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Publication : Pharmacological but not physiological GDF15 suppresses feeding and the motivation to exercise.

First Author  Klein AB Year  2021
Journal  Nat Commun Volume  12
Issue  1 Pages  1041
PubMed ID  33589633 Mgi Jnum  J:304627
Mgi Id  MGI:6515029 Doi  10.1038/s41467-021-21309-x
Citation  Klein AB, et al. (2021) Pharmacological but not physiological GDF15 suppresses feeding and the motivation to exercise. Nat Commun 12(1):1041
abstractText  Growing evidence supports that pharmacological application of growth differentiation factor 15 (GDF15) suppresses appetite but also promotes sickness-like behaviors in rodents via GDNF family receptor alpha-like (GFRAL)-dependent mechanisms. Conversely, the endogenous regulation of GDF15 and its physiological effects on energy homeostasis and behavior remain elusive. Here we show, in four independent human studies that prolonged endurance exercise increases circulating GDF15 to levels otherwise only observed in pathophysiological conditions. This exercise-induced increase can be recapitulated in mice and is accompanied by increased Gdf15 expression in the liver, skeletal muscle, and heart muscle. However, whereas pharmacological GDF15 inhibits appetite and suppresses voluntary running activity via GFRAL, the physiological induction of GDF15 by exercise does not. In summary, exercise-induced circulating GDF15 correlates with the duration of endurance exercise. Yet, higher GDF15 levels after exercise are not sufficient to evoke canonical pharmacological GDF15 effects on appetite or responsible for diminishing exercise motivation.
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