An oxytocin fragment which accumulated during the incubation of oxytocin with brain synaptic membranes was chemically characterized as the hexapeptide pGlu-Asn-Cys(Cys)-Pro-Leu-Gly-NH2 [( pGlu4, Cyt6]OXT-(4-9]. This peptide was approximately a hundred times more potent than oxytocin in attenuating memory consolidation as tested in a passive avoidance test situation; the dose-response relationship was bell-shaped. The des-glycinamide derivative [pGlu4, Cyt6]OXT-(4-8) was nearly as active, but showed a linear dose-response relationship. The data indicate that oxytoxin can act as precursor for potent behaviourally active neuropeptides.