Streptomyces tenebrarius H6 mainly produces three kinds of antibiotics: apramycin, carbamoyltobramycin and some carbamoylkanamycin B. In our present study, a dehydrogenase gene tacB in the tobramycin biosynthetic gene cluster was disrupted by in-frame deletion. The result of TLC bio-autograph analysis demonstrated the disruption mutant strain produced apramycin and a new antibiotic. The new antibiotic was identified as 3'-deoxy-carbamoylkanamycin C by MS and NMR analysis after isolation and purification. The disruption mutant was restored to produce carbamoyltobramycin in a complementation experiment by the intact tacB gene. Our studies suggested that the tacB gene encodes a 6'-dehydrogenase, which reduces the 6'-hydroxyl group of paromamine to a keto group, thus facilitating the transfer of an aminogroup to form neamine. This study is the first report on the generation of a tobramycin derivative by gene engineering, and will contribute to clarify the complete biosynthetic pathway of tobramycin.