Studies were undertaken to elucidate further the mechanism by which emodin, an anthraquinoid mycotoxin and constituent of rhubarb, was converted into a direct-acting mutagen to Salmonella typhimurium TA1537 by the hepatic microsomes and the reconstituted cytochrome P-450 system. Emodin was activated into a mutagenic principle(s) in the reconstituted cytochrome P-450 system, and its mutagenicity was significantly higher with the fraction II (P-448 type) than the fraction I (P-450 type) derived from the hepatic microsomes of PCB-induced rats. Thin-layer chromatographic analysis revealed that the purified cytochrome II-a (maximal CO-differential spectrum at 448.0 nm and high-spin form) activity converted emodin into 2-hydroxy-emodin, a direct-acting mutagen.