Studies were performed on the ontogeny of arterial blood pressure and functional properties of the thoracic aorta in lean (L) and obese (O) male Zucker rats at ages of 6-36 wk. Body weight was larger in the O than the L at all ages, with differences reaching values of 200-250 g at ages over 24 wk (at 33-36 wk: L = 510 +/- 9 and O = 730 +/- 15 g). Systolic blood pressure was lower in young O compared with L (6-15 wk) but increased with age at a rate seven times greater in O than in L. For ages of 33-36 wk, systolic pressure was significantly higher in O compared with L (O = 132 +/- 2 vs. L = 122 +/- 2 mmHg). Total serum cholesterol (at 36 wk: L = 278 +/- 31 and O = 354 +/- 12 mg/dl) and triglycerides (at 36 wk: L = 493 +/- 71 and O = 1,618 +/- 220 mg/dl), as well as glucose levels, increased with age in both groups and were significantly higher in O at all ages. Serum levels of thyroxine but not triiodothyronine were significantly lower in O at all ages. No differences were found in passive mechanics at any age. Values of maximum active stress with smooth muscle activation by 75 mM K+ plus 10-mu-M norepinephrine were significantly higher at 24 and 36 wk in O (at 36 wk: L = 573 +/- 42 and O = 821 +/- 89 x 10(3) dyn/m2). No significant differences were found in concentration-response relations of thoracic aorta to KCl concentrations or in acetylcholine- (except at 12 wk), nitroprusside-, isoproterenol-, or forskolin-mediated relaxations. Aorta from O had higher sensitivity to norepinephrine at 12 and 24 wk and to serotonin at 12, 24, and 36 wk. These differences in sensitivity persisted in aorta following endothelium removal. A more rapid increase of arterial pressure occurs in O, which is associated at 24-36 wk with larger maximum active stress as well as with more sensitive contractile responses to norepinephrine at 12 and 24 wk and to serotonin for 12-36 wk. A role for these changes in smooth muscle function in the greater age-related changes in arterial pressure in obese Zucker rats is suggested.