The effect of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) on calcium ionophore A23187-stimulated aldosterone secretion was investigated using collagenase-dispersed rat adrenal glomerulosa cell suspensions. A23187 treatment induced a dose-dependent stimulation of aldosterone secretion, exhibiting an EC50 of approximately 75 nM. In agreement with the presumed action of A23187 as a Ca2+ ionophore, stimulation was dependent on the extracellular Ca2+ concentration, being completely inhibited in nominally Ca2+-free medium. In such Ca2+-free medium, stimulation of aldosterone secretion by bath applied 25-hydroxycholesterol was not inhibited, indicating that cells and biosynthetic pathway enzymes were not inhibited by low extracellular Ca2+ levels. A23187-induced aldosterone secretion was also inhibited by more than 90% when cells were simultaneously treated with ANP. Maximal ANP inhibition of A23187-stimulated aldosterone secretion was not overcome by concentrations of A23187 up to 10-mu-M or by increasing the extracellular Ca2+ concentration from 1.25 to 5 mM in the presence of A23187 and ANP. Addition of A23187 to ACTH-, angiotensin II-, or K+-stimulated glomerulosa cells did not overcome ANP-induced inhibition of aldosterone secretion stimulated by these secretagogues. In contrast to ANP inhibition of Ca2+-dependent A23187 stimulation of aldosterone secretion, ANP inhibition of dBcAMP-stimulated aldosterone secretion was readily overcome by increasing the dBcAMP concentration. These results indicated that ANP selectively and noncompetetively inhibited an intracellular step necessary for Ca2+-dependent stimulation of the early pathway of aldosterone biosynthesis in rat adrenal glomerulosa cells.