Toxoplasma gondii rhoptry discharge factor 3 is essential for invasion and microtubule-associated vesicle biogenesis

Author:

Ben Chaabene Rouaa,Martinez Matthew,Bonavoglia Alessandro,Maco Bohumil,Chang Yi-Wei,Lentini GaëlleORCID,Soldati-Favre DominiqueORCID

Abstract

Rhoptries are specialized secretory organelles conserved across the Apicomplexa phylum, essential for host cell invasion and critical for subverting of host cellular and immune functions. They contain proteins and membranous materials injected directly into the host cells, participating in parasitophorous vacuole formation. Toxoplasma gondii tachyzoites harbor 8 to 12 rhoptries, 2 of which are docked to an apical vesicle (AV), a central element associated with a rhoptry secretory apparatus prior to injection into the host cell. This parasite is also equipped with 5 to 6 microtubule-associated vesicles, presumably serving as AV replenishment for iterative rhoptry discharge. Here, we characterized a rhoptry protein, rhoptry discharge factor 3 (RDF3), crucial for rhoptry discharge and invasion. RDF3 enters the secretory pathway, localizing near the AV and associated with the rhoptry bulb. Upon invasion, RDF3 dynamically delocalizes, suggesting a critical role at the time of rhoptry discharge. Cryo-electron tomography analysis of RDF3-depleted parasites reveals irregularity in microtubule-associated vesicles morphology, presumably impacting on their preparedness to function as an AV. Our findings suggest that RDF3 is priming the microtubule-associated vesicles for rhoptry discharge by a mechanism distinct from the rhoptry secretory apparatus contribution.

Funder

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

H2020 European Institute of Innovation and Technology

David and Lucile Packard Fellowship for Science and Engineering

Burroughs Wellcome Fund

Pennsylvania Department of Health FY19 Health Research Formula

Martin and Pamela Winter Infectious Disease Fellowship

Blavatnik Family Fellowship

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Reference45 articles.

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