Schwann cell cultures prepared from postnatal Sprague-Dawley rat sciatic nerves were used to demonstrate the presence of specific receptors for the beta-subunit of nerve growth factor (NGF) on rat Schwann cells. Indirect immunofluorescence microscopy with a monoclonal antineuronal NGF receptor (NGFR) antibody indicated that NGFR antigen was expressed on the surface of Schwann cells but not of endoneurial fibroblasts. Studies with 125I-NGF confirmed this distribution of NGFR in the cultures and showed that the Schwann cell NGFR had a single NGF binding affinity (Kd of 1.8 x 10(-9) M). 125I-NGF binding by the cultured Schwann cells increased with time in vitro, reaching a plateau level on the 4th day, but decreased with increasing age, reaching 40% of the neonatal value in Schwann cells isolated from 12-day-old rats. Treatment of the cultures with NGF did not alter Schwann cell phenotype, survival or proliferation.