The actions of tetanus toxin, botulinum A toxin, and black widow spider venom on the release of methionine-enkephalin-like immunoreactivity have been studied; a particulate fraction prepared from rat striata was used. Depending on the duration of preincubation, tetanus toxin diminished the release evoked by veratridine (50 microM final concentration), and abolished it at final concentrations between 0.1 and 1 micrograms/ml. Botulinum A toxin was about 10 to 20 times less potent. Heating or pretreatment with antitoxin inactivated the clostridial toxins. The particulate fraction pretreated with V. cholerae neuraminidase retained its toxin sensitivity. Tetanus toxin also depressed the release due to sea anemone toxin II and high K+. Spider venom stimulated the release in a concentration-dependent manner and required the presence of Ca2+; its effects were depressed by tetanus toxin. These results support the view that both clostridial toxins and spider venom act as broad-range presynaptic neurotoxins on peptidergic transmitter systems.