Base excision repair is one of the major mechanisms by which cells correct damaged DNA, We have developed an in vitro assay for base excision repair which is dependent on a uracil-containing DNA template, In this report, we demonstrate the fractionation of a human cell extract into two required components, One fraction was extensively purified and by several criteria shown to be identical to DNA polymerase beta (Pol beta). Purified, recombinant Pol beta efficiently substituted for this fraction, Escherichia coli Poll, mammalian Pol delta and to a lesser extent Pol alpha and epsilon also functioned in this assay. We provide evidence that multiple polymerases function in base excision repair in human cell extracts. A neutralizing antibody to Pol beta, which inhibited repair synthesis catalyzed by pure Pol beta by similar to 90%, only suppressed repair in crude extracts by a maximum of similar to 70%, An inhibitor of Pol beta, ddCTP, decreased base excision repair in crude extracts by similar to 50%, whereas the Pol alpha/delta/epsilon inhibitor, aphidicolin, reduced the reaction by similar to 20%, A combination of these chemical inhibitors almost completely abolished repair synthesis. These data suggest that Pol beta is the major base excision repair polymerase in human cells, but that other polymerases also contribute to a significant extent.