Pyridine-2,6-bis(monothiocarboxylic acid), also known as pyridine-2,6-dithiocarboxylic acid (pdtc), is a unique and powerful metal chelator produced by Pseudomonas stutzeri and Pseudomonas putida. The actual physiological roles of pdtc in these pseudomonads are not known with certainty, though it is likely that the compound acts as a siderophore, an antibiotic, or both. The stability constant of Fe(III)(pdtc)2(2-) was determined in previous work to be 10(33.36). Here we determined that the stability constant of FeII(pdtc)2(2-) is 10(12). We determined this stability constant through potentiometric and spectrophotometric measurements of a ligand-ligand competition study using 2,6-pyridine dicarboxylic acid as the competitor for iron. Comparing the stability constant for Fe(II)(pdtc)2(2-) to the constant for Fe(III)(pdtc)2(2-) shows that the stability constant of Fe(II)(pdtc)2(2-) is approximately 21 orders of magnitude smaller. This represents a very significant decrease in the binding strength of pdtc toward iron. Thus, if the host cell produces pdtc as a siderophore for sequestering Fe(III), it is likely that a second metabolite or a membrane protein of the host cell is used for reduction of the chelated iron at or near the cell membrane in order to facilitate its release from pdtc for cellular use.