Neurotransmitters and volatile anaesthetics have opposing effects on motoneuronal excitability which appear to reflect contrasting modulation of two types of subthreshold currents. Neurotransmitters increase motoneuronal excitability by inhibiting TWIK-related acid-sensitive K+ channels (TASK) and shifting activation of a hyperpolarization-activated cationic current (I(h)) to more depolarized potentials; on the other hand, anaesthetics decrease excitability by activating a TASK-like current and inducing a hyperpolarizing shift in I(h) activation. Here, we used whole-cell recording from motoneurones in brainstem slices to test if neurotransmitters (serotonin (5-HT) and noradrenaline (NA)) and an anaesthetic (halothane) indeed compete for modulation of the same ion channels - and we determined which prevails. When applied together under current clamp conditions, 5-HT reversed anaesthetic-induced membrane hyperpolarization and increased motoneuronal excitability. Under voltage clamp conditions, 5-HT and NA overcame most, but not all, of the halothane-induced current. When I(h) was blocked with ZD 7288, the neurotransmitters completely inhibited the K+ current activated by halothane; the halothane-sensitive neurotransmitter current reversed at the equilibrium potential for potassium (E(K)) and displayed properties expected of acid-sensitive, open-rectifier TASK channels. To characterize modulation of I(h) in relative isolation, effects of 5-HT and halothane were examined in acidified bath solutions that blocked TASK channels. Under these conditions, 5-HT and halothane each caused their characteristic shift in voltage-dependent gating of I(h). When tested concurrently, however, halothane decreased the neurotransmitter-induced depolarizing shift in I(h) activation. Thus, halothane and neurotransmitters converge on TASK and I(h) channels with opposite effects; transmitter action prevailed over anaesthetic effects on TASK channels, but not over effects on I(h). These data suggest that anaesthetic actions resulting from effects on either TASK or hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated (HCN) channels in motoneurones, and perhaps at other CNS sites, can be modulated by prevailing neurotransmitter tone.