The most stable DNA-lesions generated by irradiation with ultraviolet light (254 nm) are two kinds of pyrimidine dimers (PDs), cylobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) and (6-4) photoproducts (6-4PP) (1). Blockage of DNA-polymerase from Thermus aquaticus (Taq polymerase) at PDs has been applied in primer extension assays for photofootprinting (2) and for mapping PDs at nucleotide resolution (3,4). These assays depend on an efficient and precise blockage at PDs. Using plasmid DNA with a site specific CPD or 6-4PP and irradiated yeast DNA, we report here that Taq DNA polymerase is indeed completely blocked at PDs. Furthermore, we show that the signal depends on the local sequence and on whether the DNA was pretreated with T4-endonuclease V (T4-endoV) or with T4-endoV and DNAphotolyase. These results justify the use of primer extension protocols for quantitation of PDs and they point out some technical limitations of this approach. M13mp18TT-CPD is plasmid DNA containing a unique cis–syn cyclobutane thymine dimer (5). The DNA was cut with HindIII and aliquots were treated with (i) T4-endoV, which cuts at the CPD, (ii) DNA-photolyase, which reverts CPDs or (iii) T4-endoV and then DNA-photolyase. The DNA samples were denatured, an oligonucleotide labeled at the 5′-end with 32P was hybridized and primer extension by Taq DNA polymerase was done for 30 cycles. The reaction products were displayed on a sequencing gel and compared with sequencing lanes obtained by dideoxy sequencing using the same primer extension protocol (Fig. 1a). With untreated DNA, 93 ± 5% of the signal (average of three experiments) accumulated in front of or at the CPD (lane 5, region B) and 7% was detected at the HindIII site (region A). Pretreatment with T4-endoV (lane 6) or T4-endoV and photolyase (lanes 7) changed the signal in the B and A regions by <2% in individual experiments (see legend to Fig. 1). This result shows that blockage at the CPD site was complete and that the signal at the HindIII site corresponds to a fraction of plasmid DNA without a CPD and was not due to read through at the CPD site. After photolyase treatment, all signal was found at the HindIII site (lane 8), demonstrating that blockage in lanes 5–7 was indeed due to a CPD. Blockage at the CPD results in two major bands migrating at the position of the 3′T and 3′G, and a few minor bands which indicate premature stops (lane 5, region B). T4-endoV cleavage results in a major band at the 3′T and a minor band at th 5′T (lane 6). Additional removal of the overhanging 5′T by photolyase results in a minor band at the 3′T and major band at the site of the removed 5′T (lane 7). Since Taq polymerase is known to frequently add a non-template 3′ adenosine residue (6), the results Figure 1. Blockage of Taq DNA polymerase at a CPD (a) and 6-4PP (b). (a) Primer extension is shown for M13mp18TT-CPD DNA cut with HindIII (lane 5), and treated with T4-endoV (lane 6), T4-endoV then photolyase (lane 7) or photolyase only (lane 8). Dideoxy sequencing lanes are also shown (lanes 1–4). The relevant part of the sequence is shown (5′-AGTTGGAGC-3′). Boxes A indicate elongation to the HindIII cut. Boxes B represent blockage in the thymine dimer region. The signals in region B were almost constant in lanes 5, 6 and 7: 95, 95 and 96% (experiment 1); 98, 99 and 96% (experiment 2); 88, 86 and 89% (experiment 3; the values were lower than in experiments 1 and 2 due to higher gel background). Region A plus region B is 100%. (b) Primer extension is shown for M13mp18TT-64 DNA, cut with HindIII (lane 5) and treated with piperidine (lane 6). The sequence is shown in lanes 1–4. The signals in region B of untreated samples (lanes 5) were 84 ± 1% and for piperidine treated samples 78 ± 10% (average of three experiments).