The contents of acetylcholine and choline were determined in rat cortex, striatum, and hippocampus following intraventricular injection of β-endorphin or D-Ala2-enkephalinamide, a synthetic enkephalin analog, in doses known to produce analgesia in experimental animals. These opiate polypeptides produced significant increases in acetylcholine levels in the hippocampus, a subcortical structure rich in cholinergic terminals. The acetylcholine content of the hippocampus (but not the cortex or striatum) was significantly elevated 15, 30, and 60 minutes after a single intraventricular injection of β-endorphin (10 μg/brain) or D-Ala2-enkephalinamide (10 μg/brain). Peak alterations in regional acetylcholine concentrations and in analgetic effectiveness both occurred 30 minutes after peptide administration. Choline concentrations were unchanged by any of the experimental treatments. Naloxone hydrochloride (1 mg/kg, subcutaneously) affected neither brain acetylcholine concentrations, nor the response latencies of rats placed on a hot-plate; it did, however, antagonize the changes in these parameters caused by β-endorphin or D-Ala2-enkephalinamide. These data suggest that endorphins may normally regulate the physiologic activity of some cholinergic neurons. © 1979.