Irradiation by daylight fluorescent lamps, of a physical complex of duplex DNA with either daunorubicin, adriamycin, or rubidazone produced covalent adducts to DNA. The photoincorporated drug could not be extracted by phenol extraction which removed 99% of the non-photolyzed drug from its physical complex with DNA. The photoadduct was also stable to dialysis, Mg2+ addition, column chromatography, and thermal denaturation and alkali treatment of the DNA. The photoinduced adduct was proportional to the amount of incident irradiation, and the amount of DNA present, and as much as 30-45% of the drug which was physically associated could be photoincorporated. The drugs were not incorporated extensively into single-stranded DNA which lacks the ability to bind these antitumor agents by intercalation. Although the photochemical mechanisms of photoaffinity labeling DNA with these antineoplastic agents are unknown, this approach may prove to be useful for targeting their cellular sites of action. © 1979.