Endothelin-1 (ET-1), a potent vasoactive and mitogenic peptide, has been implicated in a number of cardiovascular diseases. including congestive heart failure, neointimal hyperplasia associated with restenosis, and hypertension. The vasoconstriction induced by ET-1 is thought to be mediated mainly by its action on ETA receptors on vascular smooth muscle cells. Recent studies have indicated that vasoconstriction also may be mediated by stimulation of an ETB-receptor subtype. Increased use of the pig as a cardiovascular model prompted us to examine the receptor profile in this species using ABT-627, a potent, nonpeptide antagonist of thr ETA receptor. The precursor to ET-1, big ET-1 (0.02 nmol/kg/min), was infused intravenously in domestic swine, resulting in a sustained increase in mean blood pressure of 38 +/- 3 mm Hg. After stabilization of the pressor response, ABT-627 (0.1-10 mu g/kg/min) or vehicle was infused for 30 min. Whereas vehicle infusion had no appreciable effect, a dose-related reversal of the presser response to big ET-1 (11-100%) was observed by the end of the ABT-627 infusion. Blood samples were assayed for plasma concentrations of ABT-627; peak levels ranged from 9 +/- 2 to 937 +/- 168 ng/ml. In a separate group of pigs, the highest dose of ABT-627 produced only a modest reversal of the hypertensive response to an infusion of angiotensin II (300 ng/kg/min). Additional results indicate that the vasoconstrictor effects produced by sarafotoxin 6C (0.03 and 0.3 nmol/kg), an agonist of the ETB receptor, are not blocked by treatment with ABT-627 (10 mu g/kg/min). However, complete blockade of the S6C response could be achieved using the ETB antagonist, A-192621 (0.33 mg/kg/min). Our results define the dose-response relation for the ETA-receptor antagonist ABT-627 in the vasculature of the domestic pig and suggest the presence of an ETB-receptor subtype that mediates vasoconstriction in this species.