Cyclic AMP has been shown essential for activation of sperm motility. When immotile hamster caudal epididymal spermatozoa were suspended in a Ca2+-deficient solution, they showed a sluggish motility. Spermatozoa were demembranated and transferred to an ATP-containing reactivation solution. Demembranated spermatozoa did not exhibit reactivated flagellar movement unless cAMP was added. Conversely, when the immotile epididymal spermatozoa were suspended in a Ca2+-containing solution, they were immediately activated to display a vigorous motility; demembranated spermatozoa also exhibited reactivated flagellar movement in the reactivation solution without cAMP. Further investigation of microtubule sliding properties revealed that the effects of Ca2+ on live spermatozoa were identical with the effects of cAMP on demembranated spermatozoa both in microtubule sliding velocity and sliding disintegration pattern. Moreover, a 36-kDa flagellar protein was found to be phosphorylated in a cAMP-dependent manner and coupled to the motility activation. A polyclonal antibody against this protein was developed and showed specific immunolocalization and significant inhibitory effects on microtubule sliding disintegration. These results indicate that extracellular Ca2+ owes its effect to triggering intracellular cAMP production, and cAMP-dependent phosphorylation of a 36-kDa phosphoprotein activates hamster sperm motility through regulation of microtubule sliding properties.