The parasitic protozoa Leishmania are intracellular pathogens which enter host cells through largely undefined mechanisms. One molecule thought to play an important role in this process is gp63, the major glycoprotein on the surface of the infective promastigote form. We have cloned and analyzed the gp63 gene from Leishmania chagasi, an etiologic agent of acute visceral leishmaniasis. The predicted amino acid sequence is highly homologous to that reported for Leishmania major, with the exception of a 56-amino-acid region. This region in L. major was predicted to contain an arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (RGD) sequence that was subsequently hypothesized to be involved in binding to the host cell. The L. chagasi gene lacks this sequence or indeed any RGD sequence, and further studies failed to confirm the existence of an RGD sequence in the L. major gp63 gene. Binding to the host cell surface must therefore be mediated by other sequences in gp63 or by other components of the Leishmania promastigote.