Abstract

The ultrastructural features of developing haustoria and associated haustorial mother cell septa were examined in the cowpea rust fungus,Uromyces phaseoli var.vignae. Significant changes occurred in the septal pore apparatus, and in structures associated with the septum, during the formation of a haustorium. The originally open septal pore became plugged with osmiophilic material and, on both sides of the septum, elaborations of the plasmalemma developed whose maximum growth coincided with the close association of numerous mitochondria. Those elaborations on the haustorial mother cell side consisted of irregular whorls and tangles of membranes and disappeared prior to the formation of the penetration peg. In contrast, the more tubular protrusions on the hyphal side of the septum reached their maximum length of about 900 nm during the breaching of the host cell wall but subsequently shrank rapidly until, by the time the haustorium was mature, they and their osmiophilic matrix adjacent to the septal wall had usually disappeared. By this time, the osmiophilic plug had also disappeared and the pore now resembled that most commonly seen in other portions of the vegetative mycelium in being covered on either side by a thin layer of osmiophilic material and in being surrounded by a region of differentiated cytoplasm bordered with microbodies. Little change in this septal pore apparatus was observed as the haustorium aged until the tonoplast of the haustorial mother cell broke down. At this time the differentiated regions of the cytoplasm, and the associated microbodies, disappeared from the haustorial mother cell side of the septum.

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