Studies of the powdery-mildew fungus, Leveillula taurica, on green pepper. II. Light and electron microscopic observation of the infection process

Abstract
Almost all ulstrastructural studies of powdery-mildew fungi have been focused on the epiparasitic fungi. In this paper, one of the endoparasitic powdery-mildew fungi, L. taurica (Lev.) Arn., on green pepper (C. annuum L. var. angulosum Mill.) leaves was investigated by light and electron microscopy. Most germinated conidia formed a lobed adhesion body (similar to the appressorium in morphology but different in function) before stomatal invasion. The track of the adhesion body on the leaf epidermis was depressed, and no cuticular perforations were observed in it. After stomatal invasion, infection hyphae grew extensively into the intercellular spaces of the leaves and formed haustoria in the spongy- and palisade-parenchyma cells. The haustorium was flask shaped with a neck arising from the intercellular hypha. The overall profiles of the haustorium resembled those of epiphytic powdery-mildew fungi of other authors; the haustorium was composed of a nucleate central body and many anucleate lobes, and the entire structure was bounded by an extrahaustorial membrane. Papillae consisting of 3 distinct regions formed against the outer cell walls at the site of penetration. The most obvious alteration in infected host cells was a marked increase in the number of large lipid bodies. Lipid bodies increased in number with time after haustorial formation. They appeared first in the host cytoplasm near the extrahaustorial membrane, then in the extrahaustorial matrix and haustorial body.