Abstract

Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) was infused into the aorta of pentobarbitone-anesthetized rats (n = 12) in stepwise increasing doses of 0.001 to 10 μg/rat at rates varying from 0.3 pmol/min/kg to 3000 pmol/min/kg over 3 min. Blood was withdrawn from the vena cava inferior for the measurement of oxytocin (OT) and vasopressin (AVP) by RIA. The loss of blood was compensated for by infusion of isotonic saline (0.9% NaCl with 0.5% human serum albumin). Control rats received this solution only (n = 11). VIP infusions resulted in a dose-dependent increase in plasma OT which was significantly greater than the slight rise observed in the controls. The difference from controls was significant at infusion rates of 3 pmol/min/kg and more. Plasma AVP, on the other hand, did not rise in response to VIP infusions until the infusion rate was increased to 300 and 3000 pmol/min/kg. At these infusion rates, the increments in AVP were much smaller than those of OT, the levels during the highest infusion rates rising to 8.6 ± 2.8 and 27.2 ± 4.8 μU/ml, respectively (log normal means). The preferential release of OT in response to exogenous VIP in rats differs from the response in cats where intracarotid administration of VIP resulted in the release of proportionately more AVP than OT. Immunoreactive VIP is found in the hypothalamo-neurohypophyseal system of rats in close proximity of some of the magnocellular neurons as well as within the nerve terminals. This, together with our data, suggests that endogenous VIP may participate in the release mechanism for OT in rats.

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