This report concerns the use of a minimum stress animal model for evaluating the neuromodulatory effects of interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha), Male Sprague-Dawley rats, 350-450 g, received jugular catheters and were habituated to handling and sampling arenas, These procedures will minimize stress usually associated with i.v. injections and blood sampling, Natural rat IFN-alpha/beta (RaIFN-alpha/beta) endotoxin free (Lee Biomolecular Research Laboratories, San Diego, CA) or recombinant human IFN-alpha (rHuIFN-alpha) (a gift from Hoffman La Roche, Nutley, NJ) was injected into rats via catheter at various IFN concentrations, Controls were injected with either (1) vehicle (saline), (2) human or bovine serum albumin in saline, or (3) heat-denatured RaIFN-alpha/beta. Experiments were begun (0 h) at about 0900 h, and blood samples were withdrawn at intervals up to 2 h after IFN or control injections and replaced by the same volume of saline, The concentrations of corticosterone and ACTH in peripheral plasma were measured by radioimmunoassay, Both IFN, when injected at concentrations of 300 or 600 U/g body weight (U/gbw), stimulated an increase above 0 h levels of both hormones in the same animals, Additionally, the stimulation was also evident when compared with plasma hormone levels in animals injected with control substance in a parallel time course, After administration of 150 U/gbw of either IFN, only the increase in the blood corticosterone was significant, These studies demonstrate that both homospecific (RaIFN-alpha/beta) and heterospecific (rHuIFN-alpha) IFN preparations are capable of stimulating the pituitary-adrenal axis.