Low concentrations of sodium nitroprusside (0.2 and 1 microM) relaxed carbachol-induced tone of the rat anococcygeus but did not affect the content of either cGMP or cAMP; higher concentrations (10,100 and 1000 microM) produced greater relaxation (greater than 60%) and a rise in cGMP but not cAMP. In the presence of the cGMP-phosphodiesterase inhibitor M&B 22948 (10 microM), 1 microM sodium nitroprusside produced greater relaxation and a selective increase in cGMP. Forskolin (0.5-250 microM) caused relaxation and a selective increase in cAMP; the concentration-response relationships of the two effects were similar. Non-adrenergic, non-cholinergic (NANC) field stimulation (10 Hz; 20 s trains) reduced tone by 52% but had no effect on cyclic nucleotide content; in the presence of 10 microM M&B 22948 or 1 microM sodium nitroprusside, NANC stimulation produced a greater degree of relaxation and increased cGMP but not cAMP content. The results show that NANC stimulation acts like sodium nitroprusside, causing a selective increase in cGMP, and this supports the proposal that NANC transmission in the rat anococcygeus involves an endogenous nitrate; the possibility that multiple pools of cGMP exist in the anococcygeus is discussed.