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The Fine Structure of Conidia of Botryodiplodia ricinicola with Observations on Effects of Chilling
Authors:MADELIN  M F; OGUNSANYA  O C
Institution:Department of Botany, University of Bristol Bristol BS8 1UG
Abstract:Conidia of Botryodiplodia ricinicola (Saccardo) Petrak havebeen studied, principally by freeze-etch electron microscopy.Freshly harvested conidia have a thin scaly surface layer, freeof rodlets, which covers an otherwise homogeneous-looking wallwhich is continuous with the single centrally-perforate septum.The contours of the plasmalemma are usually smooth. Nuclei andsmall vacuoles are numerous. Hydrophobic fracture faces of theplasmalemma, tonoplasts and nuclear membranes variously revealintra-membrane particles or corresponding depressions or both.Lipid inclusions are small and numerous. Compact orderly stacksof membranes are present, sometimes one in each locule of theconidium. Conidia of a strain insensitive to chilling were seento differ only in respect of the distribution of intra-membraneparticles on fracture faces of tonoplasts. Chilled and chilled-and-soakedconidia of the wild type showed fine-structural differencesfrom untreated conidia, most obviously in respect of the greatersize of some of the lipid inclusions, but also in respect offeatures of the plasmalemma which after chilling contained plasmalemmasomesand, after subsequent immersion for 15 min, showed annular depressions.Also, intra-membrane particles in some membrane systems showedaltered distribution between the two hydrophobic fracture faces.It is concluded that cell lipids and cytoplasmic membrane systemsmay be involved in the previously demonstrated chilling sensitivityof conidia of this species. Botryodiplodia ricinicola, conidia, ultrastructure, chilling effects
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