The Naked Mole Rat's Latest Superpower
In 2013 a cell biologist from the University of Rochester revealed that the sugar molecule hyaluronan is the key to the animal’s cancer resistance. Although hyaluronan can be found in all animals, playing a role in how cells multiply and stick together, the hyaluronan molecule is supersized in naked mole rats, and it is not broken down by enzymes as quickly as it is in other animals. It appears that the buildup of hyaluronan inside the bodies of the naked mole rats keeps their cells from clumping together to form tumors
Then, in 2017, German and American researchers found that another form of sugar processing gives naked mole rats the ability to survive in low-oxygen conditions such as those that occur underground. So enhanced is this ability that they can survive without oxygen for more than 18 minutes. The brain cells of other mammals begin to die without oxygen, because oxygen is required in glycolysis (a process that releases energy that fuels cells) to break down the sugar glucose. Naked mole rats also rely on glycolysis, but, when they are placed in oxygen-free conditions, they can switch to a modified pathway that relies on the sugars fructose and sucrose.
The Naked Mole Rat's Latest Superpower
Reviewed by faster share
on
August 12, 2018
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Reviewed by faster share
on
August 12, 2018
Rating:
