Mr Sunak and Mr Johnson had met on Saturday evening, not sure "if any conclusions or news was likely to come out of it tonight" according to BBC's Laura Kuenssberg.
Penny Mordaunt is the only candidate to officially declare they are in the race, but she lags behind on support with 23 MPs.
Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak have held talks as they edge closer to the deadline for nominations in the contest to replace Liz Truss.
Two separate sources told the BBC
the meeting took place, but neither camp has disclosed what they discussed.
Rishi Sunak continues to forge
ahead in the leadership race, gathering the support of 128 MPs.
Mr Johnson is currently in second place with 53 backers, according to the BBC's tally.
However, his campaign claims he has
the support of 100 MPs - the number required to officially enter the race.
Mr Sunak's supporters raised doubts over this and called for the former PM to show proof.
The BBC has been keeping a running total of MPs who have gone on the record with support.
The voting intentions of only 204
out of 357 Conservative MPs are currently known and have been verified by the
BBC, leaving many still to declare their interest.
The hopefuls have until 14:00 BST on Monday to get enough support to run, qualifying them for the next stage of the race.
If the party's MPs get behind just one candidate, we could have a new prime minister by Monday afternoon.
If not, it will then go to an
online ballot of the Conservative party membership, with the result to be
announced on Friday.
Polling
suggests Mr Johnson, who has returned from a Caribbean holiday to consider his
options, would be favourite to win a members' vote.
Throughout Saturday, MPs were publicly declaring support for their favoured candidate.
International Trade Secretary Kemi Badenoch earlier ruled herself out of the race to be the next prime minister, throwing her weight behind Mr Sunak.
Ms Badenoch - who made a big impact in the last Tory leadership contest - said in The Times that Mr Sunak was "the serious, honest leader we need".
She joined a growing list of Sunak backers, even though the ex-chancellor has yet to officially declare he is standing.
Mr Sunak's supporters include former chancellor and health secretary Sajid Javid, Security Minister Tom Tugendhat, former deputy prime minister Dominic Raab and former Brexit minister Lord Frost.
Pointing to the parliamentary probe facing Mr Johnson, Mr Raab told the BBC: "We cannot go backwards. We cannot have another episode of the Groundhog Day, of the soap opera of Partygate".
He said he was "very confident" Mr Sunak would stand, adding: "I think the critical issue here is going to be the economy. Rishi had the right plan in the summer and I think it is the right plan now."
Among supporters of Boris Johnson is former home secretary Priti Patel who said he could bring together a united team and lead the UK to a stronger and more prosperous future.
Business Secretary Jacob Rees-Mogg
and Transport Secretary Anne Marie Trevelyan have also thrown their weight
behind the former PM.
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