Cellular mechanisms of callose deposition induced in cowpea (Vigna unguiculata) leaves by the living cowpea rust fungus (Uromyces vignae), boric acid, or the fungus killed by polyoxin D, were investigated by the use of chemical inhibitors. Effects of the inhibitors were observed in both a resistant and a susceptible cowpea cultivar. The effect of inhibitors differed depending on the type of callose-inducing stimulus and cultivar used. Inhibitors of transcription (actinomycin D) and protein synthesis (blasticidin S, cycloheximide) lowered the incidence of fungus-induced callose deposits in both cultivars. Inhibitors of protein synthesis also reduced deposits induced by boric acid or fungal death. Callose deposition induced by the living fungus in the resistant cultivar was reduced by inhibitors of protein glycosylation (tunicamycin, deoxynojirimycin) and microfilament function (cytochalasins B and E), but these inhibitors had no effect on callose deposition in the susceptible cultivar or on chemical or fungal death-induced deposition in either cultivar. No reduction in callose deposits was observed in plants treated with inhibitors of Golgi-associated vesicle transfer (brefeldin A, monensin) or microtubule polymerization (colchicine, oryzalin). The results suggest that the cellular processes involved in callose deposition differ with differing triggering stimuli and that callose deposition triggered by the living fungus in a resistant host cultivar is not a typical wound or damage response. Keywords: callose, infection, inhibitors, resistance, rust fungi.