Chinese hamster ovary cells labelled with [14C]thymidine were made permeable, incubated with various concentrations of the intercalating dye ethidium bromide, and centrifuged through neutral sucrose gradients. The gradient profiles of these cells were qualitatively similar to those obtained by centrifuging DNA from untreated, lysed permeable cells through gradients containing ethidium bromide. The sedimentation distance of DNA had a biphasic dependence on the concentration of ethidium bromide, suggesting that the dye altered the amount of DNA supercoiling in situ. The effect of ethidium bromide intercalation on incorporation of [3H]dTMP into acid-precipitable material in an in vitro DNA synthesis mixture was measured. The incorporation of [3H]dTMP was unaffected by less than 1 μg/ml of ethidium bromide, enhanced up to two-fold by 1-10 μg/ml, and inhibited by concentrations greater than 10 μg/ml. Alkaline sucrose gradient analysis revealed a higher percentage of small DNA fragments (6-20 S) in the cells treated with 2 μg/ml ethidium bromide than in control cells. These fragments attained parental size within the same time as the fragments in control cells. In cells treated with 2 μg/ml ethidium bromide, a significant fraction of newly synthesized DNA resulted from new starts, whereas in untreated cells practically none of the newly synthesized DNA resulted from new starts. These results suggest that relaxation of DNA supercoiled structures ahead of the replication fork generates spurious initiations of DNA synthesis and that in intact cells the rate of chain elongation is limited by supercoiled regions ahead of the growing point. © 1979.