Infection of human B cells with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) was seen to result in activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) and polymerase-eta (pol-eta) gene expression. AID and pol-eta are cellular gene products that play central roles in the DNA-modifying processes involved in immunoglobulin gene class switch recombination and somatic hypermutation. Errors in these processes can result in oncogene mutation/translocation, thereby contributing to lymphomagenesis. It was seen that EBV infected, AID, and pol-eta expressing B cells accumulated mutations in cellular proto-oncogenes (BCL-6 and p53) that are known to be involved in the genesis of B cell lymphoma. The nature of the mutations seen in these oncogenes was consistent with the known activity of AID and pol-eta. These findings indicate that EBV induced AID and pol-eta expression, and that this was associated with oncogene mutation, providing a novel means by which EBV infection of B cells may contribute to lymphomagenesis.