Inorganic azide (N3-) mutagenicity is mediated through a metabolically synthesized organic azide, L-azidoalanine (N3-CH2-CH(-NH2)-COOH). L-Azidoalanine appears to be formed by the action of O-acetylserine (thiol)-Lyase (EC 4.2.99.8) using O-acetylserine and azide as substrates. In both plants and bacteria tested, azide substitutes for the natural substrate sulfide (S2-) in this reaction. Azide (L-azidoalanine) mutagenesis is highly attenuated by a deficiency in the excision of UV-like DNA damage (uvr-). Thus a premutation lesion recognizable by the bacterial excision-repair enzymes must be formed. Mutagenesis appears to proceed from this by 'direct mispairing' pathway. Azide (L-azidoalanine) mutagenicity is highly specific and involves a stereoselective process, but the molecular nature of the specificity has not been determined.