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Pythons’ extreme biology may hold clues for treating human disease : ReadNOW



Pythons have several unusual traits that scientists are studying for potential clues for treating human disease.

Ari Daniel for ReadNOW


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Ari Daniel for ReadNOW

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When Skip Maas first adopted Agrapina, a mottled ball python, she hadn’t eaten in 14 months.

But as he soon observed, she was still a taut coil of spring-loaded muscle. Presented with a rat, she struck quickly, constricted it and then gorged on her meal.

And then her body performed another feat pythons are known for: It accelerated its metabolism dramatically to deal with the sudden influx of protein and fats, says Maas, “to help break down that meal and extract all of its nutrients.”

Most people prefer to keep their distance from pythons — and for good reason. A quick strike followed by relentless constriction can be lethal. But Maas, a molecular biologist at the University of Colorado Boulder, and his colleagues argue that these snakes may hold secrets that could help people live longer and better.

In addition to being able to fast for weeks or months and still maintain muscle tone, they’re able to grow and shrink their heart and other organs during feast and famine with seemingly no issue.


Molecular biologist Skip Maas holds his pet ball python Agrapina alongside fellow researchers Jack Gugel (left), Tommy Martin (right) and Yuxiao Tan (far right). Their collective hope is to translate the unique biology of pythons like Agrapina into medical treatments for humans.

Molecular biologist Skip Maas holds his pet ball python Agrapina alongside fellow python researchers Jack Gugel (left), Tommy Martin (right) and Yuxiao Tan (far right), in Boulder, Colo.

Ari Daniel for ReadNOW


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Ari Daniel for ReadNOW

“It makes a lot of sense that pythons, because they live in such extreme environments, would have secrets that would apply to humans,” says Leslie Leinwand, a geneticist who, two decades ago, first came up with this idea of translating the unique biology of pythons into medical treatments.

She’s currently the executive science officer of CU Boulder’s BioFrontiers Institute. And her lab runs an ongoing research project studying the reptiles, regularly publishing findings they hope could lead to medical breakthroughs.

Pythons “are so adapted to their lifestyle,” says Maas, who recently completed his Ph.D. in Leinwand’s lab. “I think it’s a really great avenue to look at something that evolution has already figured out to take inspiration.”



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