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Human lactase and the molecular basis of lactase persistence
Authors:Jennifer Potter  Mae-Wan Ho  Hilary Bolton  Anna J. Furth  Dallas M. Swallow  Beatrice Griffiths
Affiliation:(1) Biology Discipline, Open University, Walton Hall, MK7 6AA Milton Keynes, U.K.;(2) MRC Human Biochemical Genetics Unit, University College, NW1 2HE London, U.K.
Abstract:Human lactase purified from detergent extracts of the total membrane fraction of postmortem jejunum by means of monoclonal immunoadsorbent chromatography appears to be a dimer of subunits identical in Mr (160K). Trypsin or papain removes a small hydrophobic anchoring peptide from each subunit to give a hydrophilic enzyme which no longer interacts with detergent micelles. Lactase hydrolyzes, besides lactose, cellobiose and the synthetic substrates, 4-methylumbelliferyl-beta-galactoside and beta-glucoside, as well as phlorizin; but it does not hydrolyze glucocerebroside. Phlorizin hydrolase is associated with lactase under all conditions investigated; coincident staining on immunodiffusion and immunoelectrophoresis, coincident elution on immunoadsorbent chromatography and on gel filtration in a dissociating buffer, and correlated reduction in activity in lactase-nonpersistent individuals. Adult and infant lactases are indistinguishable by titration or immunodiffusion against polyclonal rabbit antibodies. Adult individuals low in lactase activity also show a corresponding reduction in cross-reacting material. These observations suggest that lactase persistence is due to the continued synthesis of the infant enzyme.Financial support was provided by the Nuffield Foundation, the Medical Research Council, and the Open University Research Committee Fund.
Keywords:human lactase  purification  monoclonal antibody  polyclonal antibodies  immunology of lactase persistence
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