• Vasopressin released within the brain, specifically the paraventricular nucleus (PVN), is involved in hemodynamics and sympathetic responses to stress. • Pathways stimulated by the V 1a vasopressin receptors within the paraventricular nucleus are involved in the chronic and stress responses. • Chronic stress predisposes to enhanced blood pressure and renal sympathetic responses to acute an stressor that is mediated via the paraventricular nucleus. • Knockdown of V 1a receptors within the PVN using a silencing RNA approach diminishes the physiologic responses to chronic and acute stress. • Stressors that do not signal via the PVN are not altered by V 1a receptor modulation within that nucleus. Chronic stress and depression impart increased risk for adverse cardiovascular events. Autonomic dysregulation, particularly sympathoexcitation, has long been associated with poor cardiovascular outcomes. Vasopressin (AVP) receptors with the paraventricular nucleus (PVN), known as an integrating locus for hemodynamic and autonomic function, have been implicated in behavior and stress. The present studies were designed to test the hypothesis that knockdown of vasopressin V 1a R within the PVN in male Sprague Dawley rats subjected to chronic mild unpredictable stress (CMS) would result in lower resting hemodynamics and renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) and mitigate the responses to acute stressors. Male rats underwent CMS for 4 weeks; controls were housed in standard caging. Twenty days into the paradigm, the PVN was injected with either small interfering RNA (siRNA) directed against V 1a R or scrambled RNA (scrRNA). Arterial pressure, heart rate and RSNA were ascertained by telemetry with the animals in their home cages. Pretreatment with siRNA to V 1a R prevented the increase in arterial pressure to PVN microinjection with exogenous AVP. Basal mean arterial pressure (MAP) was significantly higher in scrRNA-treated but not in siRNA-treated CMS rats vs control rats. Paradoxically, basal RSNA was approximately two-fold higher in siRNA-treated CMS rats. Acute emotional stress delivered as 15-sec air-jet resulted in greater peak and duration of the MAP and RSNA responses in scrRNA-treated CMS rats vs control; siRNA treatment inhibited the responses. The 15-sec exposure to ammonia to test the nasopharyngeal reflex, whose circuitry does not include the PVN, produced similar increases in arterial pressure, heart rate, and RSNA in controls and both groups of CMS rats. Thus, CMS increases arterial pressure and predisposes to greater hemodynamic and RSNA responses to acute emotional stress. The higher basal RSNA in siRNA-treated rats may be due to functional and/or anatomical neuroplasticity occurring during more protracted inhibition of V 1a R PVN signaling. Vasopressinergic signaling via V 1a R in PVN modulates the cardiovascular and sympathetic responses to both the chronic and acute stress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]