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Nature Cell Biology 2, 449–456 (1 July 2000) | doi:10.1038/35017090

Targeting to rhoptry organelles of Toxoplasma gondii involves evolutionarily conserved mechanisms.

Heinrich C. Hoppe , Hu|[acirc]|n M. Ng|[ocirc]| , Mei Yang & Keith A. Joiner

Intracellular parasites of the phylum Apicomplexa contain specialized rhoptry secretory organelles that have a crucial function in host-cell invasion and establishment of the parasitophorous vacuole. Here we show that localization of the Toxoplasma gondii rhoptry protein ROP2 is dependent on a YEQL sequence in the cytoplasmic tail that binds to |[micro]|-chain subunits of T. gondii and mammalian adaptors, and conforms to the YXX|[phis]| mammalian sorting motif. Chimaeric reporters, containing the transmembrane domains and cytoplasmic tails of the low-density lipoprotein receptor and of Lamp-1, are sorted to the Golgi or the trans-Golgi network (TGN), and partially to apical microneme organelles of the parasite, respectively. Targeting of these reporters is mediated by YXX|[phis]|- and NPXY-type signals. This is the first demonstration of tyrosine-dependent sorting in protozoan parasites, indicating that T. gondii proteins may be targeted to, and involved in biogenesis of, morphologically unique organelles through the use of evolutionarily conserved signals and machinery.