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Wikipedia:Osmosis/Lactose intolerance

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Video explanation

The three most common forms of sugar are glucose, fructose, and galactose, and these are all types of monosaccharides, meaning they’re made of just one sugar molecule, molecules like this are called carbohydrates, because they’re made up of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, usually with a hydrogen-oxygen ratio of 2:1. if you link two of these guys together, you get a disaccharide because “di” means two, and this is also a carbohydrate. Now our body uses these sugar molecules for energy, right? For us humans, glucose is our gasoline, our energy source, we’ll take galactose and fructose...but ultimately we need to use glucose, so almost all the fructose and galactose we ingest is converted to glucose, and then we use that glucose for energy. Alright, but usually carbohydrates aren’t in monosaccharide form when we ingest them, and a lot of what we take in are in the disaccharide form, and one notorious disaccharide that tends to cause serious gastrointestinal distress for a lot of people, is lactose. Lactose is a disaccharide that’s made up of a glucose molecule and a galactose molecule. For us to use it as energy, though, we have to first break it down to those two monosaccharides. In the milk of most mammals, lactose is generally the major carbohydrate, so when you have a glass of milk, and it gets through your stomach to the small intestine, that lactose gets chopped into glucose and galactose by an enzyme that’s fittingly called lactase. The gene responsible for production of the lactase enzyme is expressed exclusively in the enterocytes lining the small intestine, which are cells that help absorb nutrients from stuff that we eat. Once produced, the enzyme makes it’s way to the cell’s surface along the cell’s microvilli, these little tentacles that help increase surface area and absorb nutrients. K, once lactose gets chopped by lactase, we’re good to go, and we absorb the glucose and galactose and all is well. Now, as mammals, we’re wired to be able to ingest milk after birth, right? So it makes sense that when we’re young we have a whole bunch of lactase enzyme, since that’s pretty much all we drink. After weaning, in most mammal species, expression of the gene responsible for lactase is way down-regulated, and so production of lactase also goes way down. The majority of humans actually follow this protocol as well, and down-regulate lactase production around 3-5 years of age. Interestingly, though, the majority of caucasians, mainly those from northern european background, continue to have elevated lactase activity all the way into adulthood, and so they exhibit “lactase persistence”. Why caucasians? Well, this group historically has domesticated cows and other milk providers and consumed lactose-based, or milk-based products into adulthood, and by natural selection, it’s thought that they’ve developed increased persistence of lactase production by specific gene mutations that are often autosomal dominant. Similar lactase persistence phenomena has been observed in separated and distinct smaller populations that rely on lactose production as well, pretty interesting stuff if you ask me.

At any rate, what about those of us that didn’t inherit the lactose-persistence gene? And every time we even think about milk or dairy products, our bowels give out a small groan? Well, when that lactose gets to the brush border of your small intestine, the vast majority of it doesn’t get chopped and absorbed, as much as 75%! And it just keeps on movin’ down the GI tract and passes into the colon. At this point, the gut flora has a field day, since microbes aren’t as picky and they ferment the lactose into a mix of hydrogen gas, carbon dioxide, and methane. These gases contribute to symptoms of, uh, gas and bloating. Along with those gases, though, short-chain fatty acids are produced like acetate, butyrate, and propionate. We don’t absorb these short-chain fatty acids, which means that they stay in the lumen of the gut. Both the unabsorbed lactose and products of fermentation raise the osmotic pressure, attracting water into the bowels, so water flows in and this influx of water is what leads to diarrhea. Now, in super rare cases, lactase deficiency can be a congenital, meaning infants would be deficient from birth. This is an autosomal recessive disorder and infants that can’t break down lactose have trouble with breastmilk, and develop diarrhea starting from birth.

Sometimes, even those with lactase-persistence can develop temporary lactose intolerance as a result of infection or inflammation in the small intestine. During these acute illnesses of the small intestine, the microvilli of enterocytes can be flattened or damaged, and since these are the dwellings of our lactase enzyme friend, these acute illness states can cause a lack of lactase enzyme, and result in temporary lactose intolerance, once the small bowel heals, they’ll be able to produce lactase again.

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