Monoamine oxidase in the vervet monkey showed greater variations in activity in six brain regions when tyramine or phenylethylamine was used as the substrate (3.8- to 4.1-fold differences) than when serotonin was the substrate (1.8-fold differences). With phenylethylamine and tyramine as substrates, the highest MAO specific activities were found in the hypothalamus and the lowest in the cerebellum and cortex. With serotonin as the substrate, the highest specific activities were in the mesencephalon and cortex. The inhibition of tyramine deamination by clorgyline and deprenyl yielded biphasic plots indicative of the presence of MAO-A and MAO-B enzyme forms in the vervet brain. On the basis of these inhibitor curves, the vervet brain could be estimated to contain approximately 85% MAO-B and 15% MAO-A, in contrast to rat brain which contains 45% MAO-B and 5% MAO-A. The inhibition of serotonin deamination by deprenyl in vervet brain yielded a biphasic plot, suggesting that some serotonin deamination in the vervet is accomplished by the MAO-B enzyme form. Estimations of the relative amounts of MAO-A and MAO-B based on inhibitor curves or based on substrate ratios yielded proportionate results which were in close agreement across the different brain regions, supporting the validity of these approaches to estimating MAO-A and MAO-B activities.