Apoptosis of natural killer (NK) cells can be induced by non-specific physical damage (UV irradiation, heat shock) or by simultaneous ligation of the CD16 and the interleukin-2 receptor (IL-2R) molecules, but not with either anti-CD16 or IL-2 alone. Whereas blockade of GTP-binding protein (G protein)-mediated signal transduction using ADP-ribosylating bacterial toxins or the GTPase-resistant GTP analog guanosine 5'-0-(3-thiotriphosphate (GTP gamma S) does not affect non-specific induction of NK cell apoptosis, such interventions do inhibit induction of apoptosis by anti-CD16/IL-2. The G proteins involved in the regulation of activation-induced NK apoptosis are sensitive to pertussis toxin (PTX) and to the non-specific GTP analog GTP gamma S but not to cholera toxin, Pseudomonas exotoxin A or diphtheria toxin. A pertussis toxin mutant that lacks ADP-ribosylating activity, but conserves the membrane translocating and T cell-mitogenic effects of the native molecule, fails to inhibit NK apoptosis. To exert their apoptosis-inhibitory effect, PTX and GTP gamma S must be employed before cells are activated. Later addition has no effect, suggesting the implication of G proteins in the transmission of apoptosis-inducing signals, but not in the effector stage of apoptosis. Pre-incubation with PTX or GTP gamma S does not affect the activation of NK cells by CD16 cross-linking, IL-2 stimulation- or both, as assessed by the induction of CD69 expression, protein tyrosine phosphorylation and calcium mobilization. Moreover, neither PTX nor GTP gamma S compromise the effector function of NK cells or the susceptibility of target cells to NK-mediated lysis. These data suggest apoptosis as a novel mechanism by which NK responses may be controlled in vivo, as well as an experimental and therapeutical strategy to counteract endogenous down-regulation of NK responses.