Titin is an approximately 3000-kDa polypeptide that constitutes a set of elastic filaments that connect thick filaments to the Z-line in vertebrate striated muscle myofibrils. To characterize the primary structure of titin, three overlapping cDNA clones comprising 2.4 kilobases of avian muscle titin coding sequence were obtained from a cDNA library constructed from embryonic chick cardiac muscle RNA size-selected for large transcripts. Expression of one cDNA clone in Escherichia coli produced a fusion protein that reacted specifically with titin antibodies, and titin antiserum affinity-purified against this fusion protein reacted specifically with titin on immunoblots of chicken cardiac and skeletal muscle myofibrils. Indirect immunofluorescence localization with the fusion protein-specific antibodies demonstrated that the cDNA sequence was from the region of titin located in the myofibrillar A-band adjacent to the A/I junction. Derived amino acid sequences demonstrated a repeating pattern of fibronectin type III and immunoglobulin C2 motifs, as shown previously for a portion of rabbit skeletal muscle titin located in the central region of the A-band and for other myofibrillar proteins that bind to myosin. Differences between the rabbit and chicken titin sequences included a unique, serine-rich region in one motif, which represents a potential phosphorylation site. This is the first report of sequence information for avian titin from a previously uncharacterized portion of the titin molecule.