The responses of sympathetic premotor neurons in the rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM) to activation or inactivation of neurons in the caudal presser area (CPA) were studied in urethan-anesthetized rats. Extracellular recordings were made from 32 barosensitive single units in the RVLM, of which 26 were antidromically activated from the cervical cord. Unilateral microinjections of L-glutamate (0.5-5 nmol) into the CPA increased firing in 13 of 14 premotor neurons by 90 +/- 30% while raising blood pressure. Both ipsilateral and contralateral injections were effective. Unilateral or bilateral inhibition of CPA neuron activity by microinjecting glycine (5-200 nmol/side) lowered blood pressure, while it reduced firing in 9 of 10 and 16 of 17 premotor neurons, respectively, by 45 +/- 9 and 39 +/- 6%. A significant proportion of tonic activity in RVLM sympathetic premotor neurons is thus driven, directly or indirectly by neurons in the CPA.