Twenty-two subjects (11 patients with major endogenous depression and 11 controls) received an intravenous test dose of 100 micrograms human corticotropin-releasing hormone (h-CRH). Corticotropin (ACTH), but not cortisol, responses were blunted in depressives. Basal cortisol secretion was higher in depressives than in controls and was negatively correlated to the corticotropin response following h-CRH. This finding indicates the integrity of the glucocorticoid-dependent negative feedback regulation in depression and supports the view that hypercortisolism in depression is primarily due to a suprapituitary disturbance. Comparison of ACTH responses after h-CRH with thyrotropin (TSH) output following thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) revealed a positive correlation (r = 0.65, p less than 0.001). The concordance between ACTH and TSH responses after specific challenges suggests that regulation of both systems is at least in part under a common control.