Collagen fibrils suppressed serum- or epidermal growth factor (EGF)-inducible DNA synthesis of human fibroblasts. The phosphorylation of cellular proteins upon these mitogenic stimulation was analyzed by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in order to reveal a possible interference of collagen fibrils with the cellular mitogenic signal transduction pathway coupled with the protein phosphorylation-dephosphorylation reaction. Spots of phosphorylated proteins numbered 192 on plain plastic which were reduced to 143 on collagen fibrils. More than half of them were matched between the two substrates, most of which were much more weakly phosphorylated on collagen fibrils. EGF stimulated the phosphorylation of these proteins of cells on plastic. Among them a protein with an approximate molecular weight of 27K and an isoelectric point of 5.3 was early and highly responsive to EGF, phosphorylation of which seemed to be catalyzed mainly by protein kinase C and tyrosine kinase. Collagen fibrils significantly suppressed this phosphorylation. The present study demonstrates that collagen fibrils modulate the growth-associated protein phosphorylation of cells, which seems to lead to the suppression of DNA synthesis.