The in vivo expression and distribution of the dense granule protein GRA7 was examined in both the exoenteric (tachyzoite
and bradyzoite) and enteric (coccidian) forms of Toxoplasma gondii by immunocytochemistry. There was strong staining
of GRA7 in granules within all the infectious stages (tachyzoite, bradyzoite, merozoite and sporozoite). During tachyzoite
development, GRA7 was secreted and was associated with the parasitophorous vacuole. In contrast, although there was
staining of granules within the bradyzoites of more mature cysts, there appeared to be little staining of the tissue cyst wall
or host cell. The apparent stage-specific variation in secretion of GRA7 between tachyzoites and bradyzoites was confirmed
by double labelling using stage-specific markers (SAG1 and BAG1). In the enteric forms in the cat gut there was strong
labelling of the PV containing early asexual and sexual stages and staining of a few granules in the apical cytoplasm of the
merozoite. The positive enteric staining pattern differentiates GRA7 from the other GRA proteins (GRA1–6) which were
absent in the merozoites and enteric stages. The staining pattern of GRA7 with strong staining during tachyzoite and
enteric development and reduced staining in the tissue cysts is similar to that seen for NTPases. The function of GRA7
is unknown but it is unique among the dense granule proteins in being expressed in all the infectious forms of T. gondii
which would point to a basic role in the vacuolar adaptations required for active parasite development.