We studied the effects of stress induced by different influences (immobilization and compulsory swimming) on the activity of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE, an enzyme of the proteolytic conversion of angiotensin II) in structures of the hypothalamo-hypophyseal-adrenocortical system (HHAS) of unilaterally adrenalectomized (hemiadrenalectomized, HAE) rats. The pattern of stress-induced changes in the activity of ACE depended on the type of stress; rigid daily immobilization of rats for 1 h resulted in more significant shifts. Post-immobilization stress changes in the activity of ACE in the HHAS structures of HAE rats (with a lower basal activity of the endogenous angiotensin system in their hypothalamus) differed from the stress-induced reaction of the enzyme in intact rats. In HAE rats, we also observed inhibition of the activity of a glucocorticoid link of the stress system, as compared with that in intact animals. An inhibitor of ACE, captopril, and a stable analog of leucine-enkephalin, dalargin, when injected before stressing, were capable of decreasing the stress-induced ACE reaction in the hypothalamus and adenohypophysis and of limiting manifestations of the reaction of the adrenals to immobilization. This is interpreted as a proof of the involvement of the components of the angiotensin and enkephalin systems in the formation of the HHAS system to stressing of HAE rats.