Abstract

Electron microscopy of sugarbeet leaves infected with the beet curly top virus confirmed earlier findings by light microscopy that the hyperplastic phloem consists mainly of sieve elements that are more or less abnormal in structure. Some parenchyma cells and occasional companion cells may be present. The hyperplastic phloem develops in the place of normal phloem and sometimes in the adjacent ground tissue and the xylem. The sieve elements vary in shape and may be haphazardly arranged. The protoplasts of the sieve elements have the usual characteristics of this type of cell. The sieve element plastids develop from chloroplasts if the hyperplasia occurs in chloroplast-containing parenchyma cells. The cell walls have sieve areas that often are less well differentiated than those of normal sieve elements. The hyperplastic growth in the phloem of curly top diseased plants is discussed with reference to plant tumors induced by certain other plant viruses.

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