Main article: Pyrimidine
A pyrimidine dimer is a type of molecular lesion that arises when adjacent thymine or cytosine bases are bonded together in an atypical way, often as a result of a photochemical reaction. Ultraviolet light (UV), particularly UVC, often causes this direct DNA damage, causing the formation of covalent bonds near the nucleotides' carbon–carbon double bonds. The resulting photo-coupled dimers are fluorescent, and are commonly classified as cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) and 6–4 photoproducts. These pre-mutagenic lesions modify the DNA helix structure by distorting it.