There is a genetically determined variation in the inducibility of a high-Km cytoplasmic aldehyde dehydrogenase activity in the rat liver by treatment with phenobarbital. In the present experiments this activity increased after phenobarbital administration in the phenobarbital-responsive rats also in the intestinal postmitochondrial supernatant fraction. Phenobarbital-nonresponsive rats did not exhibit such an increase after drug treatment. Intraperitoneal administration of 2,3,7,8,-tetrachlorodibenzo-pdioxin, strongly enchanced the cytoplasmic enzyme activity in the liver of both responsive and nonresponsive rats. This effect was also seen in the serum but not in the intestinal or hte kidney. Intragastric administration of 3-methylcholanthrene, 3,4,-benzpyrene or chrysene induced the activity in liver and intestine but not in serum or kidney. The activity in liver was also induced by long-term feeding with 2-acetamido-fluorene. The activities induced by tetrachlorodibenzodioxin or the carcinogens had similar behaviour in isoelectric focusing in gel slabs and in gel chromatography, suggesting a possible common identity of these induced enzymes. The activity induced by these agents could be clearly differentiated both from the activity induced by phenobarbital and from the normal cytoplasmic activities. © 1979.