The peptide PEC-60, structurally related to the pancreatic secretory trypsin inhibitor, inhibits glucose-induced insulin secretion. Here we report on the structure of a cDNA clone from pig duodenum encoding PEC-60. The cDNA encodes a 86-amino acid long precursor protein containing a 26-amino acid signal sequence, implying that the mature PEC-60 peptide is secreted from cells. Analysis of porcine duodenum demonstrated a high expression of a 0.6-kilobase long PEC-60 mRNA in this tissue, as well as the presence of strong PEC-60-like immunoreactivity in the cytoplasm of the majority of the goblet cells of the epithelium. High levels of PEC-60 mRNA were also found in the bone marrow and the peripheral blood and moderate levels in the spleen. A strong PEC-60-like immunoreactivity was localized in the monocytes of peripheral blood. Radioimmunoassay revealed high levels of pig PEC-60-like immunoreactivity in pig plasma suggesting that the PEC-60 peptide is efficiently released from cells. These findings imply that the gastrointestinal peptide PEC-60 is formed, stored, and secreted from monocytes present within the bone marrow and in the peripheral blood, indicating a role of the PEC-60 peptide in the immune system in addition to its function as a gastrointestinal peptide.