Blockade of central endothelin ET(B) receptors inhibits fever induced by LPS in conscious rats. The contribution of ET(B) receptor-mediated mechanisms to fever triggered by intracerebroventricular IL-6, PGE2, PGF(2alpha), corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF), and preformed pyrogenic factor derived from LPS-stimulated macrophages (PFPF) was examined. The influence of natural IL-1 receptor antagonist or soluble TNF receptor I on endothelin (ET)-1-induced fever was also assessed. The selective ET(B) receptor antagonist BQ-788 (3 pmol icv) abolished fever induced by intracerebroventricular ET-1 (1 pmol) or PFPF (200 ng) and reduced that caused by ICV CRF (1 nmol) but not by IL-6 (14.6 pmol), PGE2 (1.4 nmol), or PGF(2alpha) (2 nmol). CRF-induced fever was also attenuated by bosentan (dual ET(A)/ET(B) receptor antagonist; 10 mg/kg iv) but unaffected by BQ-123 (selective ET(A) receptor antagonist; 3 pmol icv). alpha-Helical CRF(9-41) (dual CRF1/CRF2 receptor antagonist; 6.5 nmol icv) attenuated fever induced by CRF but not by ET-1. Human IL-1 receptor antagonist (9.1 pmol) markedly reduced fever to IL-1beta (180 fmol) or ET-1 and attenuated that caused by PFPF or CRF. Murine soluble TNF receptor I (23.8 pmol) reduced fever to TNF-alpha (14.7 pmol) but not to ET-1. The results of the present study suggest that PFPF and CRF recruit the brain ET system to cause ET(B) receptor-mediated IL-1-dependent fever.