The in vitro effects of the following antimicrobial agents on Toxoplasma gondii tachyzoites were studied: artemisinin ether (arteether), cycloguanil hydrochloride (cycloguanil), mefloquine, primaquine phosphate, and quinine sulfate, as well as the calcium channel blocker verapamil and the calmodulin inhibitor trifluoperazine hydrochloride. Arteether at .0.5 ,ug/ml and cycloguanil at .1.0 ,ug/ml inhibited T. gondii in vitro. Cycloguanil (2.5 ,ug/ml) combined with a noninhibitory concentration of sulfadiazine (25 ,ug/ml) inhibited T. gondii more than cycloguanil alone. Neither primaquine phosphate, mefloquine, nor quinine sulfate had an inhibitory effect on intracellular T. gondii. Verapamil and trifluoperazine hydrochloride were not inhibitory at lower physiologic concentrations, but higher physiologic concentrations were toxic to cell cultures in vitro and therefore our assay could not be used to assess their effects.Infection with Toxoplasma gondii causes significant morbidity and mortality in immunocompromised individuals and infants born to women who were acutely infected while pregnant. Currently, Toxoplasma encephalitis in immunocompromised patients and congenital toxoplasmosis are treated with the synergistic combination of pyrimethamine and sulfadiazine or triple sulfonamides. Since toxic effects from this therapy include bone marrow suppression and allergy to sulfonamides (especially in AIDS patients), there is currently a great need for alternative, effective antimicrobial agents. Therefore, we evaluated in vitro several antimalarial agents, as well as the calcium channel blocker verapamil and the phenothiazine trifluoperazine hydrochloride by using our previously described assay (12).These agents were selected because malaria and T. gondii infections are caused by related apicomplexa protozoa and a number of antimicrobial agents effective in the treatment of malaria have also been effective in the treatment of toxoplasmosis (14). Artemisinin (qinghaosu) and its analogs artemisinin ethyl ether (arteether) and artemisinin methyl ether (artemether) are sesquiterpene lactones which are extremely effective against chloroquine-resistant malaria, especially cerebral malaria (9,27). Arteether is prepared from artemisinin by etherification with ethanol in the presence of Lewis acid and separated from its chromatographically more slowly moving a-dihydroqinghaosu ethyl ether (3) and has been chosen by the Steering Committee of the Scientific Working Group on Malaria Chemotherapy of the World Health Organization for development because of better bioavailability than the parent drug. The compound is lipophilic and therefore has the * Corresponding author. Mailing address: