Although it is well-established that p53 functions as a tumor suppresses gene, certain mutations exhibit gain-of-function activities that increase oncogenic transformation. We have found a common class of p53 missense mutations that exhibits a dominant, gain-of-function activity that generates genomic instability. Fibroblasts frown Li-Fraumeni syndrome heterozygotes with such mutations generate polyploid cells when exposed to spindle depolymerizing agents. Expression of such mutant alleles in normal fibroblasts yields the same phenotype. This class of dominant, gain-of-function p53 mutation (p53(RSC), relaxed spindle checkpoint allele) does not require the transcriptional activation function of p53 for this behavior. Thus p53 mutations can contribute to progression of a cancer cell not only by absence of p53 humor suppressor activity but also by the presence of an activity that promotes genetic instability.