Abstract

The general immunodepression found in ageing organisms may be related to changes in the neuroimmune network. In the present study, the migration capacity of lymphocytes from BALB/c mice of three different ages: young (12±2 weeks), adult (24±2 weeks) and old (72±2 weeks), has been assayed in vitro in response to three neuropeptides: sulfated cholecystokinin octapeptide (CCK-8s), gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) and neuropeptide Y (NPY) in a physiological range of concentrations (10 −8–10 −12 M). The capacity of migration to a chemical gradient or chemotaxis was studied by the Boyden's technique using f-met-leu-phe at 10 −8 M as chemoattractant. The results show a different response of lymphocytes to the different neuropeptides, as wells as to age, concentrations and locations studied. However, some similarities were found, for instance the three neuropeptides inhibited chemotaxis in thymus. The stimulatory effects that GRP and NPY exerted in young and adult mice were not observed in old animals. CCK-8s inhibited the chemotaxis in every organ studied, with the effect being more striking in old mice. Our conclusion is that stimulatory effects of the neuropeptides disappear or become inhibitory with ageing.

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