School of Kinesiology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
British Columbia Children's Hospital Research Institute, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2024 Dec 1;137(6):1512-1523. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00519.2024. Epub 2024 Oct 31.
Growth differentiation factor 15 (GDF15) is a stress-induced cytokine that increases with exercise and is thought to increase corticosterone and lipid utilization. How postexercise nutrient availability impacts GDF15 and the physiological role that GDF15 plays during and/or in the recovery from exercise has not been elucidated. The purpose of this investigation was to examine how postexercise nutrient availability impacts GDF15 and to use this as a model to explore associations between GDF15, corticosterone, and indices of lipid and carbohydrate metabolism. In addition, we explored the causality of these relationships using GDF15-deficient mice. Male and female C57BL/6J mice ran for 2 hours on a treadmill and were euthanized immediately or 3 hours after exercise with or without access to a chow diet. In both sexes, circulating concentrations of GDF15, corticosterone, nonesterified fatty acids (NEFA), and beta-hydroxybutyrate (BHB) were higher immediately postexercise and remained elevated when food was withheld during the recovery period. While serum GDF15 was positively associated with corticosterone, BHB, and NEFA, increases in these factors were similar in wild-type and GDF15 mice following exercise. The lack of a genotype effect was not explained by differences in insulin, glucagon, or epinephrine after exercise. Our findings provide evidence that while GDF15 is associated with increases in corticosterone and indices of lipid utilization this is not a causal relationship. Circulating growth differentiation factor 15 (GDF15) increases during exercise, but the physiological role that it plays has not been elucidated. Recent data suggest that GDF15 regulates corticosterone and lipid utilization. Here we demonstrate that postexercise nutrient availability influences GDF15 in the recovery from exercise and GDF15 is associated with corticosterone and indices of lipid utilization. However, the associations were not causal as exercise-induced increases in fatty acids, beta-hydroxybutyrate, and corticosterone were intact in GDF15 mice.
生长分化因子 15(GDF15)是一种应激诱导的细胞因子,随着运动而增加,被认为会增加皮质酮和脂质利用。运动后营养物质的可获得性如何影响 GDF15,以及 GDF15 在运动中和/或运动恢复过程中所扮演的生理角色尚未阐明。本研究的目的是探讨运动后营养物质的可获得性如何影响 GDF15,并以此作为模型来探索 GDF15、皮质酮和脂质及碳水化合物代谢指标之间的关系。此外,我们还使用 GDF15 缺陷小鼠来探索这些关系的因果关系。雄性和雌性 C57BL/6J 小鼠在跑步机上跑步 2 小时,然后立即或运动后 3 小时处死,此时它们可以获得或不获得标准食物。在两性中,循环中的 GDF15、皮质酮、非酯化脂肪酸(NEFA)和β-羟丁酸(BHB)在运动后即刻升高,在恢复期禁食时仍保持升高。虽然血清 GDF15 与皮质酮、BHB 和 NEFA 呈正相关,但运动后 GDF15 缺陷小鼠和野生型小鼠这些因子的增加相似。运动后缺乏基因型效应不能用胰岛素、胰高血糖素或肾上腺素的差异来解释。我们的研究结果表明,虽然 GDF15 与皮质酮和脂质利用的增加有关,但这不是因果关系。循环中的生长分化因子 15(GDF15)在运动过程中增加,但它所起的生理作用尚未阐明。最近的数据表明,GDF15 调节皮质酮和脂质利用。在这里,我们证明运动后营养物质的可获得性会影响运动恢复过程中的 GDF15,并且 GDF15 与皮质酮和脂质利用指标有关。然而,由于 GDF15 缺陷小鼠的脂肪酸、β-羟丁酸和皮质酮的运动诱导增加仍然完整,因此这些关联不是因果关系。