Chondroitin sulphate, injected intravenously into rats and given prior to intravenous I-125-labelled hyaluronan with a mean Mw of about 400 kDa, was shown to inhibit the rapid receptor-mediated uptake of hyaluronan by the liver. The labelled hyaluronan that remained in the circulation was shown, by size exclusion chromatography of serum and urine, to be rapidly degraded down to fragments of lower Mw and filtered out into the urine and tissues. When the uptake of I-125-hyaluronan was inhibited by unlabelled hyaluronan, only very low degradation and urinary excretion were found. Liver uptake could also be inhibited by dextran sulphate but not by heparin. Unlabelled hyaluronan could inhibit the liver uptake of labelled chondroitin sulphate but not labelled heparin. Unlabelled chondroitin sulphate and dextran sulphate inhibited cell association of labelled hyaluronan to liver endothelial cells in culture more effectively than unlabelled hyaluronan. Our data show that the liver hyaluronan receptors also recognize and effectively bind chondroitin sulphate and dextran sulphate but not heparin and that a hyaluronan-specific saturable degradative mechanism exists in the circulation. Such a mechanism could explain why hyaluronan in the general circulation has a much lower Mw than the hyaluronan in lymph. The results also indicate that increased hyaluronan levels in serum, and increased urinary excretion of hyaluronan, may be secondary to increased outflow of chondroitin sulphate from the tissues during some pathological conditions.