To determine the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitory activity of a fish hydrolysate, different methods were tested. Finally, a sensitive, extraction-free HPLC method using N-(3-[2-furylacryloyl)-Phe-Gly-Gly (FAPGG) as substrate was preferred. This method relies on the UV-titration of the peptide 2-furyl-acryloyl-L-Phe (FAP) resulting from the hydrolysis of the FAPGG after a chromatographic separation on a reverse phase column. The experimental conditions (enzyme/substrate ratio, incubation time, NaCl concentration) were optimised for linearity, sensitivity and precision. The assay was adequate for the study of ACE inhibition by Captopril, used as reference, and several peptides. Captopril and the fish hydrolysate had IC(50) values, respectively of 0.19 ng and 43 pg with standard deviations of 0.09 ng and 5 pg. Afterwards, the determination of the Hill coefficient sustained the hypothesis that active peptides present in the fish hydrolysate were low-molecular weight molecules. This result was confirmed by the activity measurement of the fish hydrolysate fractions obtained by gel filtration. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.