Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a high-burden medical condition, and current diagnostic criteria can only assess AKI after full manifestation. Stress marker growth differentiation factor 15 (GDF15) was reported to have a role in kidney injury of critical patients. Herein, we evaluated dynamic changes in GDF15 across diverse AKI scenarios and explored the underlying mechanisms of its induction. Serum parameters and renal lesions were analyzed in mouse models of unilateral ischemia-reperfusion injury (uni-IRI) and unilateral ureteral obstruction (UUO). The human proximal tubular (HK−2) cell line was stimulated with various conditions, and induction of GDF15 expression was determined. Serum GDF15 levels were rapidly induced within hours after injury in both animal models and declined thereafter. Renal GDF15 expression exhibited a temporary and early increased induction and was mainly located in aquaporin 1-positive proximal tubules in both unilateral AKI model tissues. In cell experiments, rapid GDF15 production was highly induced by t-BHP and CoCl2. Treatment with either an antioxidant or mitogen-activated protein kinase inhibitors abolished t-BHP- and CoCl2-mediated GDF15 expression. In addition, silencing nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 expression also reduced the basal and t-BHP- or CoCl2-mediated GDF15 expression level in HK-2 cells. Our data showed that elevated serum GDF15 levels could be detected early in unilateral AKI models without notable alterations in kidney function parameters. GDF15 expression was associated with oxidative stress- and hypoxia-mediated proximal tubular cell injury. These data document that elevated serum GDF15 can possibly serve as an early biomarker for proximal tubular cell injury in AKI.