Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was withdrawn from the cisterna magna of unanesthetized conscious rats (n = 14) through a chronically implanted catheter, and prostaglandins (PGs) D2, E2, and F2 alpha were measured. From each rat, CSF samples were taken at different clock-hours of the day (1000, 1400, and 1800 hr) and night (2200, 0200, and 0600 hr) in succession at 76-hour intervals. The concentration of PGD2 alone exhibited a significant circadian fluctuation, with its peak value at 1400 hr (mean +/- SEM: 1197 +/- 361 pg/ml) and its lowest level at 0600 hr (438 +/- 106 pg/ml). Thus, the mean level of PGD2 during the daytime (903 +/- 162 pg/ml) was significantly higher than that during the night (503 +/- 78 pg/ml). The results obtained are consistent with the postulated role of PGD2, acting in the surface layer of the rostral basal forebrain, as an endogenous factor to promote sleep.