Lost Genes Explain Vampire Bats' Diet of Blood (2024)

March 25, 2022

4 min read

Lost Genes Explain Vampire Bats’ Diet of Blood

To survive on nutrient-poor blood, less can sometimes be more

By Jack Tamisiea

Lost Genes Explain Vampire Bats' Diet of Blood (1)

Vampire bats—and their legendary taste for blood—are the stuff of nightmares. “Essentially they are living Draculas,” says Michael Hiller, a genomicist at the LOEWE Center for Translational Biodiversity Genomics in Frankfurt, Germany. These tiny bats, which reside in forests and caves throughout Central and South America and often prey on livestock, are the only mammals that feed exclusively on blood. New research on the bats’ genome by Hiller and his colleagues helps explain how they are able to live on such a nutrient-poor diet.

Though vampire movies treat blood like an elixir, the watery fluid is nearly devoid of carbohydrates and fats, and it has few calories. Because of these deficiencies, vampire bats have lower insulin levels than other mammals and must drink up to 1.4 times their body weight in blood at each meal to get enough nutrients. Guzzling this much blood is dangerous, though, because it is laced with high concentrations of iron, which can wreak havoc on the digestive tract and liver. Despite weighing a little more than a single AA battery, vampire bats consume an estimated 800 times more iron in their diet than the average human.

Scientists have long been puzzled over how vampire bats survive on such a paltry diet. In an attempt to answer this question, Hiller and his colleagues recently plunged into the genetics of these legendary bloodsuckers using state-of-the-art sequencing techniques. They pieced together and analyzed the genome of the common vampire bat (Desmodus rotundus) and compared it with the genomes of 26 other bat species, hoping to pinpoint the specific genes that help vampire bats stomach blood.

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Their findings, published on Friday in the journal Science Advances, illustrate that when it comes to the genetics of drinking blood, less is more. Instead of developing extra genes to help process blood, the researchers discovered, vampire bats have actually lost 13 key genes—10 of which represented previously unknown losses—over the course of their evolution, compared with other species. “Typically, when we hear about mutations destroying genes, we think that’s a bad idea,” Hiller says. “But in this study, we found that losing certain genes can be beneficial for adapting to this very special diet.”

The ramifications of these deleted genes are evident everywhere, from the bats’ brain to their intestines. Some deletions were responsible for reducing insulin secretion, which is less important, thanks to the animals’ low-sugar diet. Others reduced the amounts of sweet and bitter taste receptors, making the bats less sensitive to the noxious taste of the blood they lap up.

One of the deletions was related to the sculpting ofthe vampire bats’ strange stomach. It is shaped like a floppy wind sock and specialized for a single task, says Melissa Ingala, a bat biologist at Fairleigh Dickinson University, who was not involved with the study. “That shape has evolved to fill up like a water balloon and get as much water out of the blood as possible so that all they’re left to digest is the actual solid cellular component of the blood,” she says. This means that vampire bats must begin urinating immediately after feeding to expel all the excess water sloshing inside their stomach and weighing them down.

Another lost gene, called REP15, was once responsible for keeping iron in the bats’ bloodstream and out of their intestines. Without this stopgap in place, iron is able to seep into the cells along the intestinal wall. But the researchers hypothesize that this seeping is actually good for the bats. The intestinal cells are short-lived and easily replaceable, meaning the bats can shed them through their digestive systems and expel them in iron-rich droppings instead of having the extra iron continue to course through their bloodstream.

The vampire bat brain may have also benefitted from a fortuitous gene loss. CYP39A1 is a gene primarily responsible for degrading a by-product of cholesterol digestion. Without it, the levels of that so-called metabolite in the bats’ brain skyrocket. Past research has determined that higher levels of the metabolite was responsible for increasing memory, learning and sociability in rodents. That may help explain why vampire bats appear to be smarter and more social than their bat brethren.

This potential cognitive boost and increased sociability helps the bats survive their blood-drinking lifestyle. Because of their nutrient-poor diet, vampire bats have meager stores of energy, making them particularly vulnerable to starvation. Going multiple nights without slurping up blood is often fatal. So vampire bats will readily help out a hungry roost mate by regurgitating blood into their companion’s mouth. Remarkably, the bats often return the favor, providing blood to others who have helped them out in the past. This makes it crucial to have a strong memory. “Vampire bats develop long-term friendships with each other built on this mutual food sharing,” Ingala says. In the compassionate world of vampire bats, blood is a dish best shared with the ones you care about.

Lost Genes Explain Vampire Bats' Diet of Blood (2024)

FAQs

Lost Genes Explain Vampire Bats' Diet of Blood? ›

The loss of REP15 most likely aided vampire bats in adapting to high dietary iron levels by enhancing iron excretion, the team explains in their study. The gene keeps iron in a bat's bloodstream and out of the intestines. Without this gene, iron can seep into cells in the intestinal wall, per Scientific American.

Why do vampire bats feed on blood? ›

Similarly, gastric acid is produced in the stomach to help break down solid food. Since vampire bats have an all-liquid diet, they have no use for this gene. On the other hand, blood is rich in proteins. Vampire bats lack a gene involved in inhibiting trypsin, an enzyme that works in protein breakdown and absorption.

What genes are vampire bats missing? ›

Notably, REP15 loss likely helped vampire bats adapt to high dietary iron levels by enhancing iron excretion, and the loss of CYP39A1 could have contributed to their exceptional cognitive abilities.

What is the diet of a vampire bat? ›

Each night, a vampire bat needs about two tablespoons of blood (20 grams), and cannot go for more than two nights without food. At one time, wild animals comprised most of the vampire bat's diet. With the increase in man and their cattle, this bat now feeds mainly on domestic animals, such as cows, pigs and horses.

What are the adaptations that allow vampire bats to survive solely on a diet of blood? ›

Vampire bats need special facial nerves that can sense the heat of their victims' veins, as well as those sharp teeth to access them while doing minimal damage to their host's skin. What's more, the bats require an anticoagulant enzyme in their saliva to keep their host's blood from clotting when they drink.

Why do vampire bats donate blood meals to starving vampire bats? ›

So the creatures have developed a friendly way to cope: sometimes well-fed bats regurgitate blood directly into the mouths of hungry companions. That blood may not be enough for a full meal, but it lets the recipient live and hunt another day.

Why do vampires consume blood? ›

Blood is essential for vampires due to how they kill and receive life through blood. When vampires bite, they receive strength and energy which gives them life. While doing this, they are killing souls by drinking their blood in order to regain their own life.

What is the vampire diet? ›

The Vampire Diet calls for its followers to eat only red foods at each meal. Fruits are easy to come by with almost all berries making the cut, as well as watermelon and cherries.

Why are vampire bats not considered to be harmful to humans? ›

Despite horror-movie depictions, vampire bats very rarely bite humans to feed on their blood. They feed primarily on domestic livestock, due to their abundance, and to a lesser degree on wild mammals and birds. They are very small animals, with wingspans of about 12-15 inches, and weigh less than 2 ounces.

Do bats need blood to survive? ›

If they can't find blood for two nights in a row, they'll die. But some vampire bats seem to be generous. Well-fed bats will often regurgitate—or spit up—blood to share with others in exchange for grooming.

Why do bats hang upside down? ›

Bats cannot run so it would be almost impossible for them to take off from the ground. A major advantage to hanging upside down is that bats do not need to generate lift to begin flight. They just drop out of their bed, open their wings and off they go.

Are there vampire bats in the US? ›

Yes, but not in most of the United States. Of the three species of vampire bats in North America, only a single specimen has been recorded for the United States in extreme southwest Texas.

What is the lifespan of a vampire bat? ›

Vampire bats live up to nine years in the wild and up to 20 years in captivity.

Why can t vampire bats learn to avoid a food that makes them sick? ›

Most animals learn to recognize a toxic food very quickly. If a snail or a quail tastes something new and then falls ill, it avoids the flavor in the future. Since vampire bats only eat blood, they never meet new flavors and they're practically guaranteed never to get a toxic meal.

How do vampire bats share their blood meal? ›

If a vampire bat drinks from a cow's ankle one night, it is likely to share that meal with another bat. They do it via regurgitation, but that's just a matter of style. Blood meals are hard to find, and they don't keep you going for very long. By one estimate, a bat needs to feed every 48 hours to survive.

What happens if a vampire bat bites you? ›

Although only a small amount of blood is taken, the bite wound is vulnerable to infection. A rabies-infected bat can transmit the disease, which ultimately kills the prey, harming farmers and their families financially. The infected bats also pose a public-health risk — few humans survive late-stage rabies.

Why are bats connected to vampires? ›

When these bats were first observed lapping up the blood of cattle in Central and South America they were quickly given the label of “vampires.” This idea was made concrete when Bram Stoker's Dracula (1897) depicted vampires shapeshifting into bats.

Do bat bites hurt? ›

Most people who have been bitten by a bat report a stinging or needle prick sensation. However, bat bites may not be noticed, especially if someone is asleep, and bat bites may leave little or no evidence of a wound or puncture.

Are vampire bats venomous? ›

Blood feeding (also known as 'haematophagy') is possible thanks to the venom that the bats contain. While sometimes debated, vampire bats are considered venomous as they produce a specialised secretion in their saliva (aptly named 'Draculin'), which facilitates their feeding.

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