The monoclonal antibody Tg49 both recognizes a Toxoplasma gondii rhoptry protein (ROP1) and inhibits penetration enhancing factor. The latter is a proteinaceous factor found in Toxoplasma lysates or conditioned media that increases the efficiency with which parasites invade host cells. Tg49 was used to screen a lambda gt11 cDNA library and the clone obtained was identified as the cognate gene for ROP1 by several criteria: (1) recombinant protein reacted with the monoclonal; (2) antiserum against the recombinant reacted with the same bands on Western blots as did Tg49; and (3) antiserum against the recombinant recognized a protein in the rhoptries. The ROP1 gene is a single copy gene with a message of approximately 2.1 kb. The predicted polypeptide sequence of ROP1 shows an unusual charge and amino acid asymmetry. There is a highly acidic, proline-rich domain in the amino-terminal portion of the predicted protein, followed by a strongly basic carboxy-terminal domain. An octapeptide repeat is found almost midway through the peptide sequence toward the end of the acidic domain. The ROP1 gene was expressed in a bacterial system, and the resulting polypeptide exhibited anomalous migration on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Given that Tg49 inhibits penetration enhancing factor, it seems likely that the ROP1 protein is a component of that factor, and that the unusual sequence of this protein plays some role in host cell penetration by T. gondii.