“…The amount of steroid which will suppress the concentration of luteinizing hormone (LH) in the plasma of castrated rats to the concentration found in intact animals fails to suppress the level of FSH to a similar extent (Swerdloff, Walsh & Odell, 1972;Kalra, Fawcett, Krulich & McCann, 1973; Verjans, EikNes, Aafjes, Veis & van der Molen, 1974), and FSH is only suppressed in intact animals with supraphysiological doses of testosterone or oestradiol (de Jong, Uilenbroek & van der Verjans, van der Molen & Eik-Nes, 1975). These observations could be explained by postulating the existence of a second testicular hormone, ' inhibin ' (McCullagh, 1932), with a specific inhibitory effect on pituitary secretion and/or synthesis of FSH. Evidence for the existence of such a hormone has been given by Lugaro, Carrea, Casellato, Mazzola & Fachini (1973) ;Lugaro, Casellato, Mazzola, Fachini & Carrea (1974); Setchell & Jacks (1974) ;Franchimont, Chari & Demoulin (1975) ;Franchimont, Chari, Hagelstein & Duraiswami (1975) and Keogh, Lee, Rennie, Burger, Hudson & De Kretser (1976), who isolated extracts with specific FSH-suppressing activity from bull spermatozoa, sheep rete testis fluid, bull seminal plasma and homogenized bull testes. Recently, de Jong & Sharpe (1976a) observed that bovine follicular fluid contained a high-molecular-weight substance with inhibin-like activity.…”