https://www.selleckchem.com/products/phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate.html 713G>T, p.(Arg238Met)) was identified. This variant is predicted to cause haploinsufficiency via aberrant splicing and has previously been associated with MODY but not congenital hyperinsulinism. Our cases further strengthen the evidence for HNF1A as a CHI-causing gene requiring long-term follow-up. Dipeptidase 3 (DPEP3) is one of three glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored metallopeptidases potentially involved in the hydrolytic metabolism of dipeptides. While its exact biological function is not clear, DPEP3 expression is normally limited to testis , but can be elevated in ovarian cancer. Antibody drug conjugates targeting DPEP3 have shown efficacy in preclinical models with a pyrrolobenzodiazepine conjugate, SC-003, dosed in a phase I clinical trial (NCT02539719). Here we reveal the novel atomic structure of DPEP3 alone and in complex with the SC-003 Fab fragment at 1.8 and 2.8 Å, respectively. The structure of DPEP3/SC-003 Fab complex reveals an eighteen-residue epitope across the DPEP3 dimerization interface distinct from the enzymatic active site. DPEP1 and DPEP3 extracellular domains share a conserved, dimeric TIM (β/α)8-barrel fold, consistent with 49% sequence identity. However, DPEP3 diverges from DPEP1 and DPEP2 in key positions of its active site a histidine to tyrosine variation at position 269 reduces affinity for the β zinc and may cause substrate steric hindrance, whereas an aspartate to asparagine change at position 359 abolishes activation of the nucleophilic water/hydroxide, resulting in no in vitro activity against a variety of dipeptides and biological substrates (imipenem, leukotriene D4 and cystinyl-bis-glycine). Hence DPEP3, unlike DPEP1 and DPEP2, may require an activating co-factor in vivo or may remain an inactive, degenerate enzyme. This report sheds light on the structural discriminants between active and inactive membrane dipeptidases and provides a benchmark to c