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Lactose

Lactose, or milk sugar, is a disaccharide sugar synthesized by galactose and glucose subunits and has the molecular formula C12H22O11. Lactose makes up around 2–8% of milk (by mass). The name comes from lac (gen. lactis), the Latin word for milk, plus the suffix -ose used to name sugars. The compound is a white, water-soluble, non-hygroscopic solid with a mildly sweet taste. It is used in the food industry.[5]

Lactose
Names
IUPAC name
β-D-Galactopyranosyl-(1→4)-D-glucose
Systematic IUPAC name
(2R,3R,4S,5R,6S)-2-(Hydroxymethyl)-6-{[(2R,3S,4R,5R,6R)-4,5,6-trihydroxy-2-(hydroxymethyl)oxan-3-yl]oxy}oxane-3,4,5-triol
Other names
Milk sugar
Lactobiose
4-O-β-D-Galactopyranosyl-D-glucose
Identifiers
  • 63-42-3 Y
3D model (JSmol)
  • Interactive image
90841
ChEBI
  • CHEBI:36218 Y
ChEMBL
  • ChEMBL417016 Y
ChemSpider
  • 5904 Y
ECHA InfoCard 100.000.509
EC Number
  • 200-559-2
342369
KEGG
  • C01970
  • 6134
UNII
  • 3SY5LH9PMK Y
  • DTXSID2023193
  • InChI=1S/C12H22O11/c13-1-3-5(15)6(16)9(19)12(22-3)23-10-4(2-14)21-11(20)8(18)7(10)17/h3-20H,1-2H2/t3-,4-,5+,6+,7-,8-,9-,10-,11-,12+/m1/s1 Y
    Key: GUBGYTABKSRVRQ-DCSYEGIMSA-N Y
  • InChI=1/C12H22O11/c13-1-3-5(15)6(16)9(19)12(22-3)23-10-4(2-14)21-11(20)8(18)7(10)17/h3-20H,1-2H2/t3-,4-,5+,6+,7-,8-,9-,10-,11-,12+/m1/s1
    Key: GUBGYTABKSRVRQ-DCSYEGIMBP
  • C([C@@H]1[C@@H]([C@@H]([C@H]([C@@H](O1)O[C@@H]2[C@H](O[C@H]([C@@H]([C@H]2O)O)O)CO)O)O)O)O
Properties
C12H22O11
Molar mass 342.297 g·mol−1
Appearance White solid
Density 1.525 g/cm3
Melting point 252 °C (anhydrous)[1]
202 °C (monohydrate)[1]
195 g/L[2][3]
+55.4° (anhydrous)
+52.3° (monohydrate)
Thermochemistry
5652 kJ/mol, 1351 kcal/mol, 16.5 kJ/g, 3.94 kcal/g
Hazards
NFPA 704 (fire diamond)
Health 0: Exposure under fire conditions would offer no hazard beyond that of ordinary combustible material. E.g. sodium chlorideFlammability 0: Will not burn. E.g. waterInstability 0: Normally stable, even under fire exposure conditions, and is not reactive with water. E.g. liquid nitrogenSpecial hazards (white): no code
0
0
0
Flash point 357.8 °C (676.0 °F; 631.0 K)[4]
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
N verify (what is YN ?)

Structure and reactions edit

 
The molecular structure of α-lactose, as determined by X-ray crystallography.
 
Lactose crystals, viewed under polarized light

Lactose is a disaccharide derived from the condensation of galactose and glucose, which form a β-1→4 glycosidic linkage. Its systematic name is β-D-galactopyranosyl-(1→4)-D-glucose. The glucose can be in either the α-pyranose form or the β-pyranose form, whereas the galactose can only have the β-pyranose form: hence α-lactose and β-lactose refer to the anomeric form of the glucopyranose ring alone. Detection reactions for lactose are the Woehlk-[6] and Fearon's test.[7] Both can be easily used in school experiments to visualise the different lactose content of different dairy products such as whole milk, lactose free milk, yogurt, buttermilk, coffee creamer, sour cream, kefir, etc.[8]

Lactose is hydrolysed to glucose and galactose, isomerised in alkaline solution to lactulose, and catalytically hydrogenated to the corresponding polyhydric alcohol, lactitol.[9] Lactulose is a commercial product, used for treatment of constipation.

Occurrence and isolation edit

Lactose composes about 2–8% of milk by weight. Several million tons are produced annually as a by-product of the dairy industry.

Whey or milk plasma is the liquid remaining after milk is curdled and strained, for example in the production of cheese. Whey is made up of 6.5% solids, of which 4.8% is lactose, which is purified by crystallisation.[10] Industrially, lactose is produced from whey permeate – that is whey filtrated for all major proteins. The protein fraction is used in infant nutrition and sports nutrition while the permeate can be evaporated to 60–65% solids and crystallized while cooling.[11] Lactose can also be isolated by dilution of whey with ethanol.[12]

Dairy products such as yogurt and cheese contain very little lactose. This is because the bacteria used to make these products breaks down lactose through the use of lactase.

Metabolism edit

Infant mammals nurse on their mothers to drink milk, which is rich in lactose. The intestinal villi secrete the enzyme lactase (β-D-galactosidase) to digest it. This enzyme cleaves the lactose molecule into its two subunits, the simple sugars glucose and galactose, which can be absorbed. Since lactose occurs mostly in milk, in most mammals, the production of lactase gradually decreases with maturity due to genetic predispositions.

Many people with ancestry in Europe, West Asia, South Asia, the Sahel belt in West Africa, East Africa and a few other parts of Central Africa maintain lactase production into adulthood. In many of these areas, milk from mammals such as cattle, goats, and sheep is used as a large source of food. Hence, it was in these regions that genes for lifelong lactase production first evolved. The genes of adult lactose tolerance have evolved independently in various ethnic groups.[13] By descent, more than 70% of western Europeans can digest lactose as adults, compared with less than 30% of people from areas of Africa, eastern and south-eastern Asia and Oceania.[14] In people who are lactose intolerant, lactose is not broken down and provides food for gas-producing gut flora, which can lead to diarrhea, bloating, flatulence, and other gastrointestinal symptoms.

Biological properties edit

The sweetness of lactose is 0.2 to 0.4, relative to 1.0 for sucrose.[15] For comparison, the sweetness of glucose is 0.6 to 0.7, of fructose is 1.3, of galactose is 0.5 to 0.7, of maltose is 0.4 to 0.5, of sorbose is 0.4, and of xylose is 0.6 to 0.7.[15]

When lactose is completely digested in the small intestine, its caloric value is 4 kcal/g, or the same as that of other carbohydrates.[15] However, lactose is not always fully digested in the small intestine.[15] Depending on ingested dose, combination with meals (either solid or liquid), and lactase activity in the intestines, the caloric value of lactose ranges from 2 to 4 kcal/g.[15] Undigested lactose acts as dietary fiber.[15] It also has positive effects on absorption of minerals, such as calcium and magnesium.[15]

The glycemic index of lactose is 46 to 65.[15][16] For comparison, the glycemic index of glucose is 100 to 138, of sucrose is 68 to 92, of maltose is 105, and of fructose is 19 to 27.[15][16]

Lactose has relatively low cariogenicity among sugars.[17][15] This is because it is not a substrate for dental plaque formation and it is not rapidly fermented by oral bacteria.[17][15] The buffering capacity of milk also reduces the cariogenicity of lactose.[15]

Applications edit

Its mild flavor and easy handling properties have led to its use as a carrier and stabiliser of aromas and pharmaceutical products.[5] Lactose is not added directly to many foods, because its solubility is less than that of other sugars commonly used in food. Infant formula is a notable exception, where the addition of lactose is necessary to match the composition of human milk.

Lactose is not fermented by most yeast during brewing, which may be used to advantage.[9] For example, lactose may be used to sweeten stout beer; the resulting beer is usually called a milk stout or a cream stout.

Yeast belonging to the genus Kluyveromyces have a unique industrial application, as they are capable of fermenting lactose for ethanol production. Surplus lactose from the whey by-product of dairy operations is a potential source of alternative energy.[18]

Another significant lactose use is in the pharmaceutical industry. Lactose is added to tablet and capsule drug products as an ingredient because of its physical and functional properties.[example needed][5] For similar reasons, it can be used to dilute illicit drugs such as cocaine or heroin.[19]

History edit

The first crude isolation of lactose, by Italian physician Fabrizio Bartoletti (1576–1630), was published in 1633.[20] In 1700, the Venetian pharmacist Lodovico Testi (1640–1707) published a booklet of testimonials to the power of milk sugar (saccharum lactis) to relieve, among other ailments, the symptoms of arthritis.[21] In 1715, Testi's procedure for making milk sugar was published by Antonio Vallisneri.[22] Lactose was identified as a sugar in 1780 by Carl Wilhelm Scheele.[23][9]

In 1812, Heinrich Vogel (1778–1867) recognized that glucose was a product of hydrolyzing lactose.[24] In 1856, Louis Pasteur crystallized the other component of lactose, galactose.[25] By 1894, Emil Fischer had established the configurations of the component sugars.[26]

Lactose was named by the French chemist Jean Baptiste André Dumas (1800–1884) in 1843.[27] In 1856, Pasteur named galactose "lactose".[28] In 1860, Marcellin Berthelot renamed it "galactose", and transferred the name "lactose" to what is now called lactose.[29] It has a formula of C12H22O11 and the hydrate formula C12H22O11·H2O, making it an isomer of sucrose.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Peter M. Collins (2006). Dictionary of Carbohydrates (2nd ed.). Boca Raton: Chapman & Hall/CRC. p. 677. ISBN 978-0-8493-3829-8.
  2. ^ "D-Lactose".
  3. ^ The solubility of lactose in water is 189.049 g at 25 °C, 251.484 g at 40 °C and 372.149 g at 60 °C per kg solution. Its solubility in ethanol is 0.111 g at 40 °C and 0.270 g at 60 °C per kg solution.Machado, José J. B.; Coutinho, João A.; Macedo, Eugénia A. (2001), "Solid–liquid equilibrium of α-lactose in ethanol/water" (PDF), Fluid Phase Equilibria, 173 (1): 121–34, doi:10.1016/S0378-3812(00)00388-5. ds
  4. ^ Sigma Aldrich
  5. ^ a b c Gerrit M. Westhoff; Ben F.M. Kuster; Michiel C. Heslinga; Hendrik Pluim; Marinus Verhage (2014). "Lactose and Derivatives". Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Wiley-VCH. pp. 1–9. doi:10.1002/14356007.a15_107.pub2. ISBN 978-3-527-30673-2.
  6. ^ Ruppersberg, Klaus; Blankenburg, Janet (2018). "150 Years Alfred Wöhlk". ChemViews. doi:10.1002/chemv.201800002.
  7. ^ Fearon, W. R. (1942). "The detection of lactose and maltose by means of methylamine". The Analyst. 67 (793): 130. doi:10.1039/an9426700130. ISSN 0003-2654.
  8. ^ Ruppersberg, Klaus; Herzog, Stefanie; Kussler, Manfred W.; Parchmann, Ilka (2019-10-17). "How to visualize the different lactose content of dairy products by Fearon's test and Woehlk test in classroom experiments and a new approach to the mechanisms and formulae of the mysterious red dyes". Chemistry Teacher International. 2 (2). doi:10.1515/cti-2019-0008. ISSN 2569-3263. S2CID 208714341.
  9. ^ a b c Linko, P (1982), "Lactose and Lactitol", in Birch, G.G.; Parker, K.J (eds.), Natural Sweeteners, London & New Jersey: Applied Science Publishers, pp. 109–132, ISBN 978-0-85334-997-6
  10. ^ Ranken, M. D.; Kill, R. C. (1997), Food industries manual, Springer, p. 125, ISBN 978-0-7514-0404-3
  11. ^ Wong, S. Y.; Hartel, R. W. (2014), "Crystallization in lactose refining-a review", Journal of Food Science, 79 (3): R257–72, doi:10.1111/1750-3841.12349, PMID 24517206, DOI is open access
  12. ^ Pavia, Donald L.; Lampman, Gary M.; Kriz, George S. (1990), Introduction to Organic Laboratory Techniques: A Microscale Approach, Saunders, ISBN 0-03-014813-8
  13. ^ Wade, Nicholas (2006-12-10), "Study Detects Recent Instance of Human Evolution", New York Times.
  14. ^ Ridley, Matt (1999), Genome, HarperCollins, p. 193, ISBN 978-0-06-089408-5.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Schaafsma, Gertjan (2008). (PDF). International Dairy Journal. 18 (5): 458–465. doi:10.1016/j.idairyj.2007.11.013. ISSN 0958-6946. S2CID 10346203. Archived from the original (PDF) on Mar 2, 2019.
  16. ^ a b Björck, Inger; Liljeberg, Helena; Östman, Elin (2000). "Low glycaemic-index foods". British Journal of Nutrition. 83 (S1): S149–S155. doi:10.1017/S0007114500001094. ISSN 0007-1145. PMID 10889806. S2CID 14574754.
  17. ^ a b Gregory D. Miller; Judith K. Jarvis; Lois D. McBean (15 December 2006). Handbook of Dairy Foods and Nutrition. CRC Press. pp. 248–. ISBN 978-1-4200-0431-1.
  18. ^ Ling, Charles (2008), Whey to Ethanol: A Biofuel Role for Dairy Cooperatives? (PDF), United States Department of Agriculture Rural Development.
  19. ^ Rinaldi, R.; Negro, F.; Minutillo, A. (2020-02-20). "The health threat of new synthetic opioids as adulterants of classic drugs of abuse" (PDF). La Clinica Terapeutica. 171 (2): 107–109. doi:10.7417/CT.2020.2198. ISSN 1972-6007. PMID 32141480.
  20. ^ Fabrizio Bartoletti, Methodus in dyspnoeam … [Procedure for asthma … ], (Bologna ("Bononia"), (Italy): Nicolò Tebaldini for the heirs of Evangelista Dozza, 1633), p. 400. From page 400: "Manna seri hæc. Destilla leni balnei calore serum lactis, donec in fundo vasis butyracea fœx subsideat, cui hærebit salina quædam substantia subalbida. Hanc curiose segrega, est enim sal seri essentiale; seu nitrum, cujus causa nitrosum dicitut serum, huicque tota abstergedi vis inest. Solve in aqua propria, & coagula. Opus repete, donec seri cremorem habeas sapore omnino mannam referentem." (This is the manna of whey. [Note: "Manna" was the dried, sweet sap of the tree Fraxinus ornus.] Gently distill whey via a heat bath until the buttery scum settles to the bottom of the vessel, to which substance some whitish salt [i.e., precipitate] attaches. This curious [substance once] separated, is truly the essential salt of whey; or, on account of which nitre, is called "nitre of whey", and all [life] force is in this that will be expelled. [Note: "Nitre" was an alchemical concept. It was the power of life, which gave life to otherwise inanimate matter. See the philosophy of Sendivogius.] Dissolve it in [its] own water and coagulate. Repeat the operation until you have cream of whey, recalling, by [its] taste, only manna.)
    In 1688, the German physician Michael Ettmüller (1644–1683) reprinted Bartoletti's preparation. See: Ettmüller, Michael, Opera Omnia … (Frankfurt am Main ("Francofurtum ad Moenum"), [Germany]: Johann David Zunner, 1688), book 2, page 163. 2018-11-09 at the Wayback Machine From page 163: "Undd Bertholetus praeparat ex sero lactis remedium, quod vocat mannam S. [alchemical symbol for salt, salem] seri lactis vid. in Encyclopaed. p. 400. Praeparatio est haec: … " (Whence Bartoletti prepared from milk whey a medicine, which he called manna or salt of milk whey; see in [his] Encyclopedia [note: this is a mistake; the preparation appeared in Bartoletti's Methodus in dyspnoeam … ], p. 400. This is the preparation: … )
  21. ^ Lodovico Testi, De novo Saccharo Lactis [On the new milk sugar] (Venice, (Italy): Hertz, 1700).
  22. ^ Ludovico Testi (1715) "Saccharum lactis" (Milk sugar), Academiae Caesareo-Leopoldinae naturae curiosorum ephemerides, … , 3 : 69–79. The procedure was also published in Giornale de' letterati d'Italia in 1715.
  23. ^ See:
    • Carl Wilhelm Scheele (1780) "Om Mjölk och dess syra" (About milk and its acid), Kongliga Vetenskaps Academiens Nya Handlingar (New Proceedings of the Royal Academy of Science), 1 : 116–124. From page 116: "Det år bekant, at Ko-mjölk innehåller Smör, Ost, Mjölk-såcker, … " (It is known, that cow's milk contains butter, cheese, milk-sugar, … )
    • Carl Wilhelm Scheele (1780) "Om Mjölk-Såcker-Syra" (On milk-sugar acid), Kongliga Vetenskaps Academiens Nya Handlingar (New Proceedings of the Royal Academy of Science), 1 : 269–275. From pages 269–270: "Mjölk-Såcker år et sal essentiale, som uti Mjölken finnes uplöst, och som, för dess sötaktiga smak skull, fått namn af såcker." (Milk sugar is an essential salt, which is found dissolved in milk, and which, on account of its sweet taste, has the name of "sugar".)
  24. ^ See:
    • Vogel (1812) "Sur le sucre liquide d'amidon, et sur la transmutation des matières douces en sucre fermentescible" (On the liquid sugar of starch, and on the transformation of sweet materials into fermentable sugars), Annales de chemie et de physique, series 1, 82 : 148–164; see especially pages 156–158.
    • H. A. Vogel (1812) "Ueber die Verwandlung der Stärke und andrer Körper in Zucker" (On the conversion of starches and other substances into sugar), Annalen der Physik, new series, 42 : 123–134; see especially pages 129–131.
  25. ^ Pasteur (1856) "Note sur le sucre de lait" (Note on milk sugar), Comptes rendus, 42 : 347–351.
  26. ^ Fischer determined the configuration of glucose in:
    • Emil Fischer (1891) "Ueber die Configuration des Traubenzuckers und seiner Isomeren" (On the configuration of grape sugar and its isomers), Berichte der Deutschen Chemischen Gesellschaft, 24 : 1836–1845.
    • Emil Fischer (1891) "Ueber die Configuration des Traubenzuckers und seiner Isomeren. II" (On the configuration of grape sugar and its isomers), Berichte der Deutschen Chemischen Gesellschaft, 24 : 2683–2687.
    Fischer established the configuration of galactose in:
    • Emil Fischer and Robert S. Morrell (1894) "Ueber die Configuration der Rhamnose und Galactose" (On the configuration of rhamnose and galactose), Berichte der Deutschen chemischen Gesellschaft zu Berlin, 27 : 382–394. The configuration of galactose appears on page 385.
  27. ^ Dumas, Traité de Chimie, Appliquée aux Arts, volume 6 (Paris, France: Bechet Jeune, 1843), p. 293.
  28. ^ Pasteur (1856) "Note sur le sucre de lait" (Note on milk sugar), Comptes rendus, 42 : 347–351. From page 348: "Je propose de le nommer lactose." (I propose to name it lactose.)
  29. ^ Marcellin Berthelot, Chimie organique fondée sur la synthèse [Organic chemistry based on synthesis] (Paris, France: Mallet-Bachelier, 1860), vol. 2, pp. 248–249 and pp. 268–270.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Lactose at Wikimedia Commons

lactose, milk, sugar, disaccharide, sugar, synthesized, galactose, glucose, subunits, molecular, formula, c12h22o11, makes, around, milk, mass, name, comes, from, lactis, latin, word, milk, plus, suffix, used, name, sugars, compound, white, water, soluble, hyg. Lactose or milk sugar is a disaccharide sugar synthesized by galactose and glucose subunits and has the molecular formula C12H22O11 Lactose makes up around 2 8 of milk by mass The name comes from lac gen lactis the Latin word for milk plus the suffix ose used to name sugars The compound is a white water soluble non hygroscopic solid with a mildly sweet taste It is used in the food industry 5 Lactose NamesIUPAC name b D Galactopyranosyl 1 4 D glucoseSystematic IUPAC name 2R 3R 4S 5R 6S 2 Hydroxymethyl 6 2R 3S 4R 5R 6R 4 5 6 trihydroxy 2 hydroxymethyl oxan 3 yl oxy oxane 3 4 5 triolOther names Milk sugarLactobiose4 O b D Galactopyranosyl D glucoseIdentifiersCAS Number 63 42 3 Y3D model JSmol Interactive imageBeilstein Reference 90841ChEBI CHEBI 36218 YChEMBL ChEMBL417016 YChemSpider 5904 YECHA InfoCard 100 000 509EC Number 200 559 2Gmelin Reference 342369KEGG C01970PubChem CID 6134UNII 3SY5LH9PMK YCompTox Dashboard EPA DTXSID2023193InChI InChI 1S C12H22O11 c13 1 3 5 15 6 16 9 19 12 22 3 23 10 4 2 14 21 11 20 8 18 7 10 17 h3 20H 1 2H2 t3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 m1 s1 YKey GUBGYTABKSRVRQ DCSYEGIMSA N YInChI 1 C12H22O11 c13 1 3 5 15 6 16 9 19 12 22 3 23 10 4 2 14 21 11 20 8 18 7 10 17 h3 20H 1 2H2 t3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 m1 s1Key GUBGYTABKSRVRQ DCSYEGIMBPSMILES C C H 1 C H C H C H C H O1 O C H 2 C H O C H C H C H 2O O O CO O O O OPropertiesChemical formula C 12H 22O 11Molar mass 342 297 g mol 1Appearance White solidDensity 1 525 g cm3Melting point 252 C anhydrous 1 202 C monohydrate 1 Solubility in water 195 g L 2 3 Chiral rotation a D 55 4 anhydrous 52 3 monohydrate ThermochemistryStd enthalpy ofcombustion DcH 298 5652 kJ mol 1351 kcal mol 16 5 kJ g 3 94 kcal gHazardsNFPA 704 fire diamond 000Flash point 357 8 C 676 0 F 631 0 K 4 Except where otherwise noted data are given for materials in their standard state at 25 C 77 F 100 kPa N verify what is Y N Infobox references Contents 1 Structure and reactions 2 Occurrence and isolation 3 Metabolism 4 Biological properties 5 Applications 6 History 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksStructure and reactions edit nbsp The molecular structure of a lactose as determined by X ray crystallography nbsp Lactose crystals viewed under polarized lightLactose is a disaccharide derived from the condensation of galactose and glucose which form a b 1 4 glycosidic linkage Its systematic name is b D galactopyranosyl 1 4 D glucose The glucose can be in either the a pyranose form or the b pyranose form whereas the galactose can only have the b pyranose form hence a lactose and b lactose refer to the anomeric form of the glucopyranose ring alone Detection reactions for lactose are the Woehlk 6 and Fearon s test 7 Both can be easily used in school experiments to visualise the different lactose content of different dairy products such as whole milk lactose free milk yogurt buttermilk coffee creamer sour cream kefir etc 8 Lactose is hydrolysed to glucose and galactose isomerised in alkaline solution to lactulose and catalytically hydrogenated to the corresponding polyhydric alcohol lactitol 9 Lactulose is a commercial product used for treatment of constipation Occurrence and isolation editLactose composes about 2 8 of milk by weight Several million tons are produced annually as a by product of the dairy industry Whey or milk plasma is the liquid remaining after milk is curdled and strained for example in the production of cheese Whey is made up of 6 5 solids of which 4 8 is lactose which is purified by crystallisation 10 Industrially lactose is produced from whey permeate that is whey filtrated for all major proteins The protein fraction is used in infant nutrition and sports nutrition while the permeate can be evaporated to 60 65 solids and crystallized while cooling 11 Lactose can also be isolated by dilution of whey with ethanol 12 Dairy products such as yogurt and cheese contain very little lactose This is because the bacteria used to make these products breaks down lactose through the use of lactase Metabolism editSee also Lactose intolerance and Lactase persistence Infant mammals nurse on their mothers to drink milk which is rich in lactose The intestinal villi secrete the enzyme lactase b D galactosidase to digest it This enzyme cleaves the lactose molecule into its two subunits the simple sugars glucose and galactose which can be absorbed Since lactose occurs mostly in milk in most mammals the production of lactase gradually decreases with maturity due to genetic predispositions Many people with ancestry in Europe West Asia South Asia the Sahel belt in West Africa East Africa and a few other parts of Central Africa maintain lactase production into adulthood In many of these areas milk from mammals such as cattle goats and sheep is used as a large source of food Hence it was in these regions that genes for lifelong lactase production first evolved The genes of adult lactose tolerance have evolved independently in various ethnic groups 13 By descent more than 70 of western Europeans can digest lactose as adults compared with less than 30 of people from areas of Africa eastern and south eastern Asia and Oceania 14 In people who are lactose intolerant lactose is not broken down and provides food for gas producing gut flora which can lead to diarrhea bloating flatulence and other gastrointestinal symptoms Biological properties editThe sweetness of lactose is 0 2 to 0 4 relative to 1 0 for sucrose 15 For comparison the sweetness of glucose is 0 6 to 0 7 of fructose is 1 3 of galactose is 0 5 to 0 7 of maltose is 0 4 to 0 5 of sorbose is 0 4 and of xylose is 0 6 to 0 7 15 When lactose is completely digested in the small intestine its caloric value is 4 kcal g or the same as that of other carbohydrates 15 However lactose is not always fully digested in the small intestine 15 Depending on ingested dose combination with meals either solid or liquid and lactase activity in the intestines the caloric value of lactose ranges from 2 to 4 kcal g 15 Undigested lactose acts as dietary fiber 15 It also has positive effects on absorption of minerals such as calcium and magnesium 15 The glycemic index of lactose is 46 to 65 15 16 For comparison the glycemic index of glucose is 100 to 138 of sucrose is 68 to 92 of maltose is 105 and of fructose is 19 to 27 15 16 Lactose has relatively low cariogenicity among sugars 17 15 This is because it is not a substrate for dental plaque formation and it is not rapidly fermented by oral bacteria 17 15 The buffering capacity of milk also reduces the cariogenicity of lactose 15 Applications editIts mild flavor and easy handling properties have led to its use as a carrier and stabiliser of aromas and pharmaceutical products 5 Lactose is not added directly to many foods because its solubility is less than that of other sugars commonly used in food Infant formula is a notable exception where the addition of lactose is necessary to match the composition of human milk Lactose is not fermented by most yeast during brewing which may be used to advantage 9 For example lactose may be used to sweeten stout beer the resulting beer is usually called a milk stout or a cream stout Yeast belonging to the genus Kluyveromyces have a unique industrial application as they are capable of fermenting lactose for ethanol production Surplus lactose from the whey by product of dairy operations is a potential source of alternative energy 18 Another significant lactose use is in the pharmaceutical industry Lactose is added to tablet and capsule drug products as an ingredient because of its physical and functional properties example needed 5 For similar reasons it can be used to dilute illicit drugs such as cocaine or heroin 19 History editThe first crude isolation of lactose by Italian physician Fabrizio Bartoletti 1576 1630 was published in 1633 20 In 1700 the Venetian pharmacist Lodovico Testi 1640 1707 published a booklet of testimonials to the power of milk sugar saccharum lactis to relieve among other ailments the symptoms of arthritis 21 In 1715 Testi s procedure for making milk sugar was published by Antonio Vallisneri 22 Lactose was identified as a sugar in 1780 by Carl Wilhelm Scheele 23 9 In 1812 Heinrich Vogel 1778 1867 recognized that glucose was a product of hydrolyzing lactose 24 In 1856 Louis Pasteur crystallized the other component of lactose galactose 25 By 1894 Emil Fischer had established the configurations of the component sugars 26 Lactose was named by the French chemist Jean Baptiste Andre Dumas 1800 1884 in 1843 27 In 1856 Pasteur named galactose lactose 28 In 1860 Marcellin Berthelot renamed it galactose and transferred the name lactose to what is now called lactose 29 It has a formula of C12H22O11 and the hydrate formula C12H22O11 H2O making it an isomer of sucrose See also editLac operon Lactic acid Lactose intolerance Nectar Sugars in wineReferences edit a b Peter M Collins 2006 Dictionary of Carbohydrates 2nd ed Boca Raton Chapman amp Hall CRC p 677 ISBN 978 0 8493 3829 8 D Lactose The solubility of lactose in water is 189 049 g at 25 C 251 484 g at 40 C and 372 149 g at 60 C per kg solution Its solubility in ethanol is 0 111 g at 40 C and 0 270 g at 60 C per kg solution Machado Jose J B Coutinho Joao A Macedo Eugenia A 2001 Solid liquid equilibrium of a lactose in ethanol water PDF Fluid Phase Equilibria 173 1 121 34 doi 10 1016 S0378 3812 00 00388 5 ds Sigma Aldrich a b c Gerrit M Westhoff Ben F M Kuster Michiel C Heslinga Hendrik Pluim Marinus Verhage 2014 Lactose and Derivatives Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry Wiley VCH pp 1 9 doi 10 1002 14356007 a15 107 pub2 ISBN 978 3 527 30673 2 Ruppersberg Klaus Blankenburg Janet 2018 150 Years Alfred Wohlk ChemViews doi 10 1002 chemv 201800002 Fearon W R 1942 The detection of lactose and maltose by means of methylamine The Analyst 67 793 130 doi 10 1039 an9426700130 ISSN 0003 2654 Ruppersberg Klaus Herzog Stefanie Kussler Manfred W Parchmann Ilka 2019 10 17 How to visualize the different lactose content of dairy products by Fearon s test and Woehlk test in classroom experiments and a new approach to the mechanisms and formulae of the mysterious red dyes Chemistry Teacher International 2 2 doi 10 1515 cti 2019 0008 ISSN 2569 3263 S2CID 208714341 a b c Linko P 1982 Lactose and Lactitol in Birch G G Parker K J eds Natural Sweeteners London amp New Jersey Applied Science Publishers pp 109 132 ISBN 978 0 85334 997 6 Ranken M D Kill R C 1997 Food industries manual Springer p 125 ISBN 978 0 7514 0404 3 Wong S Y Hartel R W 2014 Crystallization in lactose refining a review Journal of Food Science 79 3 R257 72 doi 10 1111 1750 3841 12349 PMID 24517206 DOI is open access Pavia Donald L Lampman Gary M Kriz George S 1990 Introduction to Organic Laboratory Techniques A Microscale Approach Saunders ISBN 0 03 014813 8 Wade Nicholas 2006 12 10 Study Detects Recent Instance of Human Evolution New York Times Ridley Matt 1999 Genome HarperCollins p 193 ISBN 978 0 06 089408 5 a b c d e f g h i j k l Schaafsma Gertjan 2008 Lactose and lactose derivatives as bioactive ingredients in human nutrition PDF International Dairy Journal 18 5 458 465 doi 10 1016 j idairyj 2007 11 013 ISSN 0958 6946 S2CID 10346203 Archived from the original PDF on Mar 2 2019 a b Bjorck Inger Liljeberg Helena Ostman Elin 2000 Low glycaemic index foods British Journal of Nutrition 83 S1 S149 S155 doi 10 1017 S0007114500001094 ISSN 0007 1145 PMID 10889806 S2CID 14574754 a b Gregory D Miller Judith K Jarvis Lois D McBean 15 December 2006 Handbook of Dairy Foods and Nutrition CRC Press pp 248 ISBN 978 1 4200 0431 1 Ling Charles 2008 Whey to Ethanol A Biofuel Role for Dairy Cooperatives PDF United States Department of Agriculture Rural Development Rinaldi R Negro F Minutillo A 2020 02 20 The health threat of new synthetic opioids as adulterants of classic drugs of abuse PDF La Clinica Terapeutica 171 2 107 109 doi 10 7417 CT 2020 2198 ISSN 1972 6007 PMID 32141480 Fabrizio Bartoletti Methodus in dyspnoeam Procedure for asthma Bologna Bononia Italy Nicolo Tebaldini for the heirs of Evangelista Dozza 1633 p 400 From page 400 Manna seri haec Destilla leni balnei calore serum lactis donec in fundo vasis butyracea fœx subsideat cui haerebit salina quaedam substantia subalbida Hanc curiose segrega est enim sal seri essentiale seu nitrum cujus causa nitrosum dicitut serum huicque tota abstergedi vis inest Solve in aqua propria amp coagula Opus repete donec seri cremorem habeas sapore omnino mannam referentem This is the manna of whey Note Manna was the dried sweet sap of the tree Fraxinus ornus Gently distill whey via a heat bath until the buttery scum settles to the bottom of the vessel to which substance some whitish salt i e precipitate attaches This curious substance once separated is truly the essential salt of whey or on account of which nitre is called nitre of whey and all life force is in this that will be expelled Note Nitre was an alchemical concept It was the power of life which gave life to otherwise inanimate matter See the philosophy of Sendivogius Dissolve it in its own water and coagulate Repeat the operation until you have cream of whey recalling by its taste only manna In 1688 the German physician Michael Ettmuller 1644 1683 reprinted Bartoletti s preparation See Ettmuller Michael Opera Omnia Frankfurt am Main Francofurtum ad Moenum Germany Johann David Zunner 1688 book 2 page 163 Archived 2018 11 09 at the Wayback Machine From page 163 UnddBertholetuspraeparat ex sero lactis remedium quod vocatmannamS alchemical symbol for salt salem seri lactisvid inEncyclopaed p 400 Praeparatio est haec Whence Bartoletti prepared from milk whey a medicine which he called manna or salt of milk whey see in his Encyclopedia note this is a mistake the preparation appeared in Bartoletti s Methodus in dyspnoeam p 400 This is the preparation Lodovico Testi De novo Saccharo Lactis On the new milk sugar Venice Italy Hertz 1700 Ludovico Testi 1715 Saccharum lactis Milk sugar Academiae Caesareo Leopoldinae naturae curiosorum ephemerides 3 69 79 The procedure was also published in Giornale de letterati d Italia in 1715 See Carl Wilhelm Scheele 1780 Om Mjolk och dess syra About milk and its acid Kongliga Vetenskaps Academiens Nya Handlingar New Proceedings of the Royal Academy of Science 1 116 124 From page 116 Det ar bekant at Ko mjolk innehaller Smor Ost Mjolk sacker It is known that cow s milk contains butter cheese milk sugar Carl Wilhelm Scheele 1780 Om Mjolk Sacker Syra On milk sugar acid Kongliga Vetenskaps Academiens Nya Handlingar New Proceedings of the Royal Academy of Science 1 269 275 From pages 269 270 Mjolk Sacker ar et sal essentiale som uti Mjolken finnes uplost och som for dess sotaktiga smak skull fatt namn af sacker Milk sugar is an essential salt which is found dissolved in milk and which on account of its sweet taste has the name of sugar See Vogel 1812 Sur le sucre liquide d amidon et sur la transmutation des matieres douces en sucre fermentescible On the liquid sugar of starch and on the transformation of sweet materials into fermentable sugars Annales de chemie et de physique series 1 82 148 164 see especially pages 156 158 H A Vogel 1812 Ueber die Verwandlung der Starke und andrer Korper in Zucker On the conversion of starches and other substances into sugar Annalen der Physik new series 42 123 134 see especially pages 129 131 Pasteur 1856 Note sur le sucre de lait Note on milk sugar Comptes rendus 42 347 351 Fischer determined the configuration of glucose in Emil Fischer 1891 Ueber die Configuration des Traubenzuckers und seiner Isomeren On the configuration of grape sugar and its isomers Berichte der Deutschen Chemischen Gesellschaft 24 1836 1845 Emil Fischer 1891 Ueber die Configuration des Traubenzuckers und seiner Isomeren II On the configuration of grape sugar and its isomers Berichte der Deutschen Chemischen Gesellschaft 24 2683 2687 Fischer established the configuration of galactose in Emil Fischer and Robert S Morrell 1894 Ueber die Configuration der Rhamnose und Galactose On the configuration of rhamnose and galactose Berichte der Deutschen chemischen Gesellschaft zu Berlin 27 382 394 The configuration of galactose appears on page 385 Dumas Traite de Chimie Appliquee aux Arts volume 6 Paris France Bechet Jeune 1843 p 293 Pasteur 1856 Note sur le sucre de lait Note on milk sugar Comptes rendus 42 347 351 From page 348 Je propose de le nommerlactose I propose to name it lactose Marcellin Berthelot Chimie organique fondee sur la synthese Organic chemistry based on synthesis Paris France Mallet Bachelier 1860 vol 2 pp 248 249 and pp 268 270 External links edit nbsp Media related to Lactose at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lactose amp oldid 1177979009, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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