Estrogen is known to exert a protective effect on cardiovascular disease. but the mechanism for this effect is unclear. It has, however, been reported that estrogen and antiestrogen modify ionic currents and membrane potential in various cells. The aim of this study was to clarify whether the chloride channel of aortic endothelial cells was, in fact. modified by estrogen and antiestrogen with inside-out parch and cell-attached parch recording methods. Tamoxifen activated a large-conductance (368 +/- 23 pS, n = 6, in symmetric 150 nM Cl- solution) chloride channel of endothelial cells grown in the presence of 1 mu g/ml colchicine. The channels were activated mainly between +/-40 mV. but were inactivated at more extreme potentials. The open probability of channels in cell-attached patches increased from <0.01 to 0.37 +/- 0.08 (n = 8) when cells were treated with 15 mu M tamoxifen. This effect can be blocked by 17 beta-estradiol, but not by progesterone. The results showed that tamoxifen increased chloride channel activity in the presence of colchicine in cultured endothelial cells, and this action was suppressed by 17 beta-estradiol but not by progesterone. This rapid effect by estrogens suggests, that these hormones exert nongenomic, short-term activity and do nor appear to affect the nuclear estrogen receptor. With these effects, estrogen and antiestrogen bind to the endothelial cells plasma membrane site and subsequently may activate tin intracellular second messenger pathway.