Skeletal muscle atrophy and weakness are thought to be stimulated by tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) in a variety of chronic diseases. However, little is known about the direct effects of TNF-alpha on differentiated skeletal muscle cells or the signaling mechanisms involved. We have tested the effects of TNF-alpha on the mouse-derived C2C12 muscle cell line and on primary cultures from rat skeletal muscle. TNF-alpha treatment of differentiated myotubes stimulated time- and concentration-dependent reductions in total protein content and loss of adult myosin heavy chain (MHCf) content; these changes were evident at low TNF-alpha concentrations (1-3 ng/ml) that did not alter muscle DNA content and were not associated with a decrease in MHCf synthesis. TNF-alpha activated binding of nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB) to its targeted DNA sequence and stimulated degradation of I-kappaBalpha, an NF-kappaB inhibitory protein. TNF-alpha stimulated total ubiquitin conjugation whereas a 26S proteasome inhibitor (MG132 10-40 microM) blocked TNF-alpha activation of NF-kappaB. Catalase 1 kU/ml inhibited NF-kappaB activation by TNF-alpha; exogenous hydrogen peroxide 200 microM activated NF-kappaB and stimulated I-kappaBalpha degradation. These data demonstrate that TNF-alpha directly induces skeletal muscle protein loss, that NF-kappaB is rapidly activated by TNF-alpha in differentiated skeletal muscle cells, and that TNF-alpha/NF-kappaB signaling in skeletal muscle is regulated by endogenous reactive oxygen species.