The repair of UV radiation-induced pyrimidine dimers has been measured in lens epithelial DNA of the marsupial Monodelphis domestica using a pyrimidine dimer-specific endonuclease from Micrococcus luteus. Approximately 40% of the initially induced dimers were repaired during 90 min exposures to photoreactivating light. This capacity of the lens epithelium to photorepair pyrimidine dimers may provide a means with which to determine whether pyrimidine dimers in lens epithelial DNA are involved in UV radiation-induced pathologic changes of the lens.