Intercalating dyes (acridine orange, proflavin and methylene blue) and drugs (chlorpromazine, promazine and chlorprothixene) were tested for their ability to induce sister-chromatid exchanges (SCEs) with and without photoactivation by visible light. Whereas in the dark all substances tested increased the frequency of SCEs, a superimposed effect of visible light on SCE formation was observed for the acridines proflavin and acridine orange, but not for the pheneothiazine derivatives methylene blue and chlorpromazine. These results are discussed in connection with the known mutagenic effects of these substances and with the factors that may be involved in SCE formation induced by intercalating molecules in the absence and presence of visible light.