We have purified an ∼60 kDa endoribonuclease
from Xenopus liver polysomes with properties expected
for a messenger RNase involved in the estrogen-regulated
destabilization of serum protein mRNAs (Dompenciel et al.,
1995, J Biol Chem 270:6108–6118). The present
report describes the cloning of this protein and its identification
as a novel member of the peroxidase gene family. This novel
enzyme, named polysomal RNase 1, or PMR-1 has 57% sequence
identity with myeloperoxidase, and like that protein, appears
to be processed from a larger precursor. Unlike myeloperoxidase,
however, PMR-1 lacks N-linked oligosaccharide, heme, and
peroxidase activity. Western blot and immunoprecipitation
experiments using epitope-specific antibodies to the derived
protein sequence confirm the identity of the cloned cDNA
to the protein originally isolated from polysomes. The
80 kDa pre-PMR-1 expressed in a recombinant baculovirus
was not processed to the 60 kDa form in Sf9 cells and lacks
RNase activity. However, the baculovirus-expressed mature
60-kDa form of the enzyme has RNase activity. The recombinant
protein is an endonuclease that shows selectivity for albumin
versus ferritin mRNA. While it does not cleave at consensus
APyrUGA elements, recombinant PMR-1 generates the same
minor cleavage products from albumin mRNA as PMR-1 purified
from liver. Finally, we show estrogen induces only a small
increase in the amount of PMR-1. This result is consistent
with earlier data suggesting estrogen activates mRNA decay
through a posttranslational pathway.