There is pharmacological evidence that Ca 2+ channels play an essential role in triggering the mammalian sperm acrosome reaction, an exocytotic process required for sperm to fertilize the egg. Spermatozoa are small terminally differentiated cells that are difficult to study by conventional electrophysiological techniques. To identify the members of the voltagedependent Ca z+ channel family possibly present in sperm, we have looked for the expression of the a~A, tXlB, ale, atD and a~E genes in mouse testis and in purified spermatogenic cell populations with RT-PCR. Our results indicate that all 5 genes are expressed in mouse testis, and in contrast only alE, and to a minor extent CqA, are expressed in spermatogenic cells. In agreement with these findings, only T-type Ca 2+ channels sensitive to the dihydropyridine nifedipine were observed in patch-clamp recordings of pachytene s permatocytes. These 2+ results suggest that low-threshold Ca channels are the dihydropyridine-sensitive channels involved in the sperm acrosome reaction.