Urea is reported to be a main precursor of ethyl carbamate (ECA), which is suspected to be a carcinogen, in wine and sake. In order to minimize production of urea, arginase-deficient mutants (DELTA-car1/DELTA-car1) were constructed from a diploid sake yeast, Kyokai no. 9, by successive disruption of the two copies of the CAR1 gene. First, the yeast strain was transformed with plasmid pCAT2 (DELTA-car1 SMR1), and strains heterozygous for CAR1 gene were isolated on sulfometuron methyl plates. Successively, the other CAR1 gene was disrupted by transformation with plasmid pCAT1 (DELTA-car1 G418r) and the resulting car1 mutants were isolated on a G418 plate. Arginase assay of the total cell lysate of the mutants showed that 70% of transformants isolated on G418 plates had no detectable enzyme activity, possibly as a result of the disruption of the two copies of the CAR1 gene. Further genomic Southern analysis confirmed this result. We could brew sake containing no urea with the DELTA-car1/DELTA-car1 homozygous mutant. It is of additional interest that no ECA was detected in the resulting sake, even after storage for 5 months at 30-degrees-C. This molecular biological study suggests that ECA in sake originates mainly from urea that is produced by the arginase.