Toxoplasma gondii is an obligate intracellular parasite, and the delivery of effector proteins from the parasite into the host cell during invasion is critical for invasion itself and for parasite virulence. The effector proteins are released from specialized apical secretory organelles known as rhoptries. While much has been learned recently about the structure and composition of the rhoptry exocytic machinery and the function of individual rhoptry effector proteins that are exocytosed, virtually nothing is known about how the released proteins are translocated across the host cell plasma membrane. Previous electrophysiology experiments reported an unanticipated observation that invasion by T. gondii is preceded by a transient increase in host cell plasma membrane conductance. Here, we confirm this electrophysiological observation and propose that the conductance transient represents a parasite-induced perforation in the host cell plasma membrane through which rhoptry proteins are delivered. As a first step towards testing this hypothesis, and to provide higher throughput than patch clamp electrophysiology, we developed an alternative assay to detect the perforation. This assay utilizes high-speed, multi-wavelength fluorescence imaging to enable simultaneous visualization of host cell perforation and parasite invasion. Using this assay, we interrogated a panel of mutant parasites conditionally depleted of key invasion-related proteins. Parasites lacking signaling proteins involved in triggering rhoptry secretion ( e.g. , CLAMP) or components of the rhoptry exocytic machinery ( e.g. , Nd9, RASP2) are defective in their ability to induce the perforation. These data are consistent with a model in which the perforating agents that disrupt host cell membrane integrity during invasion - and may thereby provide the conduit for delivery of rhoptry effector proteins - are stored within the rhoptries themselves and released upon contact with the host cell.
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