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.
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