A cryostorage procedure was developed to provide ovine luteal cells throughout the period of seasonal anestrus. Corpora lutea obtained from midluteal phase, superovulated ewes were dispersed enzymatically. Some dispersed cells were fractionated into subpopulations by elutriation. Dimethylsulfoxide (7.5% final concentration) in Hanks' buffered saline was added to cells at 4 degrees C, and dispersed cell preparations were frozen in a programmable cell freezer and stored at -196 degrees C. After recovery from cryopreservation, cell viability and prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha) binding characteristics of thawed cells were not different from those of corresponding fresh cells. Additionally, thawed cells retained the capacity to attach to culture dishes and retained responsiveness of progesterone secretion to prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) and ovine luteinizing hormone (LH), although rates of progesterone secretion were attenuated in thawed compared with fresh cells. The cryopreservation procedure will prove useful to relieve constraints in utilization of ovine luteal cells arising from reproductive seasonality in sheep. Cells retrieved from cryostorage were evaluated by studying PGF2 alpha binding characteristics. From saturation analyses (increasing amounts of radiolabeled PGF2 alpha) of PGF2 alpha binding to unfractionated cells, we detected a single class of high affinity binding sites (Kd = 17.4 +/- 2.3 nM) in addition to the nonspecific binding component. Using displacement analyses (constant radiolabeled PGF2 alpha and increasing amounts of unlabeled PGF2 alpha) and unfractionated cells, we detected additional binding sites of lower affinity (Kd = 409 +/- 166 nM) as well as the nonspecific binding component. Small luteal cells obtained by elutriation, which were essentially devoid of large cell contamination, had only low affinity binding sites.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)