Purified alpha-actinin from human platelets was digested with Ca2+-activated protease from muscle. The alpha subunit (Mr = 100 kDa) was degraded into a unique polypeptide b of slightly lower molecular mass. In fresh platelets, only the a subunit was detected by immunoblotting techniques, while in out-dated platelets, both a and b polypeptides were present. Since a similar conversion of a to b occurs in vitro as in whole platelets, it can be assumed that, in platelets, alpha-actinin is cleaved by the endogenous Ca2+-activated protease.