Lactose intolerance and the genetic regulation of intestinal lactase‐phlorizin hydrolase

Abstract
Lactase-phlorizin hydrolase, which hydrolyzes lactose, the major carbohydrate in milk, plays a critical role in the nutrition of the mammalian neonate. Lactose intolerance in adult humans is common, usually due to low levels of small intestinal lactase. Low lactase levels result from either intestinal injury or (in the majority of the world's adult population) alterations in the genetic expression of lactase. Although the mechanism of decreased lactase levels has been the subject of intensive investigation, no consensus has yet emerged. Recent studies have begun to define the cellular and molecular biology of this enzyme. In animals and humans, a glycosylated precursor is proteolytically cleaved to yield the mature enzyme on the microvillus membrane of the enterocyte, bound to the lipid bilayer only by a hydrophobic anchor sequence. The enzyme hydrolyzes lactose, phlorizin, and glycosylceramides. A decline in lactase specific activity occurs at the time of weaning in most mammalian species; in most humans...

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