Why Do So Many Animals Have Snot? - podcast episode cover

Why Do So Many Animals Have Snot?

Oct 03, 20225 min
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Episode description

Mucus is gross, but it does a lot of good in humans and the many other animals that produce it. Learn more in this episode of BrainStuff, based on this article: https://health.howstuffworks.com/human-body/systems/respiratory/mucus.htm

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff, a production of iHeart Radio. Hey brain Stuff, Lauren vogel Bomb here. It's not it's not the most appetizing subject. It might unsettle you to know that you swallow loads of it every day, even on your healthiest of days. And that's limy gelatinous goo we call mucus doesn't just roll down the back of your throat or clog up your nose. It's actually found on all of the wet surfaces of your body not covered

by skin. That includes the lungs, sinuses, mouth, stomach, intestines, genital tissue, and I sockets, just to name a few. So why do we have to put up with it? It's because, as disgusting as it may be, mucus plays a hugely important role in keeping us healthy, and not just as humans. The same mucus helps protect other creatures too.

But mucus is a bit of a mystery. Although mammals, fish, amphibians, mollusks, and even some invertebrates produce mucus, a new study has found that many mucus genes don't share a common ancestor. This is unusual because genes with a similar function often evolved from a common ancestral gene, but in humans, for instance, genes that encode for mucus are members of several families that probably evolved independently. The key component that makes mucus

slimy is a set of proteins called mucins. In this new study, published in August two in the journal Science Advances, a team from the University of Buffalo looked into the musins and saliva across forty nine different mammal species, and they discovered that some non musan proteins in some mammals

had evolved into musans. The researchers set in a press release, if these musins keep evolving from non musans over and over again in different species at different times, it's just that there is some sort of adaptive pressure that makes it beneficial. And then at the other end of the spectrum, and maybe if this mechanism goes off the rails happening too much or in the wrong tissue, then maybe it can lead to disease like certain cancers or mucosal illnesses.

But okay, let's back up a step. What is mucus and where does it come from? A mucus is made up almost entirely of water, but is spiked with small amounts of hundreds of compounds, including fats, salts, and proteins

such as slim ifying mucins. Mucus serves our bodies in different ways, by preventing tissues from drying out and cracking, which could expose them to infection, by lubricating the eyes, by protecting the stomach lining from acid, by removing or trapping substances and thus preventing them from getting into the lungs where bloodstream, and by keeping the bodies trillions of bacterial inhabitants under control. Our bodies are constantly producing mucus.

The respiratory system alone cranks out more than a leader or court of it every day. A lot of that slides down the back of your throat, into your stomach and eventually makes its way out of your body. When you're healthy, you're probably not aware of all the mucus rolling down the back of your throat at all. But when you're sick, your mucus becomes thicker and stickier as your body ramps up production of it to quickly flush

out any offending pathogens. And as we said, humans aren't the only creatures that produce mucus, and those other critters do some amazing things with it. For example, the visco elastic mucus that snails and slugs excrete acts as both an adhesive and a lubricant, enabling them to scoot seemingly effortlessly over rough terrain. All fish are covered in mucus, but parrot fish also puke out little mucus sleeping bags that they encase themselves in every night to protect them

from parasites. In sea lions, mucus keeps the eyes and nasal tissues moist, and they're said to launch snot rockets, across great distances. Female cave dwelling birds called swiftlets use their saliva to build gooey nests to stick to steep cave walls. The nests are delicacy in China and are boiled down without eggs to form a gelatinous soup called bird's nest soup. And mucus might do even more for

us in the future. Back in a biological engineering professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology told stat News that mucus was the unsung hero that had been taming problematic pathogens for millions of years. The team at m I T wants to figure out how to harness mucus to prevent infections, especially those caused by bacteria that are resistant to antibiotics. Today's episode is based on the article The Science Behind Why We All Have Stopped on How Stuff

Work stuck Um, written by Jennifer Walker. Journey Brainstuff is production of by Heart Radio in partnership with how stuff Works dot Com, and it's produced by Tyler Klang. Four more podcasts my heart Radio, visit the heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows

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