We studied a selective enhancement of the mitomycin C (MMC)-induced antitumor effect focusing on the intracellular metabolism by NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase (DT-diaphorase, DTD). The level of cellular DTD activity related well to the degree of MMC-induced DNA total cross links and cell growth inhibition in human cancer cell lines, KB, PH101, SH101 and K562. A DTD inhibitor, dicoumarol (DIC) or flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD), inhibited the MMC-induced DNA damage and cytotoxicity at a non-toxic concentration. The DTD-mediated MMC activation was pH-dependent, and highest at pH 6 and lowest at pH 8. Although an inverse relationship appeared to exist between DTD activity and MMC efficacy in human xenografts implanted into nude mice and 9 fresh human tumor specimens, the investigation in 3 culture cells, HEC-46, HCC-48 and HCC-50, established from those xenografts, showed that DTD activated MMC in a pH-dependent manner as well as the other cell lines. Significant tumor pH reduction from 7.1 to 6.7 by continuous glucose infusion also increased the MMC-induced tumor growth inhibition in the human tumor xenografts. Thus, we conclude that bioreductive activation by DTD in a pH-dependent manner may be of key importance in the MMC-induced antitumor effect and that an increased MMC efficacy at a reduced pH caused by hyperglycemia may be applied to clinical use as a new manipulation for a biochemical modulation of MMC.