Abstract

Previous work from this laboratory identified a polysome-associated endonuclease whose activation by estrogen correlates with the coordinate destabilization of serum protein mRNAs. This enzyme, named polysomal ribonuclease 1, or PMR-1, is a novel member of the peroxidase gene family. A characteristic feature of PMR-1 is its ability to generate in vitro degradation intermediates by cleaving within overlapping APyrUGA elements in the 5'-coding region of albumin mRNA. The current study sought to determine whether the in vivo destabilization of albumin mRNA following estrogen administration involves the generation of decay intermediates that could be identified as products of PMR-1 cleavage. A sensitive ligation-mediated polymerase chain reaction technique was developed to identify labile decay intermediates, and its validity in identifying PMR-1-generated decay intermediates of albumin mRNA was confirmed by primer extension experiments performed with liver RNA that was isolated from estrogen-treated frogs or digested in vitro with the purified endonuclease. Ligation-mediated polymerase chain reaction was also used to identify decay intermediates from the 3'-end of albumin mRNA, and as a final proof of principle it was employed to identify in vivo decay intermediates of the c-myc coding region instability determinant corresponding to sites of in vitro cleavage by a polysome-associated endonuclease.

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