Four type-1 (single-chain) ribosome-inactivating proteins (RIPs), with isoelectric points between 9.5 and 9.7, were isolated from leaves of Phytolacca dioica L. The purification procedure furnished the four proteins with an overall yield of about 16% and separated them from a protein of 29,407 +/- 2 Da, as determined by electrospray mass spectrometry, whose N-terminal amino acid sequence differed from that of pokeweed (Phytolacca americana L.) leaf chitinase (PLC-B) by only one amino acid (R17I). The four RIPs (PD-L1 to PD-L4) inhibited protein synthesis by a rabbit reticulocyte lysate with 50% inhibition at the picomolar level, and produced the beta-fragment, diagnostic of the specific enzymatic action of RIPs, on yeast ribosomes. Comparison of their N-terminal sequences, up to residue 45, showed that PD-L1 is identical to PD-L2 [designated the isoleucine (Ile) form from the N-terminal residue] and PD-L3 is identical to PD-L4 [designated the valine (Val) form from the N-terminal residue] and that there are 35 identical residues between the two forms. Furthermore, the Val form presents the same number of identical residues as PD-S2, an RIP isolated from the seeds of the same plant. With the exception of PD-L4, the purified RIPs gave a positive reaction when stained for sugars on SDS-PAGE gels and, when analyzed by electrospray mass spectrometry, had M(r) values of 32,715 +/- 1 (PD-L1), 31,542 +/- 1 (PD-L2), 30,356 +/- 1 (PD-L3) and 29,185 +/- 1 Da (PD-L4). The 1171 kDa difference in M(r), within the same RIP form, could be due to glycosylation. Like leaf saporins and many other RIPs, the four RIPs released several adenines from poly(A), herring sperm DNA and rRNA 16S + 23S, thus acting as polynucleotide:adenosine glycosidases. This property was less pronounced in PD-L1 and PD-L3 than in PD-L2 and PD-L4, respectively. The proteins PD-L1 and PD-L4 showed 3.7% reactivity with the antiserum anti-dianthin 32 and no reactivity with antisera to PAP-R saporin-S6, momordin 1 and even PD-S2, an RIP isolated from the seeds of the same plant. Protein PD-L4 showed 12.5% cross-reactivity with anti-PD-L1, while the opposite cross-reactivity was 100%.