Login / Signup

An apical membrane complex for triggering rhoptry exocytosis and invasion in Toxoplasma.

Daniela SparvoliJason DelabreDiana Marcela Penarete-VargasShrawan Kumar MageswaranLev M Z TsypinJustine HeckendornLiam ThevenyMarjorie MaynadierMarta Mendonça CovaLaurence Berry-SterkersAmandine GuérinJean-François DubremetzSerge UrbachBoris StriepenAaron P TurkewitzYi-Wei ChangMaryse Lebrun
Published in: The EMBO journal (2022)
Apicomplexan parasites possess secretory organelles called rhoptries that undergo regulated exocytosis upon contact with the host. This process is essential for the parasitic lifestyle of these pathogens and relies on an exocytic machinery sharing structural features and molecular components with free-living ciliates. However, how the parasites coordinate exocytosis with host interaction is unknown. Here, we performed a Tetrahymena-based transcriptomic screen to uncover novel exocytic factors in Ciliata and conserved in Apicomplexa. We identified membrane-bound proteins, named CRMPs, forming part of a large complex essential for rhoptry secretion and invasion in Toxoplasma. Using cutting-edge imaging tools, including expansion microscopy and cryo-electron tomography, we show that, unlike previously described rhoptry exocytic factors, TgCRMPs are not required for the assembly of the rhoptry secretion machinery and only transiently associate with the exocytic site-prior to the invasion. CRMPs and their partners contain putative host cell-binding domains, and CRMPa shares similarities with GPCR proteins. Collectively our data imply that the CRMP complex acts as a host-molecular sensor to ensure that rhoptry exocytosis occurs when the parasite contacts the host cell.
Keyphrases