The effect of insulin was tested on the rate of synthesis and release of growth hormone in cultured rat anterior pituitary cells. Concentrations of insulin between 10-9 and 10-7 mol/l (6-600 ng/ml or 0.15-15 mu./ml) inhibited synthesis of growth hormone; 10-8 mol insulin/l was most effective. The effect was observed after a time-lag of at least l h. Insulin at concentrations between 3 x 10-9 mol/l and 3 x 10-7 mol/l also inhibited growth hormone secretion in 30 min incubations. The most effective insulin concentration in this case was 3 x 10-8 mol/l. Insulin (10-9-10-7 mol/l)also decreased the intracellular content of prostaglandins E and F. The effect was rapid, reaching a maximum after 30 min. Indomethacin, an inhibitor of prostaglandin synthetase, dramatically lowered the concentration of prostaglandins in the cells within 30 min; growth hormone synthesis was also decreased, but not until after 2 h of incubation. The results suggest that an initial response to insulin treatment is a lowering of intracellular levels of prostaglandins, which may then mediate a decrease in growth hormone synthesis, after a 1-2 h delay.