Earlier amino acid alignments of mature beta-caseins showed that the human protein was shifted in alignment relative to other species, with amino acid deletions in the N-terminal region and others inserted in the C-terminal region. Our alignment, based on cDNA sequences and their translation products, has shown that the amino acid deletions correspond exactly to exon 3 in the other species. Cloning and sequencing of a segment of the human beta-casein gene between exons 2 and 4 revealed the presence of an intact exon 3 sequence in the gene. An interruption of the polypyrimidine tract adjacent to the 5' end of exon 3 sequence may account for the omission of the exon from human beta-casein mRNA.