RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Growth cones are actively influenced by substrate-bound adhesion molecules JF The Journal of Neuroscience JO J. Neurosci. FD Society for Neuroscience SP 4370 OP 4381 DO 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.15-06-04370.1995 VO 15 IS 6 A1 SM Burden-Gulley A1 HR Payne A1 V Lemmon YR 1995 UL http://www.jneurosci.org/content/15/6/4370.abstract AB As axons advance to appropriate target tissues during development, their growth cones encounter a variety of cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) and extracellular matrix molecules (ECM molecules). Purified CAMs and ECM molecules influence neurite outgrowth in vitro and are thought to have a similar function in vivo. For example, when retinal ganglion cell (RGC) neurons are grown on different CAM and ECM molecule substrates in vitro, their growth cones display distinctive morphologies (Payne et al., 1992). Similarly, RGC growth cones in vivo have distinctive shapes at different points in the pathway from the eye to the tectum, suggesting the presence of localized cues that determine growth cone behaviors such as pathway selection at choice points. In this report, time-lapse video microscopy was utilized to examine dynamic transformations of RGC growth cones as they progressed from L1/8D9, N-cadherin, or laminin onto a different substrate. Contact made by the leading edge of a growth cone with a new substrate resulted in a rapid and dramatic alteration in growth cone morphology. In some cases, the changes encompassed the entire growth cone including those regions not in direct contact with the new substrate. In addition, the growth cones displayed a variety of behavioral responses that were dependent upon the order of substrate contact. These studies demonstrate that growth cones are actively affected by the substrate, and suggest that abrupt changes in the molecular composition of the growth cone environment are influential during axonal pathfinding.