A simple synthetic route for the preparation of amino acid conjugate of 5-aminosalicylic acid (5-ASA) was exploited and prepared 5-aminosalicyl-glycine (5-ASA-Gly) in good yield. In vitro and in vivo properties of 5-ASA-Gly as a colon-specific prodrug of 5-ASA were investigated using rats as the test animal. Incubation of 5-ASA-Gly with cecal or colonic contents at 37 degrees C released 5-ASA in 65 or 27% of the dose in 8 h, respectively. No 5-ASA was detected from the incubation of 5-ASA-Gly with the homogenates of stomach or small intestine. Plasma concentration of 5-ASA-Gly decreased rapidly after intravenous administration of 5-ASA-Gly, and no 5-ASA was detected in the blood, which indicated 5-ASA-Gly was not degraded in the plasma. After oral administration of 5-ASA-Gly, about 50% of the administered dose was recovered as 5-ASA and N-acetyl-ASA and 3% as 5-ASA-Gly from feces and 14% as 5-ASA-Gly and 28% as 5-ASA and N-acetyl-ASA from urine in 24 h. These results suggested that a large fraction of 5-ASA-Gly was delivered to the large intestine and activated to liberate 5-ASA. For comparison, total recovery of 5-ASA and N-acetyl-5-ASA from feces after oral administration of 5-ASA-Gly was greater than that from sulfasalazine, which is one of the most commonly prescribed prodrugs of 5-ASA.