Showing posts with label mutation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mutation. Show all posts

Viva La Evolution

Biology concepts – evolution, reproductive advantage, natural selection, co-dominance, X-linked genes

Last week we learned how less aggressive strains of malaria were used to treat neurosyphilis and how they may be useful in treating HIV infection. This week, we will turn 180˚ and see if other diseases can help prevent or lessen the effects of malaria. In the process, much can be learned about natural selection and reproductive advantage.

Plasmodium-infected red blood cells develop knobs,
the surface protrusions seen on the left erythrocyte.
These knobs are covered in a certain protein that
inhibits the immune system’s ability to recognize this
cell as infected and respond to it. The cell on the right
is also infected with P. falciparum, but has a mutation
that prevents knob formation. Image credit: Ross
Waller and Alan Cowman.
As youundoubtedly remember from last week, malaria is a parasite-caused infectious disease that is transmitted from human to human by mosquitoes. The parasite, Plasmodium falciparum, takes up residence in the red blood cells (RBC) to reproduce. The red cells burst to release the organisms, and this brings fever and weakness.

As far back as the 15th and 16thcenturies, quinine, made from the bark of the cinchona tree, was being used in Peru to treat malaria. Chloroquine, mefloquine, and quinine all work against malaria in similar fashion. Because of their neutral pH, they move across membranes easily including the lysosomemembrane. Once inside the lysosome, they become charged and can’t get out. This includes the trophozoite-containing lysosomes. In the RBC, trophozoites consume hemoglobin to obtain amino acids, and the heme is digested in the lysosomes to form a black malaria pigment. The quinine drugs in the lysosome bind up the heme and produce a toxic product (cytotoxic heme) that kills the parasite.

There are other classes of drugs that are useful against P. falciparum. Primaquine and the artemisinin drug, artesunate, act by a completely different mechanism from that the quinine drugs. Artesunate is excellent for treating P. falciparum malaria, while primaquine is often used in conjunction with quinine to treat P. vivax or P. ovale forms of the disease.

These drugs work by breaking down – weird, but this is how many drugs work. It isn’t what you swallow that kills the organism, it's the metabolites (the products made by your biochemistry breaking down the drug) that are active. In the case of artesunate and primaquine, the heme molecule in the red blood cells releases peroxide from the parent compound (the drug you take). This is just like the peroxide you use to wipe out cut in order to prevent infection.

Artusenate comes from the sweet wormwood
plant. Chinese herbal medicine has used it for
thousands of years. A recipe for an Artemisia
based malaria medicine was found on a tablet
from the Han Dynasty (206 BCE to 20 CE). It is
now being investigated as a treatment for breast
cancer, also based on its ability to form radicals.
Oxygenis crucial for cellular function because it can gain electrons and can react with many other atoms. Unfortunately, this also makes it harmful to your cells as well. Without proper supervision, forms of oxygen that have picked up an extra electron or two (peroxide, superoxide, nitric oxide) can react with many important molecules in your cells and leave the cell impossibly damaged.

The cell has defenses against free radical damage, but higher than normal concentrations render the RBC fragile; on the tipping point of destruction. Treatment with primaquine or artesunate makes the cell inhospitable for the parasite, the red blood cells become flop houses instead of five star hotels. The parasite’s operating instructions are to survive and reproduce, but these drugs pull up the erythrocyte welcome mat and the parasite seeks moves on to seek friendlier accommodations.

Unfortunately, some strains of P. falciparum have become resistant to some quinine drugs, especially chloroquine. The free radical generating drugs are still useful, but scientists in Western Cambodia recently reported artesunate drug resistance there. The parasite has evolved – evolutionary pressure is everywhere. The actions of humans have put pressure on the organism to evolve; those parasites with mutations to resist the drugs have a reproductive advantage, and those mutations get passed on. We had better have something else on our plate to combat malaria – we're working on it, but nature has provided some help as well.

There are natural defenses against malaria. We have seen that a fragile red blood cell helps in preventing are lessening the disease course of malaria. What else might do that? This is where human genes come into play.

Sickle cell diseasecreates a very fragile RBC. The mutation is just a single DNA base change in the hemoglobin beta chain peptide, but the result is a hemoglobin molecule that becomes pointy and can tear the red blood cell apart, or can get stuck in small blood vessels and prevent good blood flow. Reduced blood flow starves the downstream tissues of oxygen.

You get one gene for hemoglobin beta chain from each parent. The disease comes when an individual receives mutated genes from both parents. But that doesn’t mean that sickle cell anemia is a recessive trait. If you have one copy of the mutated gene, then you will have sickling problems when oxygen concentrations are low, like during exercise or at high altitude.
Sickle cell disease or a sickle cell trait episode can result in red blood
cells clogging up vessels and organs. On the left is an absolutely
HUGE spleen from a sickle cell patient. On the right is a normal sized
spleen, about 20% the size of the injured spleen on the left. A normal 
spleen is about the size of your hand, maybe a little skinnier.

If sickle cell anemia was a recessive disease, then a single wild type (normal) gene would be dominant, and you would show no disease. Instead, sickle cell anemia is co-dominant, one mutated allele (copy of the gene) is like having half the disease; it only shows up in certain circumstances.

This can still be a pebble in your shoe, just ask Ryan Clark, the Pro-Bowl safety for the Pittsburgh Steelers. In a 2007 game in Denver (altitude 5300 ft, 1616 m), Ryan almost died from a sickling attack during the game, and ended up having his spleen and gall bladder removed (remember that sickled RBCs can clog blood vessels, especially in blood rich organs like the spleen).

When Pittsburgh next played Denver, Clark didn’t even make the trip. This just happened to be the 2011 playoff game in which Tim Tebow threw a long touchdown pass in overtime to the receiver being covered by Clark’s replacement. Sometimes disease can change how sports evolve as well.

Thalassemia is another example. This is a group of inherited disorders wherein there is reduced production of one of the subunits of hemoglobin (hemoglobin is made from 2 alpha and 2 beta subunits). Alpha-thalassemias have mutations in the alpha subunit; likewise for beta-thalassemia.

Reduced subunit number means reduced hemoglobin number; the blood won’t carry enough oxygen, and the patient is constantly oxygen-poor in his/her tissues. Having two mutated alpha genes is lethal in the very young (called hydrops fetalis), but you can live with one mutated alpha gene, one mutated beta gene, or even two mutated beta genes.

This the broad bean, or fava bean in opened pod
and out of the pod in a bowl. The ancient Greeks
used to vote with fava beans, a young white bean
meant yes, and old black one meant no.
Sickle cell trait (one mutated allele), and thalassemias result in fragile erythrocytes. This makes them poor hosts for malaria, and confer a resistance to the disease - bad genes aren’t bad in every case. And just for good measure here is another example.

Favism, better called glucose-6 phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency (G6PDH), is an X-linked genetic disease; the gene is on the X chromosome. A female (XX) has two copies, so having one mutant copy is no problem, but a male (XY) has only one, so getting a mutated copy from your mother means that you ONLY have the mutated gene – this brings the disease.

The enzyme G6PDH works in several pathways; in your red blood cells, it is the only source of reduced glutathione, an important antioxidant. This means that things that trigger free radical formation in your red blood cells will trigger the disease – lots of weakness and lack of energy. If there is enough erythrocyte destruction, one could die.

Triggers include broad beans (fava beans), hence the name favism. Other triggers include many drugs, including primaquine and artesunate, the anti-malaria drugs that induce free radicals. Having G6PDH-deficiency is like having your own artesunate pharmacy right in your cells - you naturally have higher oxygen radical levels in your RBCs, so the malarial parasite can't live there.

Not by accident, sickle cell mutation is more prevalent in people of Sub-Saharan African descent, thalassemia mutation is more common in people from the warm, moist Mediterranean, and G6PDH-deficiency is found most commonly in the Mediterranean and Southeast Asia. These just happen to be the areas where malaria-carrying mosquitoes are most abundant. Evolutionary biologists make the argument that natural selection has maintained these genes in the populations because they provide a reproductive advantage to the species.

Left image: dark green is where there is thalassemia and yellow and red are where there is sickle cell. Right image, light green is where there is favism, and inside the blue outline is duffy antigen mutation. It is
interesting that these areas are also where malaria is endemic.


Youmight die from sickle cell disease, but probably not from sickle cell trait or beta-thalassemia. Learning not to eat fava beans makes the G6PDH mutation less lethal. One might very well live to an age where one could mate and pass on his/her genes. The diseases might still kill the patient, just not as soon as malaria would.

Malaria is a killer, and significantly, a killer of the young. In East Africa, children are bitten by the anopheles mosquito on average 50-80 times each month. They very well might not reach an age to reproduce. Therefore, having sickle cell trait, thalassemia, or favism provides a reproductive advantage in these environments and natural selection has resulted in these genes remaining in the populations in these areas.

The Duffy antigen (DARC) is important for P. vivax
entrance into the red blood cell. The Duffy binding
protein (DBP) interacts with DARC, the yellow parts
of the DBP are variable, and can be used to bind an
antibody. These variable areas overlap the binding
site, and can be used to make a vaccine for P. vivax.
Evolution maintains some diseases in order to combat others. It isn’t by design, it is by biology; no big plan is involved. This is exemplified by the Duffy antigen. All your cells have proteins on their surfaces. One, called DARC (Duffy Antigen Receptor for Chemokines, or Duffy antigen) helps your cells receive signals from your immune system. In those people with a single nucleotide polymorphism(SNP) for Duffy Ag, the antigen is not present on red blood cells (it is still on all other cells).

SinceP. vivax uses Duffy Ag as a way to enter the red blood cells, those with the Duffy SNP are resistant to P. vivax malaria – they don’t even have to suffer with some other disease, just a simple case of chance.  And chance favors the prepared mind – the Duffy antigen binding protein is now a candidate for use as a P. vivax vaccine.

Next week, how the plague was defeated by a genetic disease.


Chootong P, Panichakul T, Permmongkol C, Barnes SJ, Udomsangpetch R, et al. (2012). Characterization of Inhibitory Anti-Duffy Binding Protein II Immunity: Approach to Plasmodium vivax Vaccine Development in Thailand. PLoS ONE , 7 (4) DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0035769

For more information or classroom activities, see:

Malaria –

sickle cell mutation –

thalassemia –

favism –

duffy antigen –

An Infectious, Genetic Disease? Better Sleep On It.

Biology concepts – thermoregulation, sleep, genetic disease, infectious disease, central dogma of molecular biology, form follows function


Even rats have to get some sleep. It was nice to have the sleeping cap,
but unnecessary for a sleep deprivation study. Not a good use of
research dollars.
“I’m dying for a good night’s sleep.” Is this just hyperbole, or an impending warning of death? For laboratory rats, sleep deprivation does kill. During their insomniac downward spiral, the rats tend to get hot and can’t cool down – you know, they can't thermoregulate (see Can’t We Just Go With The Flow). This doesn’t mean that a loss of the ability to thermoregulate is what kills the rats, but it does suggest a connection between sleep deprivation and the hypothalamus.

We looked at the hypothalamus in our story of endothermy. This evolutionarily old brain structure implements a set point temperature for the body and receives information about the temperature of different parts of the body. When the body temperature deviates from the set point, the hypothalamus initiates bodily mechanisms to normalize the temperature.


Apparently one of the effects of sleep deprivation is that you
become semi-transparent.
People with severe insomnia tend to sweat more and have higher core temperatures even though they say they are cold. They also have extreme high blood pressure, pulse, and appetite. These symptoms suggest that sleep deprivation messes with the hypothalamus, since functions of the hypothalamus include themoregulation, sleep, hunger, thirst, reproductive readiness in females, and stress responses. What scientists don’t know yet is just how sleep deprivation actually kills the rats or harms people.

Dying from a lack of sleep is not just a rat problem, a few very unlucky humans die from it as well. Fatal familial insomnia (FFI) is a very rare genetic disorder; it has been reported in only 40 families worldwide. Before describing the truly horrible way these patients die, let’s look at what causes the disease.

FFI is caused by a point mutation in the gene for the prion protein PrPc. A point mutation means that one nucleotide on the DNA is changed, which leads to a change in the protein coded for by the DNA. Three unit (nucleotides) segments of the RNA (made from the DNA template) work together (called a codon) to code for one protein building block (amino acid). In the case of FFI, the amino acid called aspartic acid is changed to one called asparagine, and this changes the protein’s shape. 


The left image shows mRNA bases recognized in sets of three
(codons) by tRNAs with amino acids attached (Ser = serine, tyr =
tyrosine). The amino acids are linked to because proteins. The
lower section is the genetic code, showing which amino acids are
coded for by which codons. The right image shows how proteins
fold. The primary structure is the amino acid sequence. The
secondary structure comes from interactions of adjacent amino acids,
including spirals called helices or sheets. The tertiary structure comes
from the folding up of the entire protein, while the quaternary
structure comes from the interaction of different proteins into a
larger complex.
PrPc is made up of 250 amino acids linked together in a chain. Each different amino acid carries a different shape and charge and will interact with every other amino acid differently. The sequence of amino acids in a protein cause it to fold into a specific shape. It is the protein’s conformation (shape) that determines its function. This is the opposite of what we determined for evolved organism characteristics, where form follows function (see Do You Have To Be Ugly To Hear Well?). With proteins – function follows form!

Mutation of that single amino acid at position 178 (aspartic acid is negatively charged, while asparagine is positive) causes the folding, and therefore the function, of the protein to change. Aspartic acid is sometimes abbreviated "D", while asparagine is called "N"; therefore, the mutation is often indicated as D178N (D at position 178 is changed to N).

Many genetic mutations result in no change in amino acid, or a change that bring a large enough change the shape to cause a change in function. But when it does, good or bad things can happen. On one hand, the altered protein might confer an advantage to the organism, one that promotes survival in the environment or after an environmental change.This positive selection through reproductive advantage become the new normal – and this is evolution

On the other hand, the change in amino acid sequence, form, and function could be destructive. Disease might be the result, or perhaps a change in the organism that reduces reproductive success. One of these two results is what occurs with the FFI mutation of the prion protein.

When the mutated prion folds differently, it forgets its day job and moonlights as a sinister evil force. Every other prion protein it contacts, WHETHER MUTATED OR NOT, is coaxed into changing its shape. The new prions turn to the dark side, then change other prion proteins they contact, multiplying the effect. The poorly folded prion proteins will stick together, come out of solution, and form solids (plaques) where they settle out. In different prion protein diseases, this settling out occurs in different parts of the brain. In FFI, it is the hypothalamus.


In the top image, the PrPc on the left is properly folded. The green
represents alpha helices and the blue arrows represent beta-pleated
sheets. The right image shows the malfolded version of PrPsc. It is a
tighter structure, which partially explains why protein-degrading
enzymes don’t work on it. . The lower cartoon shows that the PrPsc
can force the PrPc to assume the improper form, and these then
aggregate into plaques.
The prion plaques are longer lived then the regular prion protein; normal cellular enzymes whose job it is to degrade proteins won’t work on prion plaques. And worse, if some of the malfolded protein is transferred to another animal, the recipient will develop plaques and disease as well. That makes this an infectious disease that isn’t caused by a bacteria, fungus, parasite, or virus. The prion is an infectious protein! What a terrible exception to the rules of infectious diseases.

We see here a protein that can replicate itself (not by building more of themselves, but by changing the form of normal proteins), and that makes it a repository of biologic information. This is an exception to the central dogma of molecular biology, which says that DNA is the sole information storing material.

FFI moves from person to person through heredity, but if a non-affected person comes into contact with some brain material from an FFI patient and that material entered their bloodstream, it can be transmitted this way as well. A prion protein disease called Kuru is famous for being transmitted from person to person.

The Fore tribe in Papua New Guinea once observed a ritual wherein they honored a dead tribe member by eating part of their brain (called ritualistic mortuary cannibalism - gasp!). Because of this, there was an epidemic of Kuru in this tribe in the early 1900’s. Over a period of 3-6 months victims would become unsteady, irrational with bouts of laughter, and then degrade mentally and physically to the point of death. There are more than twenty known prion diseases (mad cow disease, Creutzfeldt-Jakob, scrapie, etc.), and Kuru suggests that some might have no genetic component, only person to person transmission.


A member of the Fore tribe is shown on the left. This tribe used
to celebrate the lives of departed members by eating their brains.
This spread a prion protein disease called Kuru, a protein disease
that is infectious! The Fore tribe still lives in Papua New Guinea,
although there are fewer of them than before Kuru.
The differences between the various prion diseases are based on the specific prion protein mutation, what part of the brain is attacked, and how potent the prion is at refolding normal prion proteins. For instance, the D178N mutation in FFI also occurs in Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD), but a normal polymorphism (an amino acid change that doesn’t change form or function) at position 129 determines the fate. If amino acid 129 is methionine, the the person gets FFI, if it is valine, then they get CJD. 

The families that suffer from FFI have the D178N mutation, and also pass on the polymorphism for methionine (M) at position 129. Even more gruesome, some cases of prion protein diseases can be sporadic, not associated with either an inherited mutation or transmission. The malfolded prion can very rarely arise out of nowhere in isolated individuals.

The mutated PrPc is passed on via inheritance. You get one copy of each chromosome from each of your parents, so for an individual gene, you might get two normal copies, 1 mutant copy and 1 normal copy, or 2 mutant copies. Some diseases require that you must inherit two mutant copies for symptoms to show (recessive), but other require only one mutant copy (dominant, it dominates the trait from the other parent).

FFI is autosomal dominant (not associated with the X or Y sex chromosomes), so the chance of getting a mutant copy and the disease if one parent has it is 1 in 2; these are bad odds. But, if everyone with FFI dies, then why is the disease still showing up in families. Remember that we said above that some genetic diseases can, but don't have to, affect reproductive success. Unfortunately for those with FFI, the symptoms appear in the victims’ fifties, after they have had children. Natural selection doesn’t eliminate FFI from the population because FFI doesn’t appear affect reproduction.

The first symptoms of FFI include sweating while feeling cold. Later, the ability to get a good night’s sleep is lost, followed closely by the inability to nap. As the disease progresses, there are panic attacks, phobias, and no sleep whatsoever. After 4-6 months, mental abilities start to degrade. In its final stages unresponsiveness precedes death. 

This is especially sad way to die, because during the majority of the disease course the patient is aware of everything going on. At least with middle to late Alzheimer’s disease the patient is blissfully unaware of their dementia.


For both the gross and microscopic images, the left example is from prion protein disease victim, while the right example is from a normal brain. The brains on the left show how great the loss of tissue can be in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. The microscopic image from the diseased brain shows the plaques and the resulting holes in the brain structure. The small gaps in the normal brain on the right are a result of shrinking of tissue after it was on the slide.
On autopsy, the hypothalmus of an FFI sufferer looks like it has been hit with a shotgun blast. Holes are present in the tissue, representing areas where neurons have been lost due to inflammation and triggered cell death. The affected area of the brain takes on a spongy appearance, so prion protein diseases are lumped together and called transmissable spongiform encephalopathies (encephalon = brain and pathy = disease). Unfortunately, there are no cure, treatments, or vaccines for any of these prion diseases.

It is the hypothalamus' control of sleep cycles and circadian rhythms that promotes survival in animals. But what about plants? They don’t have a hypothalamus. Can they suffer from loss of circadian activity? In a word – yes!  And this will be our starting point next time.


For more information or classroom activities on prion proteins, central dogma, infectious or genetic disease, the genetic code or protein structure, see:

Prion protein and diseases –

central dogma of molecular biology –

infectious disease –

genetic disease –

genetic code –

protein structure –
nwabr.org/sites/default/files/learn/bioinformatics/AdvL5.pdf
 

Take Off Your Coat And Stay Awhile

Biology concepts – thermoregulation, ectothermy, endothermy, genetic mutation 

Let me introduce you to the most wondrous animal on the surface of the Earth, or under the surface of the Earth – the naked mole rat, Heterocephalus glaber (hetero  = different and cephalus = headed, refers to the fact that it lives in a colony where different members have different jobs; glaber = smooth skin).

Why, you ask, is this pruny thumb with two eyes the most incredible animal? Its odd looks and cutsie pink color belie the fact that this rodent is the most heinous rule breaker in all the biological world. It hasn’t meant a convention it wouldn't defy or a norm at which it wouldn’t thumb its nose.


Meet H. glaber, the naked mole rat. He has teeth, pink skin, and a probable
inferiority complex. The right image shows that H. glaber is not much bigger
than the thumb he resembles.
Take for instance, its name – NAKED mole rat. It is a mammal, but it’s naked. Mammals are always covered with hair or fur, but not his guy. Even we humans, the most hairless of all the apes (except for Robin Williams, he looks like he wears a sweater into the pool), look like we’re covered in fur compared to this rodent.

Look at yourself in a mirror. There’s hair on top of your head (well at least most of you). There is fine, unpigmented vellus hair (vellus = fleece in latin) that we know as peach fuzz, on your arms and legs when young and more coarse hair when older. You see eyebrows, and nose hairs as well. There is hardly a spot on us that isn’t hairy, save the palms of our hands to increase friction for gripping, and the soles of our feet, probably to keep it from tickling when we walk.

H. glaber eschews all this hair, but even he isn’t completely naked. From the picture, you can see the several sets of whiskers protruding from the wrinkly pink face that only a very devoted mother could love. The whiskers are crucial to helping the mole rat make its way in its surroundings, and therefore have not been lost, but why on Earth is it nearly naked?


The horn of Africa, a great place not to be noticed, and hot enough
to make underground living a plus.
The reason lies in how and where the naked mole rat lives. Found only in the desert of the horn of Africa (Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, Eritrea), this rodent that is neither a mole nor a rat lives underground its entire life. It burrows to find roots to nibble on, and they can be few and far between – it’s a desert for crying out loud!

In its tunnels, body hair imparts no advantage, and can contribute to negative outcomes, such as carriage of parasites (this is why scientists believe humans lost most of their hair), overheating, or getting stuck in narrow spaces. The mole rat’s skin helps with this last problem, although it seems counterintuitive. Defensive lineman in football like to wear very tight uniforms so that the offense has nothing to grab a hold of, and it would follow that a tight skin on the naked mole rat would also help it slide around and not get caught on anything.

But the advantage to big skin is that the rat can turn around almost completely in its uniform, and dig from any direction to move itself along. Like the owl that can turn its head 270˚, the naked mole rat can rotate its whole body to get out of a jam. That loose skin is also helpful in traffic jams; mole rats can slip past one another in a tunnel without even slowing down.

The whiskers serve to guide the mole rat around in its dark environment. It feels its way, it feels for its food, and it feels other mole rats that it may meet in the tunnels. Therefore, the hairs it has kept serve a definite purpose, and one can see why there are whiskers along its entire body, as opposed to just around its nose (see photograph above).

Other mammals might appear to hairless, some even have it in their name, but they don’t match H. glaber for nakedness on an overall basis. Rhinoceroses, elephants, pigs, they all have coarse hair on many parts of their bodies, so they can’t compete for the world hairlessness title. Even marine mammals like whales and dolphins have some hair (mostly when they are younger) and have nose hairs as well (so I’m told – I never looked up a dolphin’s nose). The Sphynx cat is supposedly hairless, but its entire body is covered in vellus hair.

Dolphins have whisker as infants, and the whisker pits help sense electrical fields. The Sphynx cat was revered by the ancient Egyptians, which was fine, because the Egyptians shaved off most of their own hair. On the right, the Xoloitzcuintli was said by the Aztecs to guard human souls in the underworld. It looks intimidating enough to be good at that.

Finally, there is the Mexican hairless breed of dog, properly called the Xoloitzcuintli or Xoloitzcuintle. While some of these dogs are completely hairless, it is a mutation rather than normally occurring. Hairlessness is the dominant form of the mutation, but even most of these animals have hair on their heads and tails. It is less common that the dog is completely hairless.


Powder was a 1995 movie about a young man with alopecia
universalis amidst other issues, like psychokinesis and a lack
of sun exposure.
Humans can also be hairless, called Alopecia universalis (alopecia is Greek for “fox mange” and universalis means everywhere). The condition is an autoimmune disorder, meaning that our own immune system has decided that our hair follicles are no longer part of us and are attacked as being foreign. Many human diseases can be autoimmune in origin, including diabetes and muscular dystrophy.

But of all the animals mentioned, H. glaber takes the crown as hairlessiest! And it serves a good purpose. Along with living underground, living in a community, having smooth skin, living in a desert, and having a limited food source – these features have contributed to another decision nature has thrust on H. glaber, it is ectothermic! It doesn’t warm itself, rather it assumes the temperature of its surroundings. Is that any way for a self-respecting mammal to behave?

In the cold, hair traps air and keeps it close to the body to act as thermal insulation. However, H. glaber is communal, and they have larger chambers in which they all huddle together during sleep. Over the course of the cold desert night, the mole rats will rotate positions, so no one animal is on the outside for too long, much like penguins do in Antarctica. This keeps them warm and negates the need for hair as an insulator.


An arrector pili muscle is attached to every hair on your body. You can
see that if it contracts (shortens), the hair will stand up. Thank you,
black cat for the Halloweenish demonstration.
Hair can also act to dissipate heat. In most mammals, each hair is attached to a small muscle (arrector pilori; pili is the plural) that can stand the hair on end and release the trapped warm next to the body, cooler air will then carry the heat away from the skin and the hairs, thereby reducing the temperature of the animal. Interestingly, this same action is seen when we get scared. The fright or flight release of adrenaline causes the arrector pili muscles to contract; think of how a cat’s tail gets bushy and the hair on its back stands up when scared. The arrector pilli muscles will also spasm in an effort to produce added heat when the skin gets cold (goose bumps).

Being underground all the time means that H. glaber is protected from the most intense heat of the desert day and therefore needs fewer thermoregulatory mechanisms.  So, the naked mole rat doesn’t need to dissipate heat via the arrector pilli action.

Finally, by practicing ectothermy, the naked mole rats reduce the amount of food they have to consume; they don’t need all that energy to produce heat and maintain a constant temperature. This works out well for them, since they live in the desert where there isn’t a heck of a lot food for them anyway. Could H. glaber have ended up as anything other than ectothermic? Its design just makes too much sense for its environment. We could learn a thing or three from how nature has tweaked its design.

And we have only scratched the surface of the ways that this rodent refuses to conform to established biological norms. Future posts will introduce more aspects of this amazing animal’s physiology, including longevity, pathology (or lack thereof), social structure, senses, immunity, biochemistry, and reproduction.

But you’ll have to wait for those stories. Next time we will turn our attention to a necessity of all life, sleep. But aren’t we learning that no single characteristic applies to ALL life – there’s always an exception.

For additional information, classroom activities or laboratories on H. glaber, animal hair, alopecia universalis, arrector pili:

H. glaber

animal hair –

alopecia universalis –

arrector pili –
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