The effect of toxic doses of acetaminophen on hepatic intracellular calcium compartmentation were studied in mice. No effects on the calcium contents of the mitochondria, microsomes or cytosol were observed 4 h after the administration of 175 and 375 mg/kg acetaminophen when compared to saline-treated controls. However, doses of 500 and 750 mg/kg of acetaminophen increased mitochondrial calcium contents at this time. Also, the 750 mg/kg dose caused marked alterations in the calcium contents of microsomal and cytosolic compartments. The time-course of the onset of these effects was examined using a 500 mg/kg dose. No changes in either mitochondrial, microsomal or cytosolic calcium contents were observed in the livers of mice treated with acetaminophen compared to saline-treated controls at either 1 or 2 h after dose administration. However, at 3, 4 and 24 h after acetaminophen, mitochondrial and cytosolic calcium contents were significantly increased above control values. The increases in mitochondrial and cytosolic calcium contents observed in the acetaminophen-intoxicated mouse liver appear to occur at the same time as the appearance of plasma membrane damage, as measured by sorbitol dehydrogenase leakage. The data suggest that a perturbation in hepatic calcium compartmentation is not an early event in acetaminophen-induced hepatotoxicity in the mouse.