The effects of vasoactive intestinal peptide on human natural killer cell function.
1985
Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) can be found at nerve endings in various tissues and has recently been shown to interact with human lymphocytes through an adenylate cyclase-linked receptor. Because various neuroendocrine factors are thought to influence immune responsiveness, we studied the effect of VIP on natural killer (NK) effector function. Human lymphocytes were incubated with 51Cr-labeled K562 target cells in a 4-hr cytotoxicity assay in the absence or presence of increasing concentrations of VIP. As expected from its activation of adenylate cyclase, VIP was inhibitory at 10(-6) to 10(-10) M. Interestingly, however, when lymphocytes were preincubated with VIP for 30 or 60 min, then washed and added to target cells, a significant augmentation of NK activity ensued. Binding studies revealed that preincubation with VIP resulted in increased numbers of effector-target conjugates, whereas cytotoxic activity in agarose was not affected at the single cell level. Studies with synthetic analogs of VIP revealed that the integrity of the 14-28 C-terminal amino acid sequence was essential for its activity in cytotoxicity. These data strongly suggest a functional role for VIP in modulating immune responses during neuroendocrine interactions with the immune system.
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