Cardiac-restricted expression of Cre recombinase can provoke lineage-specific gene excision in the myocardium, However, confounding early lethality may still preclude using loss-of-function models to study the postnatal heart. Here, we have tested whether inducible, heart-specific recombination can be triggered after birth by transgenic expression of a Cre fusion protein that incorporates a mutated progesterone receptor ligand binding domain (PR1) that is activated by the synthetic antiprogestin, RU486, but not by endogenous steroid hormones. CrePR1 driven by the alpha -myosin heavy chain (alpha MHC) promoter was expressed specifically in heart. Translocation of CrePR1 from cytoplasm to nuclei in ventricular myocytes was induced by RU486. To establish whether this approach can mediate cardiac-specific, drug-dependent excision between loxP sites in vivo, we mated alpha MHC-CrePR1 mice with a ubiquitously expressed (ROSA26) Cre reporter line. Offspring harboring alpha MHC-CrePR1 and/or the flexed allele were injected with RU486 versus vehicle, and the prevalence of beta -galactosidase (beta -gal)-positive cells was determined, indicative of Cre-mediated excision. Little or no baseline recombination was seen 1 week after birth. Cardiac-restricted, RU486-inducible recombination was demonstrated in bigenic mice at age 3 and 6 weeks, using each of 3 independent CrePR1 lines. Recombination in the absence of ligand paralleled the levels of CrePR 1 protein expression and was more evident at 6 weeks. Thus, conditional, posttranslational activation of a Cre fusion protein can bypass potential embryonic and perinatal effects on the heart and permits inducible recombination in cardiac muscle. High levels of the chimeric Cre protein, in particular, were associated with progressive recombination in the absence of drug.