In rats, 48-h starvation causes a decrease in the rate of protein synthesis in skeletal (e.g. gastrocnemius)muscle, due largely to impairment of peptide-chain initiation. In other cell types inhibition of initiation is associated with decreased activity and recycling of initiation factor eIF-2, and increased phosphorylation of its a-subunit. However, 48-h starvation has no effect on the activity or recycling of eIF-2 measured in extracts of gastrocnemius muscle, or on the level of a-subunit phosphorylation.The effects of starvation on peptide-chain initiation in skeletal muscle must therefore involve alterations in other components of the translational machinery.