PLoS Pathogens (Feb 2007)

ROP18 is a rhoptry kinase controlling the intracellular proliferation of Toxoplasma gondii.

  • Hiba El Hajj,
  • Maryse Lebrun,
  • Stefan T Arold,
  • Henri Vial,
  • Gilles Labesse,
  • Jean François Dubremetz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.0030014
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 2
p. e14

Abstract

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Toxoplasma gondii is an obligate intracellular parasite for which the discharge of apical organelles named rhoptries is a key event in host cell invasion. Among rhoptry proteins, ROP2, which is the prototype of a large protein family, is translocated in the parasitophorous vacuole membrane during invasion. The ROP2 family members are related to protein-kinases, but only some of them are predicted to be catalytically active, and none of the latter has been characterized so far. We show here that ROP18, a member of the ROP2 family, is located in the rhoptries and re-localises at the parasitophorous vacuole membrane during invasion. We demonstrate that a recombinant ROP18 catalytic domain (amino acids 243-539) possesses a protein-kinase activity and phosphorylate parasitic substrates, especially a 70-kDa protein of tachyzoites. Furthermore, we show that overexpression of ROP18 in transgenic parasites causes a dramatic increase in intra-vacuolar parasite multiplication rate, which is correlated with kinase activity. Therefore, we demonstrate, to our knowledge for the first time, that rhoptries can discharge active protein-kinases upon host cell invasion, which can exert a long-lasting effect on intracellular parasite development and virulence.