The spatial distribution of synonymous substitutions in enterobacterial genes is investigated. It is shown that synonymous substitutions are significantly clustered in such a way that a synonymous substitution in one codon elevates the rate of synonymous substitution in an adjacent codon by about 10%. The level of clustering does not appear to be related to the level of gene expression, and it is restricted to a range of two or three codons. There are at least three possible explanations: (1) sequence-directed mutagenesis, (2) recombination, and (3) selection.