We investigated the mode of action of the antitumor drug, camptothecin, by use of a partly double-stranded suicide DNA substrate which enables uncoupling of the cleavage and religation half-reactions of topoisomerase I. The suicide DNA substrate contains a single topoisomerase I site at which SDS cleavage is strongly enhanced by camptothecin on normal double-stranded DNA. The results show that the religation reaction of topoisomerase I per se is strongly inhibited at this site compared to a site that is only marginally affected by camptothecin on double-stranded DNA. This study hereby directly demonstrates that camptothecin-mediated stability of a topoisomerase I-DNA complex is sequence-dependent. The influence of camptothecin on the suicide cleavage reaction of topoisomerase I was also investigated. Surprisingly, the cleavage reaction per se is strongly inhibited by the drug. However, reformation of a cleavable suicide DNA substrate, which is fully double-stranded downstream from the cleavage position except for a nick, completely reverses the inhibitory effect of the drug on the cleavage reaction. The results suggest that the inhibitory effect of camptothecin on cleavage is due to a general decrease in the non-covalent interaction of topoisomerase I with partly double-stranded suicide DNA substrates. Based on the findings, a plausible model for camptothecin action is discussed. © 1992.