The peroxisome proliferators are structurally diverse chemicals which induce hyperplasia, hypertrophy and the proliferation of peroxisomes in the rodent liver. Cytochrome P450IVA1 and peroxisomal enzymes, such as acyl-CoA oxidase, are induced and are early markers of treatment with peroxisome proliferators. In this study, rats were dosed intraperitoneally with the potent peroxisome proliferator methylclofenapate and the hepatic induction response was studied. There was no significant change in the enzyme activities of laurate hydroxylase (cytochrome P450IVA1) or acyl-CoA oxidase in the first 8 h after treatment, but the activities had doubled at 24 h, suggesting that these enzymes are not involved in the mediation of early events in peroxisome proliferation. Hepatic cytochrome P450IVA1 mRNA was significantly increased at 6 and 8 h after treatment, rising to 15-fold above control values at 30 h. In contrast, acyl-CoA oxidase mRNA showed no significant change in the first 8 h, but increased to 13-fold above control values at 24 and 30 h, thereby demonstrating different kinetics of induction of the two mRNAs. In order to determine whether cytochrome P450IVA1 and peroxisomal enzymes were included in the same cells, rats were treated daily with sub-maximal (2 or 5 mg/kg) and maximal (25 mg/kg) inducing doses of methylclofenapate for 4 days. The lobular distribution of induced proteins was determined immunocytochemically with antibodies raised against P450IVA1 and acyl-CoA oxidase. Livers from control animals showed minimal staining for both proteins. However, in the livers of animals treated with 2 or 5 mg of methylclofenapate/kg, both acyl-CoA and P450IVA immunostaining was increased, mainly in the centrilobular area. Immunostaining of serial sections revealed that these proteins were induced in the same region of the lobule. A maximal inducing dose of methylclofenapate (25 mg/kg) caused panlobular induction of both proteins. The results demonstrate that these proteins are induced in a dose-dependent manner in the same, spatially distinct, sensitive region of the liver lobule.