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Review
. 2021 Feb 10:83:127-151.
doi: 10.1146/annurev-physiol-022020-045449. Epub 2020 Nov 23.

The GDF15-GFRAL Pathway in Health and Metabolic Disease: Friend or Foe?

Affiliations
Review

The GDF15-GFRAL Pathway in Health and Metabolic Disease: Friend or Foe?

Samuel N Breit et al. Annu Rev Physiol. .

Abstract

GDF15 is a cell activation and stress response cytokine of the glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor family within the TGF-β superfamily. It acts through a recently identified orphan member of the GFRα family called GFRAL and signals through the Ret coreceptor. Cell stress and disease lead to elevated GDF15 serum levels, causing anorexia, weight loss, and alterations to metabolism, largely by actions on regions of the hindbrain. These changes restore homeostasis and, in the case of obesity, cause a reduction in adiposity. In some diseases, such as advanced cancer, serum GDF15 levels can rise by as much as 10-100-fold, leading to an anorexia-cachexia syndrome, which is often fatal. This review discusses how GDF15 regulates appetite and metabolism, the role it plays in resistance to obesity, and how this impacts diseases such as diabetes, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, and anorexia-cachexia syndrome. It also discusses potential therapeutic applications of targeting the GDF15-GFRAL pathway and lastly suggests some potential unifying hypotheses for its biological role.

Keywords: GDF15; GDNF; GFRAL; GFRα; MIC-1; Ret; TGF-β superfamily; anorexia-cachexia; appetite; area postrema; metabolism; nucleus of the solitary tract; obesity.

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