Lactose Lab. What is Lactose Intolerance? When you are unable to digest lactose or milk sugar in dairy products. The problem: deficiency of lactase –

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The ability to digest milk in adulthood varies across populations among our species Many individuals in a relatively small number of human populations.
Advertisements

3.6: ENZYMES Enzymes- a globular protein that functions as a biological catalyst of chemical reactions (digestion, respiration). They remain unchanged.
The Case for Lactase? Evaluate and report on the claims of an advertisement for Dr. Sams Fantastic Stomach Solution TM which recently appeared on-line.
7.03 Special Dietary Needs 09 Allergies- carefully read food labels
An interactive slideshow for the youth and adults of America.
Warm-Up Write a reminder for your project, as well as the upcoming test date – get it stamped! Update your table of contents for today! Complete the “Before”
Industrial Uses of Enzymes IB Topic 3.6. Industries use enzymes Leather tanning  Hides are soften & hair is removed using proteases Brewing  Enzymes.
Lactose Intolerance Vanderbilt Student Volunteers for Science Training Presentation Spring 2009.
3.6: ENZYMES.
Amanda Haney, Dietetic Intern September  There are over 200 bones inside your body.  Bones hold up your muscles and protect all your organs. 
Lactose Intolerance and the Development of two Innovative Dairy Desserts Aaron Brown Margaret Wilson Isabel Mearig University of Hawaii at Manoa Department.
Enzymes and biotechnology © 2008 Paul Billiet ODWSODWS.
What makes you look like your parents? Your parents passed down their DNA to you. What’s carried in your DNA that gives you your traits & characteristics?
Exploring Enzymes: Lactex Lab
Laone, Benedetta, Noelia
What is the difference between this milk and ordinary milk?
Lactose Intolerance. Milk and other dairy products contain a sugar or carbohydrate called lactose. Normally, the body breaks down lactose into its simpler.
Topic 3.6 Enzymes. Define enzyme and active site  Enzyme – protein catalysts that speed up the rate of chemical reactions  Active Site - part of an.
Milk Adults Need Dairy, Too! Make It Easy. Today we will talk about… Why adults still need dairy foods The amount of milk adults need daily and how to.
Lactose Intolerance Student Created. Definition The inability to digest and absorb lactose (the sugar in milk) that results in gastrointestinal symptoms.
Warm-Up: What are the 4 macromolecules and what are their monomers?
Carbohydrate digestion. You should know:  Starch, the role of salivary and pancreatic amylases and of maltase located in the  intestinal epithelium.
Wake-up Which macromolecule functions in short term energy and structure? Explain the difference between Benedict’s and Biuret’s.
Objectives Students should know : That enzymes act as catalysts lowering activation energy through the formation of enzymesubstrate complexes. The lock.
What happens to the food that we eat?. IT BREAKS DOWN INTO…. Carbohydrates Proteins Fats NUCLEIC ACIDS!
Slide 2.1 Lesson 2 Special Skin Cells Make Melanin body epidermis How is melanin made inside the melanocytes? epidermis melanocytes tissue cells.
Chemical Reactions and Enzymes As we have seen living things are made of chemical compounds, but more importantly chemistry isn’t just what life is made.
Lactose Intolerance: The Study of Enzyme Function and Why Milk Makes Some People Sick by Lacey Howard.
Lactase Enzyme Lab.
Does milk make you sick? Why?.  Which type of milk product(s) has the sugars lactose.  Why do you think this? A = whole milk B = low fat milk C = Lactid.
Objective 7.03 Identify Special Dietary Needs
What is lactose intolerance? By: Cainn Senn. What is it? Lactose intolerance is the inability to digest sugars in dairy products.
Cell Activity Videos Learning Set 2 : Lesson 2 : Slide 1 Optional 1) Plant Cells 2) Mitosis 3) Phagocytosis 4) Listeria 5) Neutrophil 6) Exocytosis 7)
47 Beginning of the chapter
Our Guiding Question for this unit How do chemical bonds get made and broken in a cell?
Title: Lactose Lab.
Group Presentation Lactose Intolerance. Definition of Lactose Intolerance Being lactose intolerant means that your body cannot digest foods with lactose.
Genes, Polypeptides and Enzymes  One Gene – One Polypeptide Hypothesis  Exceptions to this rule: some genes = tRNA or mRNA not polypeptides  DNA sequences.
G C T A T A G C T A G C T A G C T A A mutation is a change in the DNA sequence. This may occur by an ‘insertion’, ‘deletion’ or ‘substitution’ of a base.
Which statement is not correct? 8All enzymes are protein. 8All enzymes break chemicals apart. 8All enzymes are reuseable. 8All enzymes lower activation.
Big Idea The work of each cell is done primarily by proteins. Since there are hundreds of thousands of “chores” for a cell to do, there are hundreds of.
ENZYMES *An enzyme is a molecule (usually a protein) that speeds up a specific chemical reaction in our body. Without the enzyme, the reaction typically.
Food Intolerance Jonathan Palozzi and Jason Galli.
Lactose intolerance. Description Lactose intolerant is when a person’s body cannot digest lactose within dairy products, which is a sugar that is found.
Chapter 3: Macromolecules. Got Lactose? – Many people in the world suffer from lactose intolerance Lacking an enzyme that digests lactose, a sugar found.
Enzymes Section 3.2. Metabolism How quickly or how slowly your body can break down food is metabolism. Metabolism describes all the chemical reactions.
Evolution of Lactase Persistence in Humans Take notes on your quiz while we discuss.
Answer in journal: How do you think pH affects enzymes in the body? (Hint: Remember how temperature affects them??) 2/23/16 Date:2/23/16Topic:Enzyme EvolutionPage.
DO NOW 1.Get out your macromolecules lab. 1.Explain the difference between Benedict’s and Biuret’s solution.
Organic Compounds: Carbohydrates
Lab: A Study of Lactose Intolerance
LACTOSE DEFICIENCY/INTOLERANCE
Lesson 1.2 Lactase Lab.
How can we use our knowledge of enzymes (proteins) to help solve/address real-world issues? Why are people lactose intolerant? How can they still eat ice.
Do Now Complete this sentence:
Unit 2.5 Enzymes.
Why is the “lock and key” analogy often used to describe enzyme function? A. Each enzyme is different from its substrate. B. Each enzyme will fit with.
Nature’s Efficiency Experts
The Good, the Bad and the Neutral
Mutations in the Genetic code
LACTOSE INTOLERANCE.
ENZYMES.
What are Enzymes? Enzymes are a special group of PROTEINS
Nature’s Efficiency Experts
Lactase Persistence Collaborators Shared starting point
Enzymes and Biotechnology
Question of the Day What does an enzyme do?
Enzymes and biotechnology
Enzymes: Structure and Function
LACTOSE: Milk’s Sugar.
Presentation transcript:

Lactose Lab

What is Lactose Intolerance? When you are unable to digest lactose or milk sugar in dairy products. The problem: deficiency of lactase – An enzyme that breaks down lactose

Hydrolysis Reaction

Physiology of Lactose Intolerance

Evolution of Lactose Being able to digest lactose in adulthood is actually a genetic mutation. Most babies can digest milk without getting an upset stomach thanks to an enzyme called lactase. Up until several thousand years ago, that enzyme turned off once a person grew into adulthood — meaning most adults were lactose intolerant

Evolution of Lactose This development took 20,000 years to develop under extremely strong selective pressure. Why did this develop so quickly?

Evolution of Lactose In Northern Europe, farmers that settled from the Fertile Crescent brought crops native to that region, which did not survive. This colder climate caused a “natural refrigeration” causing the people to drink the milk instead of eat it as yogurt. In times of famine, milk drinking increased. – If you lived, you pass on the genetic mutation.

Lactose Intolerance Around the World Lactose intolerance is related to the use of dairy products in the diet. In populations consuming a predominantly “dairy” diet, lactose intolerance is less common.

The Lactose Lab You will be adding the enzyme lactase to different types of milk to determine the effect of the enzyme on lactose. We will be using glucose test strips to determine if the lactose was broken down.