1. Developmental changes in the effect of isoprenaline (Iso) and acetylcholine (ACh) interactions on Ca2(+)-dependent slow action potentials (APs) were studied in the ventricular muscles of foetal (12-20 days post-gestation), neonatal (0-20 days old), and adult (2-3 months old) rats. The slow APs were recorded at 0.2 Hz in partially depolarized preparations (an extracellular K+ concentration of 25 mM). 2. Iso (1 nM to 10 microM) began to increase the Vmax of the slow APs (an approximate indicator of Ca2+ current) on foetal day 18; its potentiating effect became greater with age and reached the adult level about 2 weeks after birth. 3. ACh (10 microM) abolished the Iso (1 microM)-induced increased in the Vmax observed in the late foetal and neonatal periods. 4. The inhibitory effect of ACh on the Vmax was antagonized by atropine but not by pirenzepine, suggesting that ACh reduces Ca2+ current (in the presence of beta-adrenoceptor agonists) by stimulating muscarinic (M2) cholinoceptors. 5. These results suggest that developmental changes in the modulatory effects of beta-adrenoceptor and cholinoceptor agonists on Ca2+ channels occur from a few days before birth to 2 weeks after birth and that the functional coupling between muscarinic cholinoceptors and Ca2+ channels has already been established when the coupling between beta-adrenoceptors and Ca2+ channels starts to operate.