In this study, multiple-component water diffusion in the cat brain is investigated using an approach that combines diffusion-weighted images using multiple b values with magnetization transfer contrast (MTC). The MTC allows filter of signal originating from water molecules that rapidly exchange with binding sites on large macromolecular structures, and in brain white matter, it is assumed that a significant portion of the MTC is due to the interaction of water with the extraaxonal myelin sheath. Henceforth, multicomponent analysis of diffusion curves with and without MTC may shed light on the contribution of the extraaxonal water to the diffusion signal and on the relationship between diffusion components and tissue compartments in the brain. When a biexponential model was applied to the data, the volume fractions of the two diffusion components changed significantly in white matter with the application of the MTC. These changes are then discussed in the frame of tissue components and the possible interaction with the myelin sheath.