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Volume 17, Number 3,
Issue of February 1, 1997
pp. 1086-1100
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Growth Cone Form Is Behavior-Specific and, Consequently,
Position-Specific along the Retinal Axon Pathway
Received April 8, 1996; revised Nov. 11, 1996; accepted Nov. 13, 1996.
Carol A. Mason and
Li-Chong Wang
Departments of Pathology and Anatomy and Cell Biology, Center for
Neurobiology and Behavior, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia
University, New York, New York 10032
Video time-lapse microscopy has made it possible to document growth
cone motility during axon navigation in the intact brain. This approach
prompted us to reanalyze the hypothesis, originally derived from
observations of fixed tissue, that growth cone form is
position-specific. The behaviors of DiI-labeled retinal axon growth
cones were tracked from retina through the optic tract in mouse brain
at embryonic day (E) 15-17, and these behaviors were matched with
different growth cone forms. Patterns of behavior were then analyzed in
the different locales from the retina through the optic tract.
Throughout the pathway, episodes of advance were punctuated by pauses
in extension. Irrespective of locale, elongated streamlined growth
cones mediated advance and complex forms developed during pauses. The
rate of advance and the duration of pauses were surprisingly similar in
different parts of the pathway. In contrast, the duration of periods of
advance was more brief in the chiasm compared to those in the optic
nerve and tract. Consequently, in the chiasm, growth cones spent
relatively more time pausing and less time advancing than in the optic
nerve or tract. Thus, because growth cone form is behavior-specific and
certain behaviors predominate in particular loci, growth cone form
appears to be position-specific in static preparations, due to the
fraction of time spent in a given state in different locales.
Key words:
retinal ganglion cells;
growth cone morphology;
growth
cone behavior;
decision regions;
optic chiasm;
optic nerve;
optic
tract
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