In an attempt to clarify the role of the type 2 corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) receptor (CRHR-2) in the brain in activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis, we conducted experiments using male Wistar rats. First, an injection of urocortin-2 (7.5 mu g) into the lateral ventricle resulted in transient increases in CRH heteronuclear RNA ( hnRNA) in parvocellular paraventricular nucleus ( PVN) and in plasma adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), whereas sustained increases in arginine vasopressin ( AVP) hnRNA and c-fos mRNA in the parvocellular PVN were observed as compared with vehicle treatment. Pretreatment with the selective CRHR-2 antagonist antisauvagine-30 (20 mu g) into the lateral ventricle 15 min prior to agonist injection attenuated the stimulatory effects of urocortin-2 on the above-mentioned hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis variables. These effects were similar or rather more potent than those induced by pretreatment with 50 mu g of alpha-helical CRH. Second, we found longer-lasting increases in CRH and AVP hnRNA and c-fos mRNA in parvocellular PVN and in plasma ACTH following central administration of urocortin-3 (7.5 mu g) than following urocortin-2. Pretreatment with antisauvagine-30 antagonized the effects of urocortin-3 on the above-mentioned variables. Finally, central administration of antisauvagine-30 as well as alpha-helical CRH profoundly attenuated restraint-stress-induced increases in AVP hnRNA. However, alpha-helical CRH, but not antisauvagine-30, attenuated restraint-stress-induced increases in CRH hnRNA in the PVN. Both antagonists transiently attenuated stress responses of c-fos mRNA in PVN and plasma ACTH. These results indicate that there is a CRHR-2-mediated mechanism in the brain that stimulates CRH- and AVP-producing neurons in the PVN which results in the promotion of plasma ACTH secretion.