There is substantial evidence that magnetic fields can reduce opiate-induced analgesia, with alterations in calcium channel function and/or calcium ion flux being implicated in the mediation of these inhibitory effects. The present experiments were designed to examine the effects of protein kinase C (PKC), a calcium/diacylglycerol/phospholipid-dependent protein kinase, on opiate-induced analgesia and its involvement in mediating the inhibitory effects of exposure to magnetic fields. We observed that morphine-induced antinociception, or 'analgesia', in the land snail, Cepaea nemoralis, as measured by the enhanced latency of response to a thermal (38.5 degrees C) stimulus, was reduced in dose-related manner by the PKC activator, SC-9. Exposure of snails for 2 h to a low intensity (1.0 gauss rms) 60-Hz magnetic field also reduced morphine-induced analgesia. The inhibitory effects of the 60-Hz magnetic field on morphine-induced analgesia were significantly reduced by the PKC inhibitors, H-7 and H-9, and significantly enhanced by the PKC activator, SC-9. The non-specific protein kinase inhibitor, HA-1004, and the preferential calmodulin inhibitor, W-7, had no significant effects on either morphine-induced analgesia or the inhibitory actions of exposure to the magnetic fields. These results suggest that: (1) PKC has antagonistic effects on opiate-mediated analgesia in the snail, Cepaea, and (2) that the inhibitory effects of magnetic fields on opiate-induced analgesia involve alterations in PKC.