The mammalian renal dipeptidase catalyzes the general reaction outlined in Scheme 1 (1–6). This enzyme is also able to catalyze the hydrolysis of leukotriene D4 (2, 3, 7) as well as the oxidized degradation product of glutathione, L-Cys-Gly (2–4). Human renal dipeptidase (hRDP) is the only enzyme in humans which has been shown to catalyze the hydrolysis of β-lactams such as SCH 29482, imipenem, meropenem and DA-1131 (8, 9). However, dipeptides are consistently better substrates for hRDP than are β-lactams (2, 7, 10). Glycine is the preferred amino acid at the C-terminus, relative to an amino acid in the L-configuration and glycyldehydrophenylalanine is a better substrate for hRDP than glycylphenylalanine (10). With rat renal dipeptidase, L-Ala-Gly is hydrolyzed faster than L-Ala-L-Ala and Gly-D-Ala is hydrolyzed faster than Gly-L-Ala (3). Mammalian renal dipeptidases and some of their microbial homologues have been assayed with various substrates, but a complete substrate specificity profile for these types of enzymes has not been determined (2–4, 6, 10, 11, 12).