The effect of endothelin (ET) on membrane potential and current was studied in myocytes isolated from porcine coronary or from human mesenteric arteries at 3.6 mM extracellular Ca2+ concentration and 37-degrees-C. ET (1 - 100 nM) induced cell shortening and membrane depolarization from a resting potential of -50 mV to about -15 mV. Ca currents (I(ca), L-type) were transiently reduced by ET. At -50 mV, ET induced an inward current that peaked within 2 s and fell within 10 s to a sustained level. The current could be enlarged by reducing bath extracellular Cl- ion concentration, but removal of extracellular Na+ ions had no effect. The voltage dependence suggests that the ET-induced current is a Cl current (I(cl)) at potentials negative to - 30 mV; at more positive potentials K currents (I(k, ca)) are superimposed. The effects of ET on I(ca), I(l), I(K,Ca) and contraction were prevented by intracellular Ca chelators, suggesting a Ca-dependent activation mechanism. The ET effects were abolished by pretreatment with 20 mM caffeine or prior cell-dialysis with heparin [thought to block inositol triphosphate-induced sarcoplasmic reticular Ca release]. The results suggest that ET releases Ca from the SR through a phosphoinositol response and that the released Ca acts as second messenger in modulating the membrane currents.