The effects of a variety of factors known to influence the enhancement of GABA binding by diazepam, were studied upon pentobarbitone stimulation of GABA binding to washed synaptosomal membranes prepared from whole rat brains. The differential kinetics of, and effects of temperature, chloride ions, a benzodiazepine receptor antagonist (Ro15-1788) and picrotoxinin upon pentobarbitone and diazepam enhancement of GABA binding, suggest that these drugs exert their actions upon GABA binding at different loci. The degree of enhancement of diazepam binding and of high affinity GABA binding in chloride-containing media at 25 degrees C by members of a series of twelve side chain methyl substituted and/or unsaturated derivatives of 5-butyl-5-ethyl-barbituric acid (pentobarbitone analogs) correlated significantly. For the sedative members of the series, enhancement of high affinity GABA binding correlated with their anaesthetic but not their anticonvulsant activities. It appears likely that the anaesthetic and anticonvulsant activities of barbiturates arise from different molecular actions.