Evidence suggests that neurotransmitters can act as possible chemical signals involved in cell division and morphogenetic movements long before neurons appear in the embryo. However, whether they are playing a role in differentiation is now unknown. It was recently observed (M. Sarasa and S. Climent, 1987, J. Exp. Zool. 241, 181-190) that the neurotransmitter dopamine exerted a stimulating effect on cardiac differentiation in the chick in ovo. We show here that dopamine acts as a specific inducer of heart muscle differentiation in vitro. When cells of the gastrula of embryos treated with dopamine were dissociated and reaggregated, the aggregates obtained almost entirely underwent cardiac muscle differentiation. Also, when small postnodal pieces obtained from the most posterior region of the gastrula were cultivated in the presence of dopamine, they differentiated into myocardic tissue instead of following their fate map. Therefore, dopamine can trigger a process that both causes undifferentiated cells to differentiate into heart muscle and compels cells already determined to another way of differentiation to become myocardic tissue.