Particles of the U2 strain of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) were partly disassembled by SDS, treated with RNases and then phenol, and yielded RNA molecules one quarter to half the size of the intact virus genome. These molecules, when translated in vitro, produced the coat protein of the virus. Reassembly experiments indicated that the active messenger molecules were those that most rapidly reassembled with coat protein; the rate of reassembly was greatly diminished by treatment with spleen phosphodiesterase. Particles of sunnhemp mosaic virus (the bean strain of TMV) resist disassembly by detergent much more than those of the U2 strain of TMV.