Why bats don't get sick - Arinjay Banerjee

1,340,431 views ・ 2021-01-26

TED-Ed


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00:07
If this bat were a human, she'd be in deep trouble.
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She’s infected with several deadly viruses,
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including ones that cause rabies, SARS, and Ebola.
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But while her diagnosis would be lethal for other mammals,
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this winged wonder is totally unfazed.
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In fact, she may even spend the next 30 years living
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as if this were totally normal– because for bats, it is.
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So what’s protecting her from these dangerous infections?
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To answer this question, we first need to understand
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the relationship between viruses and their hosts.
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Every virus has evolved to infect specific species within a class of creatures.
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This is why humans are unlikely to be infected by plant viruses,
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and why bees don’t catch the flu.
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However, viruses do sometimes jump across closely related species
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And because the new host has no established immune defenses,
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the unknown virus presents a potentially lethal challenge.
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This is actually bad news for the virus as well.
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Their ideal host provides a steady stream of resources
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and comes into contact with new parties to infect—
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two criteria that are best met by living hosts.
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All this to say that successful viruses
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don’t typically evolve adaptations that kill their hosts—
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including the viruses that have infected our flying friend.
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The deadly effects of these viruses aren’t caused by the pathogens directly,
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but rather, by their host’s uncontrolled immune response.
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Infections like Ebola or certain types of flu have evolved
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to strain the immune system of their mammalian host
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by sending it into overdrive.
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The body sends hordes of white blood cells,
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antibodies and inflammatory molecules to kill the foreign invader.
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But if the infection has progressed to high enough levels,
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an assault by the immune system can lead to serious tissue damage.
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In particularly virulent cases, this damage can be lethal.
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And even when it’s not,
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the site is left vulnerable to secondary infection.
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But unlike other mammals,
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bats have been in an evolutionary arms race with these viruses for millennia,
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and they’ve adapted to limit this kind of self-damage.
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Their immune system has a very low inflammatory response;
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an adaptation likely developed alongside the other trait
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that sets them apart from other mammals: self-powered flight.
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This energy-intensive process can raise a bat’s body temperature to over 40ºC.
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Such a high metabolic rate comes at a cost;
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flight produces waste molecules called Reactive Oxygen Species
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that damage and break off fragments of DNA.
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In other mammals, this loose DNA
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would be attacked by the immune system as a foreign invader.
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But if bats produce these molecules as often as researchers believe,
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they may have evolved a dampened immune response
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to their own damaged DNA.
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In fact, certain genes associated with sensing broken DNA
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and deploying inflammatory molecules are absent from the bat genome.
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The result is a controlled low-level inflammatory response
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that allows bats to coexist with the viruses in their systems.
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Even more impressive,
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bats are able to host these viruses for decades
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without any negative health consequences.
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According to a 2013 study, bats have evolved efficient repair genes
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to counteract the frequent DNA damage they sustain.
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These repair genes may also contribute to their long lives.
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Animal chromosomes end with a DNA sequence called a telomere.
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These sequences shorten over time in a process
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that many believe contributes to cell aging.
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But bat telomeres shorten much more slowly than their mammalian cousins—
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granting them lifespans as long as 41 years.
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Of course, bats aren’t totally invincible to disease,
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whether caused by bacteria, unfamiliar viruses, or even fungi.
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Bat populations have been ravaged by a fungal infection
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called white-nose syndrome,
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which can fatally disrupt hibernation and deteriorate wing tissue.
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These conditions prevent bats from performing critical roles
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in their ecosystems, like helping with pollination and seed dispersal,
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and consuming pests and insects.
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To protect these animals from harm, and ourselves from infection,
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humans need to stop encroaching on bat habitats and ecosystems.
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Hopefully, preserving these populations
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will allow scientists to better understand bats’ unique antiviral defense systems.
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And maybe one day, this research will help our own viral immunity take flight.
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