Pancreatic eicosapeptide is synthesized together with the hormone pancreatic polypeptide in a common precursor in the major endocrine cell type of the duodenal pancreas. This processing has been previously demonstrated in man and in the dog. In the present study the cat pancreatic eicosapeptide and a C-terminally extended form of this were isolated and characterized from acid/ethanol extracts of pancreas by gel filtration and reverse-phase h.p.l.c. The sequence homology in the C-terminal part of the eicosapeptides from different species was shown to continue to the other side of the monobasic cleavage site in the extended intermediate form, whereas the end of the extension differed both in chain length and amino acid sequence. It is concluded that the processing site in the intermediate form of the pancreatic eicosapeptide is an example of a proline-directed monobasic cleavage site that has been conserved during evolution.