Muscle glycogen synthesis is modulated by physiologically relevant changes in cell volume. We have investigated the possible involvement of integrin-extracellular matrix interactions in this process using primary cultures of rat skeletal muscle subject to hypo- or hyper-osmotic exposure with integrin binding peptide GRGDTP to disrupt integrin actions and the inactive analogue GRGESP as control. Osmotically induced increases (77%) and decreases (34%) in glycogen synthesis (D-[C-14]-glucose incorporation into glycogen) were prevented by GRGDTP (but not GRGESP) without affecting glucose transport. Cytoskeletal disruption with cytochalasin D or colchicine had similar effects to GRGDTP. Osmotically induced modulation of muscle glycogen synthesis involves integrin-extracellular matrix interactions and cytoskeletal elements, possibly as components of a cell-volume 'sensing' mechanism. (C) 1997 Federation of European Biochemical Societies.