The mechanism of intestinal uptake of alpha-methyldopa (Aldomet) was investigated using isolated segments of rat small intestine. Incubations were limited to 2 to 5 min as histological examination of the tissue showed significant loss of structural integrity after 10 to 20 min at 37 degrees C. alpha-Methyldopa in the tissue was extracted and assayed by high-pressure liquid chromatography. Corrections were applied for uptake into extracellular spaces using inulin (14C). Uptake was temperature- and concentration-dependent (Km congruent to 10 mM), was dependent on the location in the small intestine and was inhibited by ouabain (2 mM) or lack of sodium or glucose in the incubation medium. alpha-Methyldopa uptake also was inhibited by other neutral amino acids. The mucosal cell layer accounted for approximately 50% of the total drug accumulated in the tissue. Uptake was less when the serosal surface was exposed than when the tissue was everted. The similarity in uptake parameters between alpha-methyldopa and L-phenylalanine (parallel experiments) suggests that alpha-methyldopa is principally absorbed into rat small intestinal mucosal cells via an amino acid transport system.