The effects of iontophoretically applied cholecystokinin fragments and cholecystokinin antagonists on neurons of the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus were investigated with extracellular recordings in rats anesthetized with urethane. The peptide cholecystokinin-8S, which has affinity for both cholecystokinin-A and -B receptors, altered the baseline firing as well as the responses to visual stimuli of about one half of the investigated neurons (90 out of 190). Excitatory effects predominated (P < 0.01, Wilcoxon test), although inhibitory effects were also observed. The effects of cholecystokinin-8S were dose-dependent. Neurons sensitive to cholecystokinin-8S could be found in all regions of the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus, but they differed in their susceptibility to cholecystokinin in relation to their location. The B-agonist, BOC-cholecystokinin-4, also changed the baseline firing as well as the light-evoked activity of dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus neurons. The effects were either excitatory or inhibitory. Changes induced by cholecystokinin-8S could be effectively blocked by the cholecystokinin-B antagonist; CAM 1028 (19 out of 22 cholecystokinin-sensitive neurons tested); The cholecystokinin-A antagonist, Ge 410, blocked cholecystokinin-induced effects in 10 out of 16 neurons. These results indicate that the modulation of geniculate cell firing by cholecystokinin is mediated by both A-and B-receptor types.