The cytokine interleukin-1 (IL-1) has a variety of effects in the kidney involving induction of nephritis and renal injury. In addition, recent reports suggest that IL-1 regulates natriuresis and renin secretion in the kidney. To examine the potential sites of action of IL-1 in the kidney, we used iodine-125-labeled recombinant human interleukin-1-alpha ([I-125]IL-1-alpha) to identify and characterize IL-1 receptors in crude membrane preparations of mouse (C57BL/6) kidney. The binding of [I-125] IL-1-alpha was linear over a broad range of membrane protein concentrations, saturable, reversible, and of high affinity, with an equilibrium dissociation constant (K(d)) of 66 +/- 10 pM and a maximum number of binding sites of 1.04 +/- 0.24 fmol/mg protein. In competition studies, recombinant human IL-1-alpha, recombinant human IL-1-beta, and a weak IL-1-beta analog (IL-1-beta+) inhibited [I-125]IL-1-alpha binding to mouse kidney in parallel with their relative bioactivities in the T-cell comitogenesis assay, with inhibitory binding affinity constant (K(i)) values of 28 +/- 19, 53 +/- 23, and 5560 +/- 2098 pM, respectively; rat/human CRF and human tumor necrosis factor had no effect on [I-125]IL-1-alpha binding. In autoradiographic studies, IL-1 receptors were heterogeneously distributed in the kidney, with significantly higher densities present in the medulla than in the cortex. To study the effects of endogenous IL-1 in modulating [I-125]IL-1-alpha-binding sites in kidney, we injected 30-mu-g of the bacterial endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS) to mice ip. Autoradiographic studies demonstrated substantial decreases in [I-125]IL-1-alpha binding in both the kidney cortex (control, 34.7 +/- 6.2 fmol/mg tissue equivalent; LPS, 11.3 +/- 0.3; P < 0.05) and medulla (52.7 +/- 8.1 vs. 26.0 +/- 1.0; P < 0.05) 24 h after injection of LPS. Saturation studies in whole kidney homogenates demonstrated that the LPS-induced decrease in [I-125]IL-1-alpha binding was primarily due to a down-regulation of IL-1 receptors (i.e. decrease in the maximum number of binding sites). The identification of IL-1 receptors in kidney with characteristics similar to those IL-1 receptors in the brain-endocrine-immune axis provides further support for a physiological role for IL-1 in regulating renal function.