Calcium efflux from rat liver perfused with nonrecirculating medium was observed at 1.4 s following 10(-6) M (-)epinephrine infusion, when the perfusate Ca2+ was 60 microM. Net calcium efflux was also seen in livers perfused with 1.3 microM Ca2+ at approximately 8 s. In isolated rat hepatocytes, phosphorylase, a cytosolic enzyme, was activated significantly at 3 s and maximally at approximately 15 s by phenylephrine (10(-5) M), epinephrine (10(-6) M), and vasopressin (10(-8) M). Hexose phosphates were elevated at between 3 and 6 s with vasopressin. Phenylephrine and vasopressin stimulated hepatocyte respiration relatively slowly. The effects took 10 s to become evident, were dependent on the presence of Ca2+, and were probably the result of increased total cellular reduced pyridine nucleotide observed at 5 s. The slowness of the increase in respiration indicates that it cannot be the cause of the Ca2+ mobilization, but is more likely to be a consequence of it. From these studies, it is proposed that, following binding of catecholamines to alpha 1-adrenergic receptors, Ca2+ is first mobilized from the plasma membrane resulting in an elevation of the free Ca2+ ion concentration in the cytosol (Charest, R., Blackmore, P. F., Berthon, B., and Exton, J. H. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 8769-8773) which stimulates phosphorylase kinase and, hence, phosphorylase. These events begin to occur within the first 2 to 3 s. Following this, the concentration of reduced pyridine nucleotide(s) increases at 5 s resulting in the stimulation of respiration seen at 10 s. These events occur more slowly than the mobilization of cell Ca2+ and activation of phosphorylase, and may be secondary to the rise in cytosolic Ca2+. The time at which mitochondrial Ca2+ decreases is not known, but it accounts for most of the Ca2+ mobilized.