Thymidine was exposed to low-energy electrons (LEE) as a thin solid film under a high vacuum. Nonvolatile radiation products, remaining on the irradiated surface, were analyzed by HPLC/UV and GC/MS. Here, we show that exposure of thymidine to 3-100 eV electrons gives thymine as a major product with a yield of 3.2 x 10-2 per electron (about one-third of the total decomposition of thymidine). The formation of thymine indicates that LEE induces cleavage of the glycosidic bond separating the base and sugar moieties, suggesting a nonionizing resonant process involving dissociative attachment (<15 eV). In contrast, this reaction is not very efficient by DNA base ionization and does not occur by the reaction of solvated electrons with DNA. These studies introduce a new mechanism of DNA damage involving the interaction of LEE.