Glutathione transport was studied in brush-border membrane vesicles of rabbit small intestine in which .gamma.-glutamyl transpeptidase (EC 2.3.2.2) had been inactivated by a specific affinity-labeling reagent, L-(.alpha.S,5S)-.alpha.-amino-3-chloro-4,5-dihydro-5-isoxazoleacetic acid (AT125). Transport of intact [glycine-2-3H]GSH occurred into an osmotically active intravesicular space of AT125-treated membranes. The 0.1 M NaSCN gradient (Na+ inside > Na+ outside) in the transport medium could be replaced with KSCN or NaCl without affecting transport activity. The initial rate of GSH transport followed Michaelis-Menten saturation kinetics (Km = 17 .mu.M). The results suggest that, in these membranes, there was an Na+-independent mediated transport for intact GSH with marked specificity and affinity. In fact glycine, glutamic acid and cysteine did not decrease GSH uptake, as was also true for glycylglycine and glycylglycylglycine; only .gamma.-glutamylcysteinylglycol ester, a derivative of GSH, partially inhibited GSH transport.