Lactose, or milk sugar, is a
disaccharide composed of
galactose and
glucose and has the
molecular formula C12H22O11. Lactose makes up around 2–8% of
milk (by mass). The name comes from lact (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 comprises about 2–8% of milk by weight. Several million tons are produced annually as a by-product of the
dairy industry.[citation needed]
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 – 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
β-Galactosidases.[citation needed]
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 weaning; the removal of lactose from the diet removes the metabolic pressure to continue to produce lactase for its digestion.[citation needed]
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 due to dietary consumption of milk products throughout adulthood driving selection for genes that continue lactase production. 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
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]
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.[citation needed]
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
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.
^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
^
abcGerrit 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.
ISBN978-3-527-30673-2.
^
abcLinko, P (1982), "Lactose and Lactitol", in Birch, G.G.; Parker, K.J (eds.),
Natural Sweeteners, London & New Jersey: Applied Science Publishers, pp. 109–132,
ISBN978-0-85334-997-6
^Pavia, Donald L.; Lampman, Gary M.; Kriz, George S. (1990), Introduction to Organic Laboratory Techniques: A Microscale Approach, Saunders,
ISBN0-03-014813-8
^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: "Mannaseri 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.Archived 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: ... )
^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.
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".)
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, Traité de Chimie, Appliquée 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 nommer lactose." (I propose to name it lactose.)
^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.