By Brent Kendall And Annie Gasparro 

The Federal Trade Commission on Thursday sued to block Sysco Corp.'s acquisition of rival US Foods Inc., a long-awaited move that sets the stage for a major court battle over a plan to combine the nation's two largest food distributors.

The FTC, in a 3-2 vote, alleged the proposed tie up would create a dominant national company that could raise prices and reduce service for restaurants, hotels, schools and other institutions that buy food, paper products and a wide range of supplies from Sysco and US Foods.

The FTC said the two companies were the only food distributors with a broad national footprint that offered extensive product lines, frequent deliveries and services like menu planning. The commission said many hotel chains and food service management companies consider Sysco and US Foods to be each other's closest competitor.

"Consumers across the country, and the businesses that serve them, benefit from the healthy competition between Sysco and US Foods, whether they eat at a restaurant, hotel, or a hospital," Debbie Feinstein, head of the FTC's bureau of competition, said in a written statement.

Postmerger, the combined companies were expected to generate more than $65 billion in annual revenue. Sysco and US Foods have said the $3.5 billion merger would allow them to improve service and achieve hundreds of millions of dollars in cost savings.

"The facts are strongly in our favor, and we look forward to making our case in court," Sysco Chief Executive Bill DeLaney said in a written statement. "Those of us who work in this industry every day know it is fiercely competitive." He said the majority of restaurants and other food service operators work with local distributors-of which there are many choices.

US Foods didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

The FTC's antitrust case will move forward amid a partisan split on the wisdom of filing a lawsuit. The FTC's three Democratic commissioners voted in favor of the merger challenge, while the commission's two Republicans voted against it.

Sysco in recent days began escalating its preparations for a government lawsuit, hiring top antitrust lawyers who are former FTC officials to lead the company's defense. Sysco has said it could keep the merger agreement in place long enough for any case to go to trial.

The FTC plans to try the merger case through its own administrative litigation system and set a trial date of July 21. But the commission said it would concurrently ask a Washington, D.C. federal court to issue a preliminary injunction to block the deal while the case at the FTC proceeds.

The companies' merger agreement expires in September, but they could extend it if litigation isn't wrapped up by then.

The commission had been investigating the merger for more than a year. Lengthy settlement talks between the two sides failed to produce an agreement to allow the merger.

Sysco recently offered to address FTC concerns about competition by selling off a large package of assets that generate $4.6 billion in annual revenue, far above its original $2 billion divestiture commitment. A round of meetings last week between the companies and the FTC's five commissioners failed to spark further settlement discussions.

The lawsuit is the FTC's highest-profile merger challenge since the commission in 2007 sought to stop Whole Foods Market Inc. from acquiring rival organic supermarket chain Wild Oats Markets, a case brought under Republican leadership that led to a lengthy court fight and ultimately a settlement.

Since Obama administration nominees took the helm at the FTC in 2009, the agency has won some notable hospital-merger cases, but it hadn't brought a marquee case. Recent headline-grabbing merger lawsuits under the Obama administration have come from the Justice Department, which shares U.S. antitrust authority.

The FTC's decision to sue doesn't necessarily foreclose the possibility of a settlement down the road, a point underscored by recent Justice Department cases. The department in 2013 filed major antitrust lawsuits challenging mergers in the airline and beer industries. Both cases ended up settling before trial, with the government agreeing to allow the mergers after the companies involved made additional concessions.

Write to Brent Kendall at brent.kendall@wsj.com and Annie Gasparro at annie.gasparro@wsj.com

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