Five rare distamycin A-inducible fragile sites have been identified on human chromosomes: fra(8)(q24.1), fra(11)(p15.1), fra(16)(p12.1), fra(16)(q22), and fra(17)(p12). All of these fragile sites are located at the junction of Giemsa-positive (G) and negative (R) bands and their expression can be induced by a variety of AT specific DNA ligands. Analysis of family data indicate that the distamycin A-inducible fragile sites segregate as a simple codominant trait with complete penetrance, and probands receive these fragile site genes equally from mothers and fathers. Based on current knowledge of chromosome instability, the nature of distamycin A-inducible fragile sites is discussed. Distamycin A-inducible fragile sites appear to be unique chromosomal regions particularly susceptible to fragility under certain stress conditions. They may also be hot spots for recombination, gene amplification, and integration of foreign genomes.