‘Vampire’ bacteria thirst for human blood — and cause deadly infections as they feed

Vampires don’t only haunt the pages of classic novels and spook us in horror movies — they’re also lurking inside the human body.

In new research, scientists have found that several bacteria responsible for life-threatening bloodstream infections enter our blood because they are attracted to the liquid, or serum, within it. This is most likely because human blood contains a molecule — the amino acid L-serine — that bacteria can use as food. The researchers behind the study have dubbed this phenomenon “bacterial vampirism.”

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