Oligodeoxynucleotide probes derived from the published amino acid (aa) sequence for D-amino acid oxidase (DAO) [Ronchi et al. J. Biol. Chem. 259 (1982) 8824-8834] were used to screen cDNA libraries made from porcine kidney cortex and liver. Whereas no clones were obtained from kidney mRNAs, 20 independent ones were isolated from the liver library. Surprisingly, all of them carried only partial cDNAs for DAO starting around aa 100 in the coding sequence and extending for up to 250 bp in the 3'-noncoding sequence. One of these clones, pULB9103, was used to screen a porcine genomic library and allowed the isolation of DAO gene clone phULB001. Four exons encoding aa 1-151 were identified and sequenced, as well as the relevant exon-intron junctions. The mRNA sequence coding for DAO has been reconstituted from the genomic and cDNA sequences; its analysis by computer did not reveal any significant secondary structure, or particular feature, which could explain the failure to obtain full-length cDNAs.