Discovery of New Cell Type in Pythons That Digest Bones

Researchers have identified a previously unknown cell type in Burmese pythons that is responsible for absorbing the skeletons of their prey. This finding sheds light on how snakes can consume bones and avoid calcium deficiencies.

Jul 9, 2025 - 12:11
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Research into the intestinal cells of Burmese pythons has revealed the existence of a previously unknown cell type, responsible for completely absorbing the skeletons of their prey.

Most carnivores eat only the flesh of their prey and avoid eating the bones or pass them undigested, but many snakes and reptiles often consume their prey whole, including the bones. The cellular mechanisms that enable them to do this have remained mysterious until now.

Snakes that are fed on boneless prey suffer from calcium deficiencies, and so bones are a required part of their diet. However, absorbing all the available calcium from a skeleton could result in too much calcium entering their bloodstream. \"We wanted to identify how they were able to process and limit this huge absorption of calcium through the intestinal wall,\" says Dr Jehan-Hervé Lignot, a Professor at the University of Montpellier.

Dr Lignot and his team analysed the enterocytes, or intestinal lining cells, of Burmese pythons (Python bivittatus) using both light and electron microscopy alongside blood calcium and hormone measurements. This study revealed the presence of a new type of cell along the intestine that is involved in the production of large particles made from calcium, phosphorus and iron.

\"A morphological analysis of the python epithelium revealed specific particles that I'd never seen in other vertebrates,\" says Dr Lignot. These particles were found inside the internal \"crypt\" of specialised cells that differed from traditional intestinal cells. \"Unlike normal absorbing enterocytes, these cells are very narrow, have short microvilli, and have an apical fold that forms a crypt,\" adds Dr Lignot.

To assess the function of these new cells, the intestinal cells of pythons were analysed after they had been fed on three different diets: a normal diet of whole rodents, a low-calcium diet of \"boneless prey\" and a calcium-rich diet of boneless rodents supplemented with injections of calcium.

The researchers found that when fed with boneless prey, these calcium and phosphorus-rich particles were not produced, but when fed with either a whole rodent or the calcium-supplemented diet, the cell's crypt filled with large particles of calcium, phosphorus and iron. No bone fragments were found in the python's faeces, confirming that skeletons were always entirely dissolved inside the body.

This new specialised bone-digesting cell has now been identified in several python and boa species, as well as the Gila monster, a venomous lizard native to the Southwestern United States and Mexico.

However, bone-filled diets aren't limited to reptiles and there are many other carnivores that eat bony animals whole. \"Marine predators that eat bony fish or aquatic mammals must face the same problem,\" says Dr Lignot. \"Birds that eat mostly bones, such as the bearded vulture, would be fascinating candidates too.\"

This research is being presented at the Society for Experimental Biology Annual Conference in Antwerp, Belgium on the 9th July 2025.

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