The human monoclonal autoantibody HF2-1/17, produced by a human-human hybridoma derived from lymphocytes of a lupus patient with thrombocytopenia, reacts with single stranded DNA and platelets. To determine the chemical nature of the autoantigen against which this antibody is directed on platelets, this platelet antigen was purified by the lipid extraction of sonicated platelets, DEAE-Sephadex chromatography, and high performance liquid chromatography. The purified glycolipids, a trace component in platelets, demonstrated high reactivity with the HF2-1/17 antibody using a competition enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay system or immunostaining of thin layer chromatograms. The purified glycolipids co-migrated with bovine sulfatides by thin layer chromatography. The purified glycolipids contain sulfate and galactose but not sialic acid or phosphate. Fast atom bombardment-mass spectrometry revealed these sulfatides to be sulfated monohexyl ceramides. The dominant species has a molecular weight of 794 while a minor form has a molecular weight of 812 due to an extra hydroxyl group and loss of a double bond. These results indicate that the platelet autoantigen against which the human monoclonal anti-DNA antibody is directed represents a family of novel monogalactosyl sulfatides.