The genes coding for apo(a) and plasminogen belong to a family of related genes sharing several structural sequences like leader, kringle, and protease domains. YAC cloning has allowed to understand that all these genes are clustered within 400 Kb of genomic DNA on the telomeric region of chromosome 6 (6q26-27). We have now characterized the two remaining members of the apo(a) and plasminogen gene cluster. One of them was found to contain a leader highly homologous to that of apo(a) and plasminogen, followed by several kringle IV-like units, kringle V and protease domains although no tail sequences could be detected. This apo(a)-like gene was found to be expressed at the RNA level in liver although an in-frame stop codon was detected in one of its kringle units. The other member of the cluster besides the leader shows a plasminogen tail-like domain whose sequences contain a frameshift resulting in a stop codon; another mutation, destroying a consensus splicing site, has been found in a large intron separating the exon coding for the leader from the one encoding the tail-like sequences. The structural organisation of this cluster suggests that new arrangements of these four genes will be a likely finding.