Two cDNA clones for glycophorin C, a transmembrane glycoprotein of the human erythrocyte which carries the blood group Gerbich antigens, have been isolated from a human reticulocyte cDNA library. The clones were identified with a mixture of 32 oligonucleotide probes (14-mer) which have been synthetized according to the amino acid sequence Asp-Pro-Gly-Met-Ala present in the N-terminal tryptic peptide of the molecule. The primary structure of glycophorin C deduced from the nucleotide sequence of the 460 base-pair insert of the pGCW5 clone indicates that the complete protein is a single polypeptide chain of 128 amino acids clearly organized in three distinct domains. The N-terminal part (residues 1-57, approximately) which is N- and O-glycosylated is connected to a hydrophilic C-terminal domain (residues 82-128, approximately) containing 4 tyrosine residues by a hydrophobic stretch of nonpolar amino acids (residues 58-81, approximately) probably interacting with the membrane lipids and permitting the whole molecule to span the lipid bilayer. Northern blot analysis using a 265-base-pair restriction fragment obtained by DdeI digestion of the inserted DNA shows that the glycophorin C mRNA from human erythroblasts is approximately 1.4 kilobases long and is present in the human fetal liver and the human K562 and HEL cell lines which exhibit erythroid features. The glycophorin C mRNA, however, is absent from adult liver and lymphocytes, indicating that this protein represents a new erythrocyte-specific probe which might be useful to study erythroid differentiation.