Advertisement
World

Naked mole-rats just got weirder - study shows how they survive on almost no oxygen

2-MIN READ2-MIN
Naked mole-rats are seen in a University of Illinois at Chicago laboratory. The species has a bizarre ability to survive on almost no oxygen by adopting survival tactics more commonly seen in plants. Photo: Reuters
Agence France-Presse

When deprived of oxygen, naked mole-rats have a unique ability to convert sugar to energy, a skill that might one day help treat victims of heart attack and stroke, researchers said.

These cold-blooded mammals have long been a source of fascination for scientists because they can live 30 years, rarely get cancer and do not seem to feel most kinds of pain.

Researchers now report in the journal Science that when naked mole-rats are exposed to oxygen levels low enough to kill a person in minutes, they can survive for at least five hours.

Advertisement

They do so by acting like plants, converting fructose to energy to keep their brain cells alive.

In the absence of oxygen, large amounts of fructose flowed into their bloodstreams, and were carried to brain cells.

Advertisement

“The naked mole-rat has simply rearranged some basic building blocks of metabolism to make it super-tolerant to low-oxygen conditions,” said lead author Thomas Park, professor of biological sciences at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x