ABSTRACT [1,2-3H]Testosterone with a specific activity of 42.3 Ci/mmole was injected intramuscularly to adult castrated male rats. There was a selective uptake of radioactivity by the prostate, where a high and prolonged accumulation of radioactive material was found, in contrast to the much lower uptake by muscle tissue. The influence of castration on the uptake was investigated. In the ventral prostate, the uptake was 205% higher in animals castrated 24 h previously than in non-castrated animals. The corresponding values for the lateral prostate, the coagulating glands and the seminal vesicles were 120%, 165% and 213% respectively. The uptake by the dorsal prostate was only about 23% higher one day after orchidectomy. The uptake by muscle was apparently not influenced by castration. Following homogenization of the coagulating glands and the dorsal and ventral prostate, some of the radioactivity in the 105 000 × g supernatant fraction 1 h after the administration of [1,2-3H] testosterone in vivo was associated with macromolecules. In the lateral prostate an interaction between radioactive material and soluble macromolecules was only found in vitro.