In an effort to develop esterase-sensitive pro-prodrugs for amines, an amide derivative of 3-(2'-acetoxy-4',6'-dimethylphenyl)-3,3-dimethylpropionic acid (4-methoxyaniline amide 8) was synthesized and its stability investigated. This esterified hydroxy amide was found under all conditions to degrade via a two-step process initiated by acetyl ester hydrolysis generating the hydroxy amide intermediate 9a. The lactonization of this intermediate 9a in the second step resulted in the formation of 4-methoxyaniline (10) and 4,4,5,7-tetramethyl-3, 4-dihydrocoumarin (1a). The pro-prodrug 8 was observed to possess the following half-lives at 37-degrees-C under various conditions: 4030 min in phosphate buffer (50 mM, mu = 0.15) fixed to pH 7.4, 11.9 min in the same buffer containing a porcine liver esterase, 53.7 min in plasma, and 475 min in plasma containing diisopropylfluorophosphate. These results suggest that in a biological milieu the ester hydrolysis will occur by the enzymic hydrolysis rather than the chemical hydrolysis and that the enzymic hydrolysis of 8 in plasma is due, in part, to the action of serine-dependent esterases.