Sucrose gradient analysis of chick acetylcholine receptor (AChR) alpha7 subunits expressed in oocytes indicates that they form pharmacologically active homomers of the same size as native alpha7 AChRs, a size compatible with a complex of five alpha7 subunits. By immunoisolating the [S-35]methionine-labeled alpha7 subunits we also demonstrate that they do not appear to assemble with endogenous Xenopus AChR subunits. Pharmacological characterization of detergent-solubilized brain alpha7 AChRs and alpha7 homomers reveals that they have similar but nonidentical properties. The pharmacological difference is most accentuated for cytisine (approximately 50-fold). Thus, at least in E18 chicken brain, most or all of the native alpha7 AChRs do not appear to be homomeric.