High-field proton (1H) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy has been employed to evaluate the formation of substance P carbamate in aqueous solution. Equilibration of substance P with physiologically relevant concentrations of bicarbonate (2.50 x 10(-2) mol.dm-3) at pH 7.00 generated a new multiplet signal centred at 4.13 ppm in its NMR spectrum, characteristic of the alpha-proton of peptide carbamate species. High-field 1H NMR spectroscopy also demonstrated that the model dipeptide, Arg-Gly, formed a carbamate in neutral aqueous solutions containing 2.50 x 10(-2) mol.dm-3 HCO3-. The physiological significance of these results is discussed in view of the central roles of vasoactive neuropeptides in human joint diseases and the hypercapnic environment of the inflamed rheumatoid joint.