The effect of P-1-purinoceptor activation on contractions, release of noradrenaline and release of ATP elicited by electrical field stimulation (210 pulses, 7 Hz) was studied in the superfused vas deferens of the guinea pig. Release of noradrenaline was assessed as overflow of total tritium after preincubation with [H-3]-noradrenaline. ATP was measured by means of the luciferinluciferase technique. Electrical stimulation elicited reproducible contraction, tritium overflow and ATP overflow. In the absence of other drugs, adenosine (10-100 mu M) did not change evoked contractions but reduced the evoked overflow of tritium and ATP. In subsequent experiments alpha(1)-adrenoceptors were blocked by prazosin, P-2-purinoceptors by suramin and alpha(2)-adrenoceptors by rauwolscine. No or almost no contraction remained under these conditions. The evoked overflow of tritium was 505% and the evoked overflow of ATP 34% of that observed in the absence of prazosin, suramin and rauwolscine. Adenosine (1-100 mu M) again reduced the evoked overflow of tritium and ATP, and so did the A(1)-selective agonist 2-chloro-N-6-cyclopentyladenosine (CCPA; 0.032-0.32 mu M). Adenosine and CCPA decreased the evoked overflow of ATP to a greater extent than the evoked overflow of tritium. It is concluded that neural release of both postganglionic sympathetic cotransmitters, noradrenaline and ATP, is decreased upon activation of prejunctional P-1- (A(1)-) purinoceptors in guinea-pig vas deferens. The A(1) -receptor-mediated inhibition of the release of ATP is more marked than the inhibition of the release of noradrenaline, a pattern opposite to the inhibition produced by activation of prejunctional alpha(2)-autoreceptors.