The frequency of sister-chromatid exchanges (SCE) was evaluated in mouse bone marrow cells at different time intervals (from 19 h to 10 days) after treatment i.p. with mitomycin C (MMC; 1 and 2 mg/kg body weight). Significantly higher frequencies of SCE were found during the first week after treatment, at both doses tested. This result confirms that chromosomal lesions induced by MMC in the mouse may persist in bone marrow cells, in agreement with previous evidence based on chromosomal aberration analysis in the same cell population. In addition, the observation of a unimodal distribution of SCE/cell frequencies at each time tested indicates that the bone marrow cell population on the whole is affected by increased SCE frequency, i.e., that persistent chromosomal lesions may be transmitted along with cell proliferation.