It is still a controversial issue whether different classes of antihypertensive drugs are equally effective in the regression of cardiac hypertrophy and associated complications. The present study compared the effects of prolonged treatment with the Ca2+-channel blocker amlodipine and the ACE inhibitor enalapril, respectively, in TGR(mREN2)27 rats (TGR), an animal model of renin-dependent hypertension. TGR were divided into three groups and received either amlodipine, enalapril or drinking water without addition, Sprague-Dawley rats (SPRD) served as normotensive control group. Cardiovascular parameters were monitored by radiotelemetry, and drug doses were titrated until 24-h blood pressure was reduced to approximately 140/90 mmHg in both active treatment groups. After 8 weeks of treatment left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy was completely reversed in both treatment groups despite a tenfold increase in plasma angiotensin II in amlodipine-treated TGR. In untreated TGR LV catecholamines were depleted, and beta1-adrenergic stimulation of adenylyl cyclase was blunted. Treatment of TGR with enalapril prevented both the depletion of tissue catecholamines and the desensitisation of LV beta1-adrenoceptors. Amlodipine had no effect on cardiac adrenergic signal transduction. Basal activity of LV soluble guanylyl cyclase was not different between TGR and SPRD, but its sensitivity to stimulation by nitric oxide was slightly reduced in TGR. Treatment had no effect on basal and stimulated guanylyl cyclase activity. The present study in an animal model of renin-dependent hypertension suggests that blood pressure reduction per se is sufficient for a regression of cardiac hypertrophy. However, beta-adrenergic desensitisation was prevented only in the enalapril-treated group, supporting a blood pressure-independent contribution of the renin-angiotensin system to the regulation of beta-adrenergic signal transduction.