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Cell and Organelle Structure and Assembly

Two Conserved Amino Acid Motifs Mediate Protein Targeting to the Micronemes of the Apicomplexan Parasite Toxoplasma gondii

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Pages 7332-7341 | Received 04 Apr 2000, Accepted 07 Jul 2000, Published online: 28 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

The micronemal protein 2 (MIC2) of Toxoplasma gondiishares sequence and structural similarities with a series of adhesive molecules of different apicomplexan parasites. These molecules accumulate, through a yet unknown mechanism, in secretory vesicles (micronemes), which together with tubular and membrane structures form the locomotion and invasion machinery of apicomplexan parasites. Our findings indicated that two conserved motifs placed within the cytoplasmic domain of MIC2 are both necessary and sufficient for targeting proteins to T. gondii micronemes. The first motif is based around the amino acid sequence SYHYY. Database analysis revealed that a similar sequence is present in the cytoplasmic tail of all transmembrane micronemal proteins identified so far in different apicomplexan species. The second signal consists of a stretch of acidic residues, EIEYE. The creation of an artificial tail containing only the two motifs SYHYY and EIEYE in a preserved spacing configuration is sufficient to target the surface protein SAG1 to the micronemes of T. gondii. These findings shed new light on the molecular mechanisms that control the formation of the microneme content and the functional relationship that links these organelles with the endoplasmic reticulum of the parasite.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank Furio Spano, Federico Giannoni, Bruno Arca′, and David Roos for helpful discussions.

This work was supported by a grant from the Wellcome Trust to A.C. M.D. has been supported by a short-term EMBO fellowship and by the TMR program of the European Union.

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