In this study, we characterized the cardiovascular effects produced by microinjection of doses in the femtomole range of bradykinin (BK) into the nucleus tractus solitarii of male Wistar rats (230-280 g, n=120) anesthetized with urethane (1.2 g/kg, i.p.). Microinjections of BK (1, 10, 100 fmol, and 1 and 10 pmol, in 50 nl) or vehicle (NaCl, 0.9%) were made by using a triple-barreled glass micropipette into the medial nTS (0.4 mm anterior, 0.3 mm lateral to the obex and 0.3 mm deep from the dorsal surface). Microinjection of BK produced a shallow dose-dependent decrease in mean arterial pressure and heart rate reaching -18+/-6 mmHg and -21+/-5 beats/min, with the dose of 10 pmol. The peripheral mechanism of these effects, tested in animals treated with methylatropine (2 mg/kg, i.v.), or propranolol (2 mg/kg, i.v.) or prazosin (30 mu g/kg, i.v.), was shown to be mainly dependent on an increase in vagal efferent activity for bradycardia and a decrease in sympathetic activity for hypotension. In order to investigate the receptor subtype involved in these effects, BK was microinjected into the nTS before and after the injection of the B-1 receptor antagonist, Des-Arg(9)-Leu(8)-BK (DALBK) (11.5 pmol) or before and after the B-2 receptor antagonist, HOE-140 (7.7 pmol). The cardiovascular effects of BK were significantly attenuated by the microinjection of HOE-140 and DALBK into the nTS. The effect of BK microinjected into the nTS on the baroreflex modulation was also investigated. While BK produced a significant facilitation of the baroreflex, HOE-140 and DALBK produced a significant attenuation of the baroreceptor control of heart rate. Taken together, the data presented in this study indicate the nTS as a site, in the central nervous system, for the modulatory effect of BK on the central cardiovascular control.