The follicle-stimulating hormone receptor (FSHR) is physiologically localized in the basolateral compartment of the membrane of Sertoli cells. This localization is also observed when the receptor is experimentally expressed in Madin-Darby canine kidney cells. We thus used in vitro mutagenesis and transfection into these polarized cells to delineate the basolateral localization signal of the receptor.The signal was localized in the C-terminal tail of the intracellular domain (amino acids 678 -691) at a marked distance of the membrane. Mutation of individual amino acids highlighted the importance of Tyr 684 and Leu 689 . The 14-amino acid sequence was grafted onto the p75 neurotrophin receptor and redirected this apical protein to the basolateral cell membrane compartment. Deletion of amino acids 677-695 did not modify the internalization of the FSHR, showing that the basolateral localization signal of the FSHR is not colinear with its internalization signal.The FSH 1 receptor (FSHR), along with the LH and TSH receptors, belongs to a subgroup of G protein-coupled receptors (reviewed in Refs. 1-5). These highly homologous proteins are unusual among G protein-coupled receptors in that they contain a very large extracellular hormone binding domain. FSH transduction pathways involve mainly G s proteins coupling and the ensuing activation of adenylate cyclase (5).The FSH receptor has a central role in reproduction through the control of gonadal development and gamete production (5). In males it is expressed in testicular Sertoli cells. These cells form an epithelial blood barrier and control the development of spermatogenesis (6). In females, the FSHR is expressed in the granulosa cells of the ovaries. It controls follicular growth and, in cooperation with the LH receptor, ovarian steroidogenesis (2).Little is known of the intracellular trafficking of G proteincoupled receptors and, more specifically, of this subgroup of receptors. The pathways of internalization of the LH and TSH receptors have been studied at the ultrastructural level (7), 2 but the molecular signals involved are still unknown. The LH receptor is also present in the vascular endothelium of the testes (8). This endothelial LH receptor is involved in receptormediated hormone transcytosis, leading to the accumulation of the hormone in close proximity to the target cells. FSHR has been detected in the vascular endothelial cells of the testes (9), but its role in hormone transcytosis has not been studied to date.Another particularity of gonadotrophin and thyrostimulin receptors is their polarized cellular expression in several target tissues. Immunocytochemical studies with monoclonal antibodies have shown that the FSH receptor in Sertoli cells and the TSH receptor in thyroid follicular cells have a polarized basolateral expression (9, 10). By contrast, the LH receptor is expressed circumferentially in the ovarian granulosa and theca cells and in the testicular Leydig cells (11,12). This difference in receptor distribution could result from either a diffe...