The present study was designed to establish whether penile dorsal arteries isolated from rabbits fed a high cholesterol diet show an enhanced contractile and/or impaired vasodilator response to histamine, and to characterize the histamine receptor subtype involved through in vitro isometric techniques. New Zealand White rabbits were fed a normal diet or a 1% cholesterol diet for 16 weeks. Arteries from cholesterol-fed rabbits retained the ability to relax in response to acetylcholine, whereas histamine and noradrenaline induced a greater contraction response compared to that observed in controls. In both groups, histamine-induced contraction was unaffected by the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor N G-nitro- l-arginine methyl ester ( l-NAME), its precursor l-arginine or the cyclooxygenase inhibitor indomethacin. Treatment of arterial rings in the control and hypercholesterolemia groups with the H 1 receptor antagonist, mepyramine, unmasked a vasodilation response to histamine. This was followed by contraction at higher concentrations showing a leftward displacement of the histamine curve compared to controls. The histamine receptor that induced contraction in preparations from the hypercholesterolemic animals was of the H 1 subtype, whereas the receptor involved in histamine-induced relaxation was H 2. The affinity of histamine receptor agonists was comparable to their effects in control animals, and receptor antagonists showed the same potency in both groups. Our findings indicate a preserved endothelial function and enhanced contraction in response to histamine in penile dorsal arteries, probably due to a change in the sensitivity of the contractile machinery of smooth muscle but not a mechanism mediated by a receptor.