A rapid, sensitive, semiautomated method to measure the activity of mast cell-derived tryptase has been developed. The assay is based on the tryptase-mediated hydrolysis of vasoactive intestinal peptide that was modified to include an N-terminal dansyl reporter group. Tryptase cleaves vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) producing two major and two minor products. Full-length VIP was separated from the proteolysis products by reverse-phase (C18) chromatography. The amount of each product as well as the amount of full-length substrate remaining was determined using an in-line fluorescence detector. As little as 0.5 pmol of peptide could be detected. Predominant cleavages were after Arg-14 and Lys-20 with minor cleavages after Lys-15 and Lys-21. The hydrolysis of VIP at Arg-14 was slightly affected by the presence of the dansyl group at the N-terminus. While the Km value was unaffected, the kcat value decreased, yielding a kcat/Km ratio that was eightfold lower. The addition of calcium chloride to the reaction mixture resulted in a slight decrease in the kcat/Km ratio. Cleavage of dansyl-VIP by tryptase was completely inhibited by DesPro2-Arg15-Aprotinin.