DAMP (3-(2,4-dinitroanilino)-3′amino-N-methyldipropylamine),
which differentially accumulates in acidic compartments, was used to identify
such compartments in Toxoplasma gondii tachyzoites at the electron
microscope level. In both
free tachyzoites and dividing intracellular parasites the only sites of
DAMP accumulation were mature and forming
rhoptries. No labelling of other secretory organelles (micronemes and dense
granules), the ER, Golgi or any other
membrane-bounded organelles or anything resembling a lysosomal system was
observed. Labelling of the forming
rhoptries was higher and more homogenous than in mature rhoptries in which
labelling was confined to the expanded ends
of each organelle. The acid pH-dependent accumulation of DAMP in the forming
and mature rhoptries was blocked by
ammonium chloride and monensin, reagents known to abolish intracellular
pH gradients. Estimates of rhoptry pH, based
on the level of DAMP accumulation, show that the intralumenal pH of forming
rhoptries is more acidic (pH 5·5–3·5) than
the mature rhoptries (pH 7·0–5·0).