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Middle East blind mole-rat

The Middle East blind mole-rat or Israel mole-rat (Nannospalax ehrenbergi) is a species of rodent in the family Spalacidae.[2]

Middle East blind mole-rat
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Rodentia
Family: Spalacidae
Genus: Nannospalax
Species:
N. ehrenbergi
Binomial name
Nannospalax ehrenbergi
(Nehring, 1898)
Synonyms

Spalax ehrenbergi
Nannospalax carmeli (Nevo, Ivanitskaya & Bailes, 2001)
Nannospalax galili (Nevo, Ivanitskaya & Bailes, 2001)
Nannospalax golani (Nevo, Ivanitskaya & Bailes, 2001)
Nannospalax judaei (Nevo, Ivanitskaya & Bailes, 2001)

Taxonomy edit

It was formerly classified in the genus Spalax, but more recent phylogenetic evidence supports it and two other species belonging to the genus Nannospalax. Of the three Nannospalax species, N. ehrenbergi is the only one to also belong to the subgenus Nannospalax (unless the potential species within N. ehrenbergi are also considered their own species).[3]

Possible cryptic species edit

Cytogenetic studies have shown N. ehrenbergi in Israel may actually be a species complex containing several cryptic species with chromosome numbers 2n=52, 2n=54, 2n=58 and 2n=60. Close to the 'border line' of the niche of each subspecies there is mating between individuals from different subspecies/different 2n chromosome number. Birth of fertile offspring implies that speciation of the subspecies has not been completed.[4]

In 2001, four new Nannospalax species (then classified within Spalax) endemic to geographical regions within Israel, Palestine and the Golan Heights were described based on chromosome divergence by a team of researchers led by Eviatar Nevo. These were:[5]

  • The Mount Carmel blind mole-rat (N. carmeli) - endemic to Mount Carmel in northern Israel, including the vicinity of Afik, Kabri, and Tzippori settlements.
  • The Upper Galilee Mountains blind mole rat (N. galili) - endemic to Upper Galilee in northern Israel, including the vicinity of Kerem Ben Zimra settlement.
  • The Golan Heights blind mole-rat (N. golani) - endemic to the Golan Heights, including the vicinity of Mount Hermon, Quneitra and Eliad.
  • The Judean Mountains blind mole-rat (N. judaei) - endemic to the Judaean Mountains in central Israel and Palestine, including the vicinity of Kibbutz Lahav.

Although the ITIS and Mammal Species of the World still recognize these species, the American Society of Mammalogists and the IUCN Red List presently group these within N. ehrenbergi due to taxonomic uncertainty, such as lack of convincing genetic support for speciation, and the type locality of ehrenbergi itself likely falling within the range of one of these species.[6][7][8]

Description edit

The Palestinian mole-rat weighs 100–200 grams (3.5–7.1 oz). It has light gray fur and four sharp teeth, two large teeth in the upper jaw and two smaller teeth in the lower jaw. It has a life span of up to 20 years and is notable for its adaptability to severe lack of oxygen. In Israel, the blind mole-rat is a major agricultural pest. It digs long tunnels up to 80 centimeters deep and stores onions and tubers in underground chambers.[9] The exceptional ecological adaptation strategies of the blind mole-rats can be seen in their different tongue morphologies, as evidenced by their tongue papillae. The tongue papillae differ between individuals in a species to adapt to different environmental regions with variant soil characteristics and food types.[10]

Distribution and habitat edit

 
Soil mounds of the Middle East blind mole-rat in a field in Pardes Hanna-Karkur, Israel

N. ehrenbergi is found in Egypt, Iraq, Turkey and the Levant (Israel, Syria, Palestine, Jordan and Lebanon). The natural habitat of the mole is Mediterranean-type shrubbish vegetation, and it is threatened by habitat loss.

Use in research edit

According to Israeli researchers at Haifa University, the Middle East blind mole-rat is an important lab animal for researching cancer due to its apparent resistance to the disease.[9] In a 2013 study, data on N. ehrenbergi resistance to cancer was documented:[11]

-No spontaneous tumors have ever been noticed in blind mole rat, based on observing thousands of individuals along half a century.[11]

-Inducing cancer with chemical carcinogens that lead to 100% of the expected tumors in mice and rats after 2–6 months, respectively, indicate an extraordinary cancer resistance of Spalax: Only 2 out of 12 animals, and old ones (>10 years old; Spalax can live ~>20 years; 5 times longer than its evolutionary relative, the rat) developed the expected tumor with one of the carcinogens and only after 18 and 30 months.[11]

- Nannospalax cells (fibroblasts), and only Nannospalax cells, when grown in co-culture with cancer cells from different species, including a wide range of human cancer cells, kill the cancer cells. This is also true when "feeding" the cancer cells with the medium that Nannospalax cells grew in. Identification of the secreted substance/s by Nannospalax fibroblasts and the component on cancer cells' membrane they interact with, that lead to the cancer cells' death, can open a possibility for finding a general cure to cancer.[11]

Cancer resistance has also been noted in the two former species (N. judaei and N. golani) presently merged with this species.[12] N. galili had its genome sequenced in 2014.[13]

Studies on the growth of fibroblasts in vitro of N. judaei and N. golani showed that the process of necrosis replaces the role of the systematic apoptosis normally used in most organisms. Generally low-oxygen conditions, such as those common in blind mole rats’ burrows, usually cause cells to undergo apoptosis. One study showed that in adaptation to a higher tendency of cell death, blind mole rats evolved a mutation in the tumor suppressor protein p53, also used in humans, to prevent cells from undergoing apoptosis.[14] Human cancer patients have similar mutations, and blind mole rats were thought to be more susceptible to cancer because their cells cannot undergo apoptosis. However, after a specific amount of time (within 3 days according to one study), the cells in blind mole rats release interferon-beta (which the immune system normally uses to counter viruses) in response to over-proliferation of cells caused by the suppression of apoptosis. In this case, the interferon-beta triggers cells to undergo necrosis, and this mechanism also kills cancer cells in blind mole rats. Because of tumor suppression mechanisms such as this, blind mole rats and other spalacids are resistant to cancer.[15][16][17]

The involvement of interferon in the so-called concerted cell death of Spalax cells via necrosis was highly disputed.[15] Serious questions have been raised on the inconsistent methodology used that led to this speculation.

Observing the dirt displaced by burrowing mole rats can help archaeologists decide where to dig, since it often contains small artifacts like potsherds.[18][19]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Lövy, M.; Gazzard, A (2023). "Nannospalax ehrenbergi". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2023: e.T14326A22276839. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2023-1.RLTS.T14326A22276839.en. Retrieved 1 January 2024.
  2. ^ Musser, G. G. and Carleton, M. D. 2005. "Superfamily Muroidea". Pp. 894–1531 in Mammal Species of the World a Taxonomic and Geographic Reference. D. E. Wilson and D. M. Reeder eds. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore
  3. ^ Kryštufek, Boris; Ivanitskaya, Elena; Arslan, Atilla; Arslan, Emine; Bužan, Elena V. (2011-10-31). "Evolutionary history of mole rats (genus Nannospalax) inferred from mitochondrial cytochrome b sequence". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. 105 (2): 446–455. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8312.2011.01795.x. ISSN 0024-4066. S2CID 83596816.
  4. ^ Sözen, M et al., Some karyological records and a new chromosomal form for Spalax (Mammalia: Rodentia) in Turkey. Folia Zool. – 55(3): 247–256 (2006)
  5. ^ Nevo, Eviatar; Biologe, Israel (2001). Adaptive radiation of blind subterranean mole rats : naming and revisiting the four sibling species of the Spalax ehrenbergi superspecies in Israel: Spalax galili (2n=52), S. golani (2n=54), S. carmeli (2n=58) and S. judaei (2n=60). Backhuys. ISBN 90-5782-086-2. OCLC 634626236.
  6. ^ "Explore the Database". www.mammaldiversity.org. Retrieved 2022-03-07.
  7. ^ "Nannospalax ehrenbergi: Schlitter, D., Shenbrot, G., Kryštufek, B. & Sozen, M." 2008-06-30. doi:10.2305/iucn.uk.2017-1.rlts.t14326a113301086.en. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  8. ^ Arslan, Atilla; Kryštufek, Boris; Matur, Ferhat; Zima, Jan (2016). "Review of chromosome races in blind mole rats (Spalax and Nannospalax)". Folia Zoologica. 65 (4): 249–301. doi:10.25225/fozo.v65.i4.a1.2016. ISSN 0139-7893. S2CID 90250254.
  9. ^ a b "Better check that mole: Has an Israeli biologist found the key to curing cancer?" Haaretz
  10. ^ Kilinic, M.; Erdogan, S.; Ketani, S.; Ketani, M. A. (2010). "Morphological Study by Scanning Electron Microscopy of the Lingual Papillae in the Middle East Blind Mole Rat (Spalax ehrenbergi, Nehring, 1898)". Journal of Veterinary Medicine. 39: 509–515.
  11. ^ a b c d Manov, Irena; Hirsh, Mark; Iancu, Theodore C.; Malik, Assaf; Sotnichenko, Nick; Band, Mark; Avivi, Aaron; Shams, Imad (2013-08-09). "Pronounced cancer resistance in a subterranean rodent, the blind mole-rat, Spalax: in vivo and in vitroevidence". BMC Biology. 11 (1): 91. doi:10.1186/1741-7007-11-91. ISSN 1741-7007. PMC 3750378. PMID 23937926.
  12. ^ Cormier, Zoe (November 5, 2012). "Blind mole rats may hold key to cancer". Nature. doi:10.1038/nature.2012.11741. S2CID 101691159. Retrieved November 15, 2012.
  13. ^ Fang, Xiaodong; Nevo, Eviatar; Han, Lijuan; Levanon, Erez Y.; Zhao, Jing; Avivi, Aaron; Larkin, Denis; Jiang, Xuanting; Feranchuk, Sergey (2014-06-03). "Genome-wide adaptive complexes to underground stresses in blind mole rats Spalax". Nature Communications. 5: 3966. doi:10.1038/ncomms4966. ISSN 2041-1723. PMID 24892994.
  14. ^ Avivi, A; Ashur-Fabian, O; Joel, A; Trakhtenbrot, L; Adamsky, K; Goldstein, I; Amariglio, N; Rechavi, G; Nevo, E (16 October 2006). "P53 in blind subterranean mole rats – loss-of-function versus gain-of-function activities on newly cloned Spalax target genes". Oncogene. 26 (17): 2507–2512. doi:10.1038/sj.onc.1210045. PMID 17043642.
  15. ^ a b Saey, Tina Hesman (5 November 2012). "Cancer cells self-destruct in blind mole rats". Science News. Retrieved 27 November 2012.
  16. ^ Gorbunova, V.; Hine, C.; Tian, X.; Ablaeva, J.; Gudkov, A. V.; Nevo, E.; Seluanov, A. (2012). "Cancer resistance in the blind mole rat is mediated by concerted necrotic cell death mechanism". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 109 (47): 19392–6. Bibcode:2012PNAS..10919392G. doi:10.1073/pnas.1217211109. PMC 3511137. PMID 23129611. Retrieved 27 November 2012
  17. ^ Shams, Imad; Manov, Irena; Malik, Assaf; Band, Mark; Avivi, Aaron (2014). Fighting Cancer Underground: Hypoxia Tolerant Spalax Hides the Key for Treatment. The Plant & Animal Genome XXII Conference.
  18. ^ Hasson, Nir (2018-04-16). . Haaretz. Archived from the original on 2023-01-03. Retrieved 2023-01-16.
  19. ^ Sapir, Yair; Faust, Avraham (February 2016). "Utilizing Mole-Rat Activity for Archaeological Survey: A Case Study and a Proposal". Advances in Archaeological Practice. 4 (1): 55–70. doi:10.7183/2326-3768.4.1.55. ISSN 2326-3768. S2CID 130601715.

middle, east, blind, mole, israel, mole, nannospalax, ehrenbergi, species, rodent, family, spalacidae, conservation, status, least, concern, iucn, scientific, classification, domain, eukaryota, kingdom, animalia, phylum, chordata, class, mammalia, order, roden. The Middle East blind mole rat or Israel mole rat Nannospalax ehrenbergi is a species of rodent in the family Spalacidae 2 Middle East blind mole rat Conservation status Least Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Mammalia Order Rodentia Family Spalacidae Genus Nannospalax Species N ehrenbergi Binomial name Nannospalax ehrenbergi Nehring 1898 Synonyms Spalax ehrenbergi Nannospalax carmeli Nevo Ivanitskaya amp Bailes 2001 Nannospalax galili Nevo Ivanitskaya amp Bailes 2001 Nannospalax golani Nevo Ivanitskaya amp Bailes 2001 Nannospalax judaei Nevo Ivanitskaya amp Bailes 2001 Contents 1 Taxonomy 1 1 Possible cryptic species 2 Description 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Use in research 5 See also 6 ReferencesTaxonomy editIt was formerly classified in the genus Spalax but more recent phylogenetic evidence supports it and two other species belonging to the genus Nannospalax Of the three Nannospalax species N ehrenbergi is the only one to also belong to the subgenus Nannospalax unless the potential species within N ehrenbergi are also considered their own species 3 Possible cryptic species edit Cytogenetic studies have shown N ehrenbergi in Israel may actually be a species complex containing several cryptic species with chromosome numbers 2n 52 2n 54 2n 58 and 2n 60 Close to the border line of the niche of each subspecies there is mating between individuals from different subspecies different 2n chromosome number Birth of fertile offspring implies that speciation of the subspecies has not been completed 4 In 2001 four new Nannospalax species then classified within Spalax endemic to geographical regions within Israel Palestine and the Golan Heights were described based on chromosome divergence by a team of researchers led by Eviatar Nevo These were 5 The Mount Carmel blind mole rat N carmeli endemic to Mount Carmel in northern Israel including the vicinity of Afik Kabri and Tzippori settlements The Upper Galilee Mountains blind mole rat N galili endemic to Upper Galilee in northern Israel including the vicinity of Kerem Ben Zimra settlement The Golan Heights blind mole rat N golani endemic to the Golan Heights including the vicinity of Mount Hermon Quneitra and Eliad The Judean Mountains blind mole rat N judaei endemic to the Judaean Mountains in central Israel and Palestine including the vicinity of Kibbutz Lahav Although the ITIS and Mammal Species of the World still recognize these species the American Society of Mammalogists and the IUCN Red List presently group these within N ehrenbergi due to taxonomic uncertainty such as lack of convincing genetic support for speciation and the type locality of ehrenbergi itself likely falling within the range of one of these species 6 7 8 Description editThe Palestinian mole rat weighs 100 200 grams 3 5 7 1 oz It has light gray fur and four sharp teeth two large teeth in the upper jaw and two smaller teeth in the lower jaw It has a life span of up to 20 years and is notable for its adaptability to severe lack of oxygen In Israel the blind mole rat is a major agricultural pest It digs long tunnels up to 80 centimeters deep and stores onions and tubers in underground chambers 9 The exceptional ecological adaptation strategies of the blind mole rats can be seen in their different tongue morphologies as evidenced by their tongue papillae The tongue papillae differ between individuals in a species to adapt to different environmental regions with variant soil characteristics and food types 10 Distribution and habitat edit nbsp Soil mounds of the Middle East blind mole rat in a field in Pardes Hanna Karkur Israel N ehrenbergi is found in Egypt Iraq Turkey and the Levant Israel Syria Palestine Jordan and Lebanon The natural habitat of the mole is Mediterranean type shrubbish vegetation and it is threatened by habitat loss Use in research editAccording to Israeli researchers at Haifa University the Middle East blind mole rat is an important lab animal for researching cancer due to its apparent resistance to the disease 9 In a 2013 study data on N ehrenbergi resistance to cancer was documented 11 No spontaneous tumors have ever been noticed in blind mole rat based on observing thousands of individuals along half a century 11 Inducing cancer with chemical carcinogens that lead to 100 of the expected tumors in mice and rats after 2 6 months respectively indicate an extraordinary cancer resistance of Spalax Only 2 out of 12 animals and old ones gt 10 years old Spalax can live gt 20 years 5 times longer than its evolutionary relative the rat developed the expected tumor with one of the carcinogens and only after 18 and 30 months 11 Nannospalax cells fibroblasts and only Nannospalax cells when grown in co culture with cancer cells from different species including a wide range of human cancer cells kill the cancer cells This is also true when feeding the cancer cells with the medium that Nannospalax cells grew in Identification of the secreted substance s by Nannospalax fibroblasts and the component on cancer cells membrane they interact with that lead to the cancer cells death can open a possibility for finding a general cure to cancer 11 Cancer resistance has also been noted in the two former species N judaei and N golani presently merged with this species 12 N galili had its genome sequenced in 2014 13 Studies on the growth of fibroblasts in vitro of N judaei and N golani showed that the process of necrosis replaces the role of the systematic apoptosis normally used in most organisms Generally low oxygen conditions such as those common in blind mole rats burrows usually cause cells to undergo apoptosis One study showed that in adaptation to a higher tendency of cell death blind mole rats evolved a mutation in the tumor suppressor protein p53 also used in humans to prevent cells from undergoing apoptosis 14 Human cancer patients have similar mutations and blind mole rats were thought to be more susceptible to cancer because their cells cannot undergo apoptosis However after a specific amount of time within 3 days according to one study the cells in blind mole rats release interferon beta which the immune system normally uses to counter viruses in response to over proliferation of cells caused by the suppression of apoptosis In this case the interferon beta triggers cells to undergo necrosis and this mechanism also kills cancer cells in blind mole rats Because of tumor suppression mechanisms such as this blind mole rats and other spalacids are resistant to cancer 15 16 17 The involvement of interferon in the so called concerted cell death of Spalax cells via necrosis was highly disputed 15 Serious questions have been raised on the inconsistent methodology used that led to this speculation Observing the dirt displaced by burrowing mole rats can help archaeologists decide where to dig since it often contains small artifacts like potsherds 18 19 See also editWildlife of IsraelReferences edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nannospalax ehrenbergi Lovy M Gazzard A 2023 Nannospalax ehrenbergi IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2023 e T14326A22276839 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2023 1 RLTS T14326A22276839 en Retrieved 1 January 2024 Musser G G and Carleton M D 2005 Superfamily Muroidea Pp 894 1531 in Mammal Species of the World a Taxonomic and Geographic Reference D E Wilson and D M Reeder eds Johns Hopkins University Press Baltimore Krystufek Boris Ivanitskaya Elena Arslan Atilla Arslan Emine Buzan Elena V 2011 10 31 Evolutionary history of mole rats genus Nannospalax inferred from mitochondrial cytochrome b sequence Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 105 2 446 455 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8312 2011 01795 x ISSN 0024 4066 S2CID 83596816 Sozen M et al Some karyological records and a new chromosomal form for Spalax Mammalia Rodentia in Turkey Folia Zool 55 3 247 256 2006 Nevo Eviatar Biologe Israel 2001 Adaptive radiation of blind subterranean mole rats naming and revisiting the four sibling species of the Spalax ehrenbergi superspecies in Israel Spalax galili 2n 52 S golani 2n 54 S carmeli 2n 58 and S judaei 2n 60 Backhuys ISBN 90 5782 086 2 OCLC 634626236 Explore the Database www mammaldiversity org Retrieved 2022 03 07 Nannospalax ehrenbergi Schlitter D Shenbrot G Krystufek B amp Sozen M 2008 06 30 doi 10 2305 iucn uk 2017 1 rlts t14326a113301086 en a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Arslan Atilla Krystufek Boris Matur Ferhat Zima Jan 2016 Review of chromosome races in blind mole rats Spalax and Nannospalax Folia Zoologica 65 4 249 301 doi 10 25225 fozo v65 i4 a1 2016 ISSN 0139 7893 S2CID 90250254 a b Better check that mole Has an Israeli biologist found the key to curing cancer Haaretz Kilinic M Erdogan S Ketani S Ketani M A 2010 Morphological Study by Scanning Electron Microscopy of the Lingual Papillae in the Middle East Blind Mole Rat Spalax ehrenbergi Nehring 1898 Journal of Veterinary Medicine 39 509 515 a b c d Manov Irena Hirsh Mark Iancu Theodore C Malik Assaf Sotnichenko Nick Band Mark Avivi Aaron Shams Imad 2013 08 09 Pronounced cancer resistance in a subterranean rodent the blind mole rat Spalax in vivo and in vitroevidence BMC Biology 11 1 91 doi 10 1186 1741 7007 11 91 ISSN 1741 7007 PMC 3750378 PMID 23937926 Cormier Zoe November 5 2012 Blind mole rats may hold key to cancer Nature doi 10 1038 nature 2012 11741 S2CID 101691159 Retrieved November 15 2012 Fang Xiaodong Nevo Eviatar Han Lijuan Levanon Erez Y Zhao Jing Avivi Aaron Larkin Denis Jiang Xuanting Feranchuk Sergey 2014 06 03 Genome wide adaptive complexes to underground stresses in blind mole rats Spalax Nature Communications 5 3966 doi 10 1038 ncomms4966 ISSN 2041 1723 PMID 24892994 Avivi A Ashur Fabian O Joel A Trakhtenbrot L Adamsky K Goldstein I Amariglio N Rechavi G Nevo E 16 October 2006 P53 in blind subterranean mole rats loss of function versus gain of function activities on newly cloned Spalax target genes Oncogene 26 17 2507 2512 doi 10 1038 sj onc 1210045 PMID 17043642 a b Saey Tina Hesman 5 November 2012 Cancer cells self destruct in blind mole rats Science News Retrieved 27 November 2012 Gorbunova V Hine C Tian X Ablaeva J Gudkov A V Nevo E Seluanov A 2012 Cancer resistance in the blind mole rat is mediated by concerted necrotic cell death mechanism Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 109 47 19392 6 Bibcode 2012PNAS 10919392G doi 10 1073 pnas 1217211109 PMC 3511137 PMID 23129611 Retrieved 27 November 2012 Shams Imad Manov Irena Malik Assaf Band Mark Avivi Aaron 2014 Fighting Cancer Underground Hypoxia Tolerant Spalax Hides the Key for Treatment The Plant amp Animal Genome XXII Conference Hasson Nir 2018 04 16 Did King David s United Monarchy Exist Naked Mole Rats Uncover Monumental Evidence Haaretz Archived from the original on 2023 01 03 Retrieved 2023 01 16 Sapir Yair Faust Avraham February 2016 Utilizing Mole Rat Activity for Archaeological Survey A Case Study and a Proposal Advances in Archaeological Practice 4 1 55 70 doi 10 7183 2326 3768 4 1 55 ISSN 2326 3768 S2CID 130601715 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Middle East blind mole rat amp oldid 1223631131, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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