The feasibility of using the rhesus monkey as a non-human primate model for testing the efficacy of a contraceptive vaccine based on FA-1 antigen was evaluated. Affinity-purified anti-FA-1 polyclonal antibodies (Fab' fragments) and anti-FA-1 monoclonal antibody were used as probes in these studies. Anti-FA-1 antibodies (polyclonal Fab' as well as monoclonal IgG) predominantly reacted with the postacrosomal, mid-piece and tail regions of rhesus monkey sperm, as with human sperm, by an indirect immunofluorescence technique (IFT). These antibodies also specifically recognized a single protein band of 51 +/- 2 kDa, corresponding to the dimeric form of FA-1 antigen, on a Western blot of lithium diiodosalicylate (LIS)-solubilized monkey sperm. Anti-FA-1 antibodies, when present in the insemination mixture, inhibited the in vitro fertilization (IVF) of monkey oocytes. These results indicate that FA-1 antigen in rhesus monkey sperm is similar in subcellular localization, molecular identity and function to that in human sperm, and that the rhesus monkey represents a permissible non-human primate model in which the efficacy of a contraceptive vaccine based on FA-1 antigen can be tested.