The potent vasoconstrictor peptide, angiotensin II (AII) (200-mu-g/kg, SC), increases tail skin temperature (TST) and tail blood flow when acutely administered either peripherally (SC) or centrally (ICV) to rats. Colonic temperature declines with the increase in TST. These responses are apparently mediated by way of AII subtype receptor AT1 because they are blocked by acute administration of the nonpeptide AT1 receptor antagonist, losartan potassium (DuP 753) (10 mg/kg, SC). The responses were also blocked by the peptide AII receptor antagonist, saralasin, at 100-mu-g/kg SC. Chronic administration of the steroid deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA, 250-300-mu-g/day for 45 days) sensitized the response of TST to acute administration of AII. The increase in responsiveness resulting from chronic treatment with DOCA is consistent with the increase in dipsogenic responsiveness to AII under similar conditions. The latter was shown to be correlated with the upregulation of AII receptors in the diencephalon. While the location of the AII receptors mediating the increase in TST is not known with certainty, it is reasonable to suggest that they are also upregulated by chronic treatment with DOCA.