Abstract

Seedlings of a susceptible inbred line of male-fertile corn were inoculated with conidia of Helminthosporium maydis race O. Histological and ultrastructural observations of mesophyll, bundle sheath and phloem were made over a period of 8 days. Histological observations at 1 day revealed that lesions were comprised of several dead mesophyll cells bordered by a pair of vascular bundles. By 3 days lesions had developed their characteristic appearance caused by mesophyll collapse and had increased to a width of 10–12 bundles. At the ultrastructural level, the first signs of mesophyll cell change were rupture of the tonoplast and swelling of the mitochondrial matrix followed by a disintegration of the cytoplasm and swelling of the chloroplast stroma. Following these changes the cytoplasm became filled with an electron dense material and the plasmalemma ruptured leaving only partial remnants of chloroplasts as recognizable organelles. All of these changes occurred by 1 day. Bundle sheath cells were more resistant and intact cells could be observed in 3-day-old lesions. Phloem showed signs of degeneration by 1 day with distortion of the sieve-tube element membranes and disintegration of the companion cell cytoplasm. By 4 days the phloem had disintegrated.

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