Arginine-specific ADP-ribosyltransferase present in secretory granules of chicken polymorphonuclear leukocytes (so-called heterophils) was shown to be released into the extracellular space by secretagogues (Terashima et al., J. Biochem. 120 (1996) 1209-1215). In the present work, we examined fibronectin as an extracellular target protein of the released transferase. Fibronectin was ADP-ribosylated by purified transferase and stoichiometry of ADP-ribose incorporation into fibronectin was 1.0 mol/mol of fibronectin. Cell adhesion and spreading assays revealed that ADP-ribosylation of fibronectin markedly inhibited the adhesion activity of fibronectin. A proteolytic peptide map of ADP-ribosylated fibronectin demonstrated that the modification occurs in the cell binding domain of fibronectin. ADP-ribosylation of the RGD peptide suggests that the RGD sequence is the modification site in the domain. ADP-ribosylation of fibronectin in plasma means that fibronectin can probably serve as the substrate for extracellularly released ADP-ribosyltransferase in vivo. Thus, in the extracellular space, ADP-ribosyltransferase released from polymorphonuclear leukocytes may perhaps be involved in regulation of cell adhesion process by interfering with the activity of fibronectin.