The binding characteristics of muscarinic receptors in rat salivary and lacrimal glands were studied by means of radioligand binding techniques. In competition experiments against [3H]N-methylscopolamine, classical muscarinic antagonists ipratropium bromide, N-methylscopolamine and N-methylatropine exhibited very similar KD values in all the glands and their binding behavior was well described by a one binding site model (nH congruent to 1). The novel cardioselective antimuscarinic compound, AF-DX 116, displayed an equally low affinity in all the tissues examined. Pirenzepine and dicyclomine, two other selective muscarinic antagonists, showed a similar behaviour in all but the sublingual gland, where their binding profile indicated the presence of a heterogeneous receptor population (nH = 0.74 and 0.84, respectively). Histological studies of the sublingual-submandibular glandular complex demonstrated the presence of ganglionic structures mainly located in the hilum of the sublingual-submandibular glandular complex connected with the sublingual gland. Binding studies carried out with pirenzepine on the hilum and on a synaptosomal preparation from this region again revealed the presence of two populations of muscarinic receptors with KD values of 22-25 and 270-463 nM. These results are best explained by the presence of M1 and M2 receptors located on neuronal and glandular structures.