In the presence of intact Hymenolepis diminuta, trypsin was inactivated; intact worms had no apparent effect on subtilisin, pepsin, or papain. Inactivation of trypsin was demonstrable using azoalbumin as a substrate, but the inactivated enzyme retained full catalytic activity against benzoyl-DL-arginine-p-nitroanilide, p-tosyl-L-arginine methyl ester (low molecular weight synthetic trypsin substrates) and p-nitro-p-guanidinobenzoate (an active site titrant). Inactivation was not reversible under conditions of heating, freezing and thawing, or prolonged dialysis of the enzyme. Analyses of inactivated 3H-trypsin by cationic and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and gel chromatography failed to indicate the presence of a high molecular weight trypsin inhibitor associated with the inactivated enzyme; no low molecular weight, dissociable inhibitor was demonstrable following thermal denaturation of the inactivated enzyme. Analyses of trypsin after incubation in the presence of pulse-labeled worms also failed to demonstrate the presence of any inhibitor of worm origin associated with the inactivated enzyme. The data suggest that inactivation is the result of a small structural or conformational change in the enzyme molecule, a change which partially (rather than totally) inactivates the enzyme towards protein substrates.