Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) are hypothalamic factors that play roles in the regulation of anterior pituitary cell activity, PACAP exists in 2 forms physiologically, a 38 amino acid form (PACAP38) and a form possessing the N-terminal 27 amino acids of PACAP38 (PACAP27). We have previously shown that PACAP38 stimulates an increase in [Ca2+](i) in rat gonadotrophs, In an attempt to identify the PACAP receptor type underlying this effect, we compared the potency of PACAP38, PACAP27 and VIP to stimulate Ca2+ changes in identified single rat gonadotrophs. All 3 peptides at 100 nM were capable of stimulating high amplitude Ca2+ oscillations, which were also observed in the absence of extracellular Ca2+, The order of potency of these peptides was PACAP38 > PACAP27 > VIP, and a potent antagonist of the PACAP/VIP type II binding site ([4-CI-D-Phe(6), Leu(17)]-VIP) failed to block these responses, suggesting that these effects are mediated through a PACAP/VIP type 1 receptor (PVR1). The Ca2+ responses to PACAP38 and VIP were unaffected by overnight treatment of the cells with pertussis toxin (PTX; 250 ng/ml) indicating that these responses are mediated by a PTX-insensitive G-protein. Finally, the Ca2+ responses stimulated by PACAP38 and VIP were blocked by the phospholipase C-beta blocker U73122 (5 mu M). In summary, PACAP stimulates Ca2+ oscillations in rat gonadotrophs through the activation of the PVR1 linked to a PTX-insensitive G-protein and the activation of phospholipase C-beta. VIP can stimulate the same pathway in rat gonadotrophs, although it is at least 100 fold less potent than PACAP38.