The interaction of plant toxin ricin and MLI binding subunits to liposomes containing monosialoganglioside (GM1), bearing a terminal galactose residue, has been examined as a possible receptor model. For the first time we demonstrate that ricin B-chain but not ricin provokes liposome aggregation at 10 M% GM1 concentration, whereas in the presence of either ricin A-chain or galactose the aggregation is inhibited. The B-subunit of plant toxin MLI from Viscum album has similar lectin specificity and activity but cannot aggregate GM1 liposomes. The ability of the B-chain to aggregate liposomes adds a new crucial step in the toxin transmembrane penetration mechanism. We demonstrate here possible ricin B-chain interactions with membranes proceeding via two sites, namely (a) a galactose-binding domain and (b) a hydrophobic interchain domain. In close contact with two phospholipid bilayers, ricin B-chain may determine the geometry of the fusion site. These events can provoke A-chain translocation which follows membrane fusion.