Chlorocatechols are the central metabolites in the bacterial degradation processes of many chlorinated aromatic compounds (reviewed in references 50 and 60). The degradation processes via chlorocatechols have been studied intensively with simple chlorinated aromatics such as chlorobenzoates (7, 10, 18, 23, 25, 26), chlorobenzenes (21, 47, 51, 53, 54, 56, 57, 62), and 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) (4,9,14). In the degradation of chlorocatechols, the chlorocatechol orthocleavage pathway (modified ortho-cleavage pathway) plays a central role, converting chlorocatechols into 3-oxoadipate (reviewed in references 24, 42, and 50), although several examples of degradation of chlorocatechols via the meta-cleavage pathway have been documented (1, 34).The genes encoding enzymes of the chlorocatechol orthocleavage pathway have been found as a cluster and mostly on large plasmids, which are often transmissible (3,6,7,8,32,39,62,67; for a review, see reference 38). Some of the chlorocatechol gene clusters have been found to be carried on transposons (30,40,45,63) or a phage-like element (49,55). Recent reports on the entire sequencing of two 2,4-D degradative plasmids, pJP4 and pEST4011, illustrated their genetic features of basic plasmid functions such as replication, maintenance, and transfer, shared with other broad-host-range IncP1 plasmids (59, 63). These findings have revealed some of the reasons underlying the wide distribution of the gene clusters of the chlorocatechol ortho-cleavage pathway.In the first step of the chlorocatechol ortho-cleavage pathway, chlorocatechol 1,2-dioxygenase (CCD) cleaves the aromatic ring, converting chlorocatechols into chloro-cis,cis-muconates, and thus has been a subject of intensive study from an enzymatic viewpoint. The CCDs of several strains have been characterized, and some of them have been purified (2,5,10,27,31,33,35,43,44,46,61). The early enzymatic studies of the CCD from the 3-chlorobenzoate (3-CB)-degradative Pseudomonas sp. strain B13 revealed that the CCD is adapted for the conversion of chlorocatechols such as 3-chlorocatechol, unlike catechol 1,2-dioxygenase, which cannot process chlorocatechols efficiently (10, 11). Several studies have revealed a tendency such that CCDs responsible for the conversion of 3,5-dichlorocatechol (3,5-DC) produced as an intermediate of 2,4-D degradation are adapted for the preferential conversion of 3,5-DC (2, 43). CCDs engaged in degradative pathways for other compounds could show different substrate specificities towards congeners of chlorocatechols: one example is TcbC from the 1,2,4-trichlorobenzene-degrading Pseudomonas sp. strain P51, which favors 3,4-dichlorocatechol (3,4-DC) (61). Recently, the crystal structure of the 4-chlorocatechol 1,2-dioxygenase from Rhodococcus opacus strain 1CP has been solved (15, 17), and another CCD from the strain 1CP has been