Hydroxyquinol 1,2-dioxygenase, an intradiol dioxygenase, which catalyzes the cleaving of the aromatic ring of hydroxyquinol, a key intermediate of 2,4-D and 2,4,5-T degradation, was purified from Nocardioides simplex 3E cells grown on 2,4-D as the sole carbon source. This enzyme exhibits a highly restricted substrate specificity and is able to cleave hydroxyquinol (K m for hydroxyquinol as a substrate was 1.2 μM, V max 55 U/mg, K cat 57 s −1 and K cat /K m 47.5 μM s −1 ), 6-chloro- and 5-chlorohydroxyquinol. Different substituted catechols and hydroquinones are not substrates for this enzyme. This enzyme appears to be a dimer with two identical 37-kDa subunits. Protein and iron analyses indicate an iron stoichiometry of 1 iron/65 kDa homodimer, α 2 Fe. Both the electronic absorption spectrum which shows a broad absorption band with a maximum at 450 nm and the electron paramagnetic resonance spectra are consistent with a high-spin iron(III) ion in a rhombic environment typical of the active site of intradiol cleaving enzymes.