An in vitro system based on extracts of Escherichia coli infected with bacteriophage T7 is able to repair double-strand breaks in a T7 genome with efficiencies of 20% or more. To achieve this high repair efficiency it is necessary that the reaction mixtures contain molecules of donor DNA that bracket the double-strand break. Gaps as long as 1,600 nucleotides are repaired almost as efficiently as simple double-strand breaks. DNA synthesis was measured while repair was taking place. It was found that the amount of DNA synthesis associated with repair of a double-strand break was below the level of detection possible with this system. Furthermore, repair efficiencies were the same with or without normal levels of T7 DNA polymerase. However, the repair required the 533 exonuclease encoded by T7 gene 6. The high efficiency of DNA repair allowed visualization of the repaired product after in vitro repair, thereby assuring that the repair took place in vitro rather than during an in vivo growth step after packaging.Double-strand breaks in DNA confront the cell with potentially disastrous consequences, in the form of permanent loss of genetic information. Double-strand breaks can result from DNA-damaging agents (7), aberrant interactions between topoisomerases and DNA (11, 43), or from collapsed replication forks (2,19). To counteract the deleterious effects of double-strand breaks, most organisms maintain elaborate repair mechanisms directed against these lesions (3, 7). Recombination with undamaged portions of homologous genomes offers an economical scheme for rescue of partial genomes formed by double-strand breaks. A connection between double-strand breaks and recombination (both homologous and illegitimate) has been well established in a number of biological systems, including yeasts, bacteria, and bacteriophages (9,12,32,44,46,53,54). Our laboratory has been examining the repair of double-strand breaks by using an in vitro system based on extracts made from Escherichia coli infected with bacteriophage T7 (13,21,25,55). In this system, DNA replication closely mimics the in vivo replication of T7 DNA (4, 28). Moreover, the in vitro system is able to carry out at least some steps of homologous recombination (22,23,27,38,39). To study double-strand break repair, breaks are experimentally introduced with a restriction endonuclease at a predetermined site in the T7 genome. The broken genomes are then incubated in the in vitro system before the DNA is recovered and packaged into infective T7 phage. The yield of viable phage reflects the number of intact genomes and, therefore, the efficiency of double-strand break repair. Double-strand breaks are repaired efficiently in this system, and repair of the breaks is often accompanied by acquisition of genetic information from other DNA molecules present in the same reactions (25). When a double-strand break occurs between a pair of direct repeats, the break can increase the frequency of deletion of the region between the repeats by 2 or more orders of magnitude (13, 55).Althou...