The effects of acute single doses (0.3 and 1 mg/kg) of nicotine on various hypothalamic catecholamine nerve terminal systems and on the secretion of adenohypophyseal hormones in the rat were studied. Nicotine, in a dose of 1.0 mg/kg, increased noradrenaline turnover in the median eminence and in the peri- and paraventricular hypothalamic regions. The dopamine and noradrenaline nerve terminal systems in the median eminence and the dorsomedial hypothalamic nucleus respectively were unaffected. Serum GH levels were decreased and serum prolactin levels increased after a dose of 1 mg/kg. In the presence of tyrosine hydroxylase inhibition, nicotine in a dose of 1 mg/kg, instead increased GH and also LH secretion. It is suggested that the preferential increases of noradrenaline turnover in various hypothalamic noradrenaline nerve terminal systems by nicotine may be partly responsible for the nicotine induced increases of serum prolactin. GH and LH levels observed.