Norfloxacin, ofioxacin, and other new quinolones, which are antagonists of the enzyme DNA gyrase, rapidly kill bacteria by largely unknown mechanisms. Earlier, we isolated, after mutagenesis, Escherichia coli DS1, which exhibited reduced killing by quinolones. We evaluated the killing of DS1 and several other strains by quinolones and j-lactams. In An important property of quinolones is their ability effectively to kill many bacterial species (11,12,47,60). Exposure of E. coli to a quinolone results in an initial rapid decrease in cell viability followed by a slowing or cessation of killing (6,8,11,12,18,21,47,62). The refractory subpopulation is composed of persisters (3, 24, 37) which are neither resistant mutants nor mutants that are less effectively killed on growth and reexposure to drug (62). Additional characteristics of killing by quinolones include a paradoxical reduction in killing at high drug concentrations (9,12,47,59); reduced killing in the presence of chloramphenicol, rifampin, or other treatments that inhibit protein synthesis (suggesting a requirement for synthesis of a protein [s] for killing [8,9,11,12,47,48,51,59,65]