The cls gene responsible for cardiolipin synthesis in Escherichia coli K-12 was cloned in a 5-kilobase-pair DNA fragment inserted in a mini-F vector, pML31, and then subcloned into a 2.0-kilobase-pair fragment inserted in pBR322. The initial selection of the gene was accomplished in a cls pss-1 double mutant that had lesions in both cardiolipin and phosphatidylserine synthases and required either the cls or the pss gene product for normal growth at 42 degrees C in a broth medium, NBY, supplemented with 200 mM sucrose. The cloned gene was identified as the cls gene by the recovery and amplification of both cardiolipin and cardiolipin synthase in a cls mutant as well as by the integration of a pBR322 derivative into its genetic locus at 27 min on the chromosome of a polA1 mutant. The maxicell analysis indicated that a protein of molecular weight 46,000 is the gene product. The cls gene is thus most likely the structural gene coding for cardiolipin synthase. Hybrid plasmids of high copy numbers containing the cls gene were growth inhibitory to pss-I mutants under the above selective conditions, whereas they inhibited neither the growth of pss-I mutants at 30 degrees C nor that of pss+ strains at any temperature. Amplification of cardiolipin synthase activity was observed, but was not proportional to the probable gene dosage (the enzyme activity was at most 10 times that in wild-type cells), and cardiolipin synthesis in vivo was at the maximum 1.5 times that in wild-type strains, implying the presence in E. coli cells of a mechanism that avoids cardiolipin overproduction, which is possibly disadvantageous to proper membrane functions.