Glanzmann's thrombasthenia (GT) is a hereditary bleeding disorder caused by a quantitative or qualitative defect in the integrin alphaIIbbeta3. A new mutation, a T to C substitution at base 258 in the alphaIIb gene, leading to the replacement of Leu55 with Pro, was found by sequence analysis of a patient's alphaIIb cDNA. In transfection experiments using COS7 cells, the cells co-transfected with the mutated alphaIIb cDNA containing C258 and wild-type beta3 cDNA scarcely expressed the alphaIIbbeta3 complex. The Leu55 to Pro substitution in the alphaIIb gene was found to be responsible for this case of Glanzmann's thrombasthenia.