A self-deleting retrovirus vector carrying a herpes simplex virus (HSV)-thymidine kinase suicide gene has been developed to selectively kill cancer cells expressing a dysfunctional p53 tumor suppressor protein. When cells containing functional p53 are infected with the virus, the integrated provirus and the HSV-thymidine kinase gene are deleted from the genome by site-specific recombination (Cre/loxP). In contrast, cells without p53 or cells expressing a DNA-binding mutant of p53 retain the provirus and become susceptible to killing by ganciclovir. This strategy provides a new concept for the selective killing of cancer cells that can be adapted to any other dysfunctional transcription factor expressed by different tumors.