lactazën
Lactazën is a term that has been used mainly in specialized biochemical literature to refer to an enzyme responsible for the hydrolysis of lactose into glucose and galactose. Although the accepted scientific name for this activity is lactase, the alternate orthography “lactazën” appears in some European texts, particularly those written in French and German, where the diacritic indicates a particular isoenzyme variant. The enzyme is a glycoprotein belonging to the larger family of β-galactosidases and is primarily located on the brush border membrane of enterocytes in the small intestine.
The lactazën gene in humans is situated on chromosome 2q21 and encodes a single polypeptide chain that
In industrial contexts, lactazën is exploited in dairy processing to produce lactose-free milk and to create