Various fatty acids were studied in vitro as inhibitors of pure hog kidney D-amino acid oxidase by means of a spectrophotometric peroxidase-coupling method using D-methionine as a substrate. All the fatty acids tested behaved as substrate-competitive inhibitors of the enzyme. The affinity of the saturated aliphatic acids for D-amino acid oxidase decreased from pentanoate (5:0; Ki = 220 microM) to laurate (12:0; Ki = 675 microM), then rose to a maximum with stearate (18:0; Ki = 36 microM), suggesting the presence of a site in the active center of the enzyme that accepts long-chain fatty acid alkyl groups. Unsaturation did not further increase the affinity of the fatty acid for this binding site.