The bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloid cepharanthine, which has been considered to exhibit antiperoxidation activity due to its membrane stabilizing effect, was found to scavenge radicals such as .OH and DPPH (1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl) in solution, and to inhibit lipid peroxidation in mitochondria and liposomes by Fe2+/ADP. The antiperoxidation activity of cepharanthine in rat liver mitochondria initiated by Fe2+/ADP at pH 7.4 was much greater than that of alpha-tocopherol, its half-inhibitory concentration being about 23 microM. However, cepharanthine was effective only at neutral pH values such as pH 7.4, not in a moderately acidic pH region below pH 6.5. Accordingly, the neutral form of the deprotonated amine moiety in the tetrahydroisoquinoline ring is concluded to be responsible for the radical scavenging activity of cepharanthine. There are two amine moieties in the cepharanthine molecule, but we specified the effective amine moiety from the antiperoxidation activities of the imine analogs of cepharanthine.