The hepatic uptake of an anionic fluorescence probe, 1-anilino-8-naphthalene sulfonate (ANS) was characterized using isolated rat hepatocytes. The initial uptake rate of ANS by isolated hepatocytes was determined. The uptake process of ANS was fitted well to the Michaelis-Menten equation with a saturable component. The V_(max) and K_m values were 2.9±0.1 n㏖/min/㎎ protein and 29.1±3.2 μM, respectively. The uptake clearance (CL_(up)) based on the ratio of V_(max) to K_m was 11.7 ㎖/min/g liver, revealing the good coincidence with that assessed from the analysis of the plasma disappearance curve in previous report. Forthermore, the effect of serum protein on the hepatic uptake of ANS into isolated hepatocytes was investigated. The permeability clearances (PS_(inf)) of ANS uptake were much higher than those predicted based on the unbound fractions in the presence of serum. These suggested that the hepatic uptake of extensively serum protein-bound ANS is mediated not only by the unbound form of ligand but also by the serum protein-mediated uptake mechanism.