Københavns Universitet      -        Det Natur- og Biovidenskabelige Fakultet

Mysterious hormone makes insulin work better

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It makes animals want to eat less and is found in levels 100 times greater in pregnant women. A new study from the University of Copenhagen also reports that it makes insulin work better in rodents. While its role in our bodies remains shrouded in mystery, it appears as if the GDF15 hormone may be able to help diabetics and those who are overweight.

Photo: Getty
Photo: Getty

More than 500 million people worldwide suffer from diabetes. Roughly 2.6 billion are overweight. Something that both groups have in common is that the hormone insulinhormones does not work nearly as well for them as it does for people who are healthy and in a normal weight range. As such, researchers have long been eager to better understand the processes that affect insulin function in our bodies so as to be able to develop new medications and treatment types.

In a new study, researchers from the University of Copenhagen’s Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports (NEXS) studied how GDF15affects insulin sensitivity in rodents.

The researchers were the first to discover that GDF15 actually improves sensitivity in mice and rats, making them better suited to regulate their blood sugar and absorb energy in their muscles. The result, now published in the renowned scientific journal Cell Metabolism, increases our general understanding of GDF15. 

"Increased insulin sensitivity is an important indicator of health and critical for avoiding type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure and cardiovascular diseases. That we are now able to demonstrate a beneficial effect of GDF15 in rodents raises interesting perspectives," explains Professor Erik Richter, the study’s senior author.   

Fat rats lose weight, lean ones benefit from improved insulin action

Among other things, previous studies demonstrated that the hormone caused obese rodents to lose weight because the hormone acts as an appetite suppressant.

In this study, the researchers wanted to see if lean rodents benefitted from receiving the GDF15 hormone, even though they did not lose weight. The experiments showed that a low dose of GDF15 every other day, spread over three occasions, improved insulin action.

"Because quite high doses of GDF15 are needed to curb appetite, our lean rodents didn't lose weight with the low doses that we gave them. However, their insulin sensitivity improved. It turned out that it was primarily their liver and fatty tissue that increased insulin sensitivity, and not the muscles, as we had anticipated," says Richter.

High insulin sensitivity is a good health indicator because lowered insulin sensitivity – called insulin resistance – strains insulin secretion in the pancreas and can lead to the onset of type 2 diabetes, among other things.

The hormone’s ability to act as an appetite suppressant has also been tested in humans – but without quite as positive results, as nausea was a side effect. However, nausea is also seen with other appetite suppressant formulations. Whether GDF15 also increases insulin sensitivity in humans remains to be studied.

Many strange effects in the body

The GDF15 stress hormone is not unknown among scientists due to it being secreted in a very diverse range of physiological states. For example, GDF15 concentrations increase during physical activity, with aging, and in people who are overweight or battling serious diseases like cancer or heart disease. In pregnant women, levels of the hormone are elevated 100 times above normal. The better a person’s physical fitness, the lower their GDF15 levels are in the bloodstream while at rest.

One could be tempted to consider GDF15 as an inverse biomarker of general health – the lower the GDF15 while at rest, the better. But as with all of the other physiological conditions in which this mysterious hormone is in some way involved, the researchers still do not know exactly what role GDF15 plays:

"The hormone stands out because it is secreted in so many different situations without us fully understanding why and what its effect is. On one hand, we can see that it improves insulin sensitivity in mice, which is a positive physiological effect. But at the same time, it’s a hormone that increases under various types of stress. How exactly this is all connected is something that we need to investigate more thoroughly," concludes Erik Richter.

About the study and GDF15

  • The GDF15 hormone (Growth Differentiation Factor 15) is found in blood and increases as a result of various types of stress. This can be due to various diseases, such as cancer and heart disease, or from physical activity and pregnancy.
  • GDF15 also increases insulin sensitivity in rodents, according to new research from the University of Copenhagen ’s Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports (NEXS).
  • The study has been published in the renowned scientific journal Cell Metabolism

 

Contacts

Erik Richter
Professor
Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports
University of Copenhagen
Mobile: +45 28 75 16 26
Mail: erichter@nexs.ku.dk

Michael Skov Jensen
Journalist and team coordinator
The Faculty of Science
University of Copenhagen
Mobile: +45 93 56 58 97
Mail: msj@science.ku.dk

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