1 Isolated vasa deferentia from the mouse were opened longitudinally and suspended in Krebs solution at 37°C in an organ bath. Contractions of the muscle were elicited by electric field stimulation, noradrenaline (10-6 M) and acetylcholine (10-6 M). Continued transmural stimulation evoked a biphasic response comprising a rapid twitch followed about 10s later by a smaller, sustained rise in muscle tone. 2 The amplitudes of nerve-mediated and drug-induced responses were considerably potentiated by substance P-(SP) in the dose range 10-12 to 10-M. Higher concentrations of SP were directly spasmogenic. The sensitizing property of SP was dose-dependent and was usually well maintained, but always disappeared quickly on washing the preparation. In some experiments SP facilitated the twitch, but not the subsequent phase of the electrically-induced contraction or the response to externally applied noradrenaline. 3 Phentolamine (10-6 M) failed to block this effect of SP, but itself potentiated the nerve-mediated twitch, and completely abolished the sustained secondary contraction. 4 Desmethylimipramine (10-6 M) enhanced the delayed contraction but not the immediate contraction. 5 The uptake of tritiated noradrenaline (3 x lo-M) by vasa was inhibited by desmethylimipramine (10-6M) and increased by nialamide (3 x 10-5M), but was not modified by SP (10-6M). 6 Nerve-mediated release of accumulated radioactivity was accelerated by phentolamine, but not by SP or desmethylimipramine. 7 These findings suggest that SP sensitizes the muscle cells to depolarizing stimuli but that it has no facilitatory effect on sympathetic neural elements.