Vascular responsiveness to 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) is dramatically increased in hypertension. The hypothesis that augmented vasoconstriction to 5-HT in hypertension is due to a change in receptor subtype on vascular myocytes was tested. Mesenteric arteries from deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA)-salt hypertensive (systolic blood pressure > 180 mm Hg) and sham normotensive (systolic blood pressure < 130 mm Hg) rats were mounted in isolated tissue baths for measurement of isometric contractile force. The receptor mediating contraction in isolated mesenteric arteries from sham and DOCA-salt hypertensive rats is a member of the 5-HT2 family based on rank order of agonist potency (5-HT = alpha-methyl-5-HT [5-HT2 receptor agonist]>tryptamine>5-hydroxykynuramine). 5-HT was approximately 10-fold more potent in contracting mesenteric arteries from DOCA-salt hypertensive rats compared with arteries from sham normotensive rats. The tryptophan metabolite kynuramine, which possesses significant contractile activity at the 5-HT2B receptor, contracted hypertensive arteries significantly (50% of 5-HT maximum) but not sham arteries. Ketanserin (5-HT2A antagonist) competitively inhibited contraction to 5-HT in arteries from normotensive rats (-log dissociation constant [mol/L]; pKB = 8.54) but not from hypertensive rats (pKB > 6.5). Moreover, contraction to kynuramine was not blocked by ketanserin. Thus, under normal conditions, 5-HT2A receptors mediate contraction to 5-HT. However, in DOCA-salt hypertension, ketanserin-insensitive 5-HT2 receptors, possibly 5-HT2B receptors, mediate mesenteric arterial contraction to 5-HT.