Effects of isoprenaline on monophasic contractions evoked by electric field stimulation were studied in rat isolated prostatic vas deferens. Isoprenaline reduced electrically evoked contractions (EC50: 0.27 +/- 0.05 microM), and propranolol concentration-dependently antagonized the effect of isoprenaline. In contrast, isoprenaline (0.3-3 microM) did not affect the contractile response induced by exogenous noradrenaline or ATP, while forskolin (100 nM) attenuated agonist-induced contraction. In some tissues, adrenergic and purinergic components of the electrically evoked contraction were isolated by exposure to alpha,beta-methylene ATP (3 microM) and prazosin (3 microM), respectively. Isoprenaline induced a greater inhibition of purinergic than adrenergic component of the electrically evoked contraction. Iberiotoxin (50 nM), glibenclamide (3 microM), 4-aminopyridine (0.3 mM) and tetraethylammonium ions (1 mM) attenuated the effect of isoprenaline. These results indicate that isoprenaline-induced inhibition of the electrically evoked (both purinergic and adrenergic) contraction was mediated primarily through activation of prejunctional beta-adrenoceptors, which probably inhibited release of contractile transmitters from sympathetic nerves supplying vas deferens. Lack of effect of isoprenaline on agonist-induced contraction does not favour a functional role of beta-adrenoceptors in vas smooth muscle.