Proenkephalin
Proenkephalin, formerly known as proenkephalin A, is an endogenous opioid polypeptide hormone which, via proteolyic cleavage, produces the enkephalin peptides met-enkephalin, and to a lesser extent, leu-enkephalin. Upon cleavage, each proenkephalin peptide results in the generation of four copies of Met-enkephalin, two extended copies of met-enkephalin, and one copy of leu-enkephalin. Contrarily, Leu-enkephalin is predominantly synthesized from prodynorphin, which produces three copies of it per cleavage, and no copies of Met-enkephalin. Other endogenous opioid peptides produced by proenkephalin include adrenorphin, amidorphin, BAM-18, BAM-20P, BAM-22P, peptide B, peptide E, and peptide F.
The following table lists the peptides that are derived from cleavage of the proenkephalin protein.
| Peptide | Alternative Names | Amino acid positions |
| Met-enkephalin | Opioid growth factor | 107–111 |
| PENK | Neuropeptide E; ENK-20 | 114–133 |
| Leu-enkephalin | — | 150–154 |
| Met-enkephalin-Arg-Phe | MERF; Neuropeptide AF | 186–191 |
| Met-enkephalin-Arg-Gly-Leu | MERGL; Neuropeptide AM | 218–223 |
| PENK | Neuropeptide F | 237–258 |