Metastatic nodules were examined by DNA fingerprint analysis. The probes used, Pc-1 and Pc-2, detect mutations as shifts in bands of the minisatellite loci which are dispersed among chromosomes. Four clonal lines of a fibrosarcoma from an F1 mouse (C57BL/Ka x C3H/He) were selected for various metastatic potentials upon inoculation into syngeneic mice. These four lines exhibited many extra bands resulting from recombination and/or DNA slippage, indicating accumulation of mutations during the successive passages in mice. One of the four, a 505 cell line which had been passaged extensively in vitro and consisted of a heterogenous population, was inoculated into thirteen syngeneic mice, and gave rise to six lung metastatic nodules in two mice. All the nodules showed band-patterns distinct from one another, although nodules within a given mouse tended to show similar patterns. When a genetically tagged 505-05-01 clone was analyzed, three of nine metastatic nodules obtained also revealed new bands. These results strongly suggest that somatic mutations occur at a high frequency during metastasis, providing direct evidence of genetic instability of the tumor cells.