Abstract
Eggplant roots colonized by a sterile, white mycelial endophyte (SWM) were previously found to become highly resistant to Verticillium wilt. SWM alone, however, caused no visible, disease symptoms, such as wilting or necrosis. The mechanism of the symptomless infection by SWM was investigated in this study. Electron microscopy revealed that hyphae of SWM were abundant on and inside the root epidermal cells 2 weeks after inoculation. Many terminal appressoria formed from apical tips of hyphae, and heavy degradation of the host cell walls was evident where hyphae accumulated. By 4 weeks following inoculation, penetration pegs easily breached epidermal cells, and the infection hyphae penetrated outer cortical cells. In response to the hyphal ingress, numerous tubule-like vesicles and membrane-bound, multivesicular bodies accumulated in cortical cytoplasm near the infection sites of the outer cortical cells, but no visible signs of the host reactions were seen in the epidermal cells. Papillae developed at the spaces between cell walls and plasma membranes at the infection sites. The penetration hyphae often grew out of the papillae, but further hyphal ingress was halted in the middle cortical cell layer. By 8 weeks following inoculation, papillae that developed in these cells contained larger amounts of highly electron-dense material and were reinforced by multilamellate, fibrous elements. Hyphae that entered such papillae were confined to them, and the hyphal cytoplasm degenerated. As the result of the activated resistance reactions, root vascular cylinders remained intact, and the host plants did not wilt.
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