Lactase persistence, the genetic trait in which intestinal lactase activity persists at childhood levels into adulthood, varies in frequency in different human populations, being most frequent in northern Europeans and certain African and Arabian nomadic tribes, who have a history of drinking fresh milk. Selection is likely to have played an important role in establishing these different frequencies since the development of agricultural pastoralism ∼9,000 years ago. We have previously shown that the element responsible for the lactase persistence/nonpersistence polymorphism in humans is cis-acting to the lactase gene and that lactase persistence is associated, in Europeans, with the most common 70-kb lactase haplotype, A. We report here a s...
The lactase enzyme allows lactose digestion in fresh milk. Its activity strongly decreases after the...
Abstract: Lactase persistence (LP) is a well-studied example of a Mendelian trait under selection in...
The genetic trait of lactase persistence is attributable to allelic variants in an enhancer region u...
Lactase persistence, the genetic trait in which intestinal lactase activity persists at childhood le...
Lactase, the enzyme responsible for milk digestion, is expressed in the small intestine of nearly al...
The levels of haplotype diversity within the lineages defined by two single-nucleotide polymorphisms...
The levels of haplotype diversity within the lineages defined by two single-nucleotide polymorphisms...
The genetic trait of lactase persistence (LP) is associated with at least five independent functiona...
The persistence of lactase into adult life in some humans is a genetic trait that is considered to h...
The ability to digest significant quantities of the dissacharide lactose is dependent upon high expr...
Persistence of lactase into adulthood varies in frequency worldwide and is attributable to several d...
The persistent expression of lactase into adulthood in humans is a recent genetic adaptation that al...
Background: The ability of adult humans to digest the milk sugar lactose - lactase persistence - is ...
The ability to digest the milk sugar lactose as an adult (lactase persistence) is a variable genetic...
In most human populations, the ability to digest lactose contained in milk usually disappears in chi...
The lactase enzyme allows lactose digestion in fresh milk. Its activity strongly decreases after the...
Abstract: Lactase persistence (LP) is a well-studied example of a Mendelian trait under selection in...
The genetic trait of lactase persistence is attributable to allelic variants in an enhancer region u...
Lactase persistence, the genetic trait in which intestinal lactase activity persists at childhood le...
Lactase, the enzyme responsible for milk digestion, is expressed in the small intestine of nearly al...
The levels of haplotype diversity within the lineages defined by two single-nucleotide polymorphisms...
The levels of haplotype diversity within the lineages defined by two single-nucleotide polymorphisms...
The genetic trait of lactase persistence (LP) is associated with at least five independent functiona...
The persistence of lactase into adult life in some humans is a genetic trait that is considered to h...
The ability to digest significant quantities of the dissacharide lactose is dependent upon high expr...
Persistence of lactase into adulthood varies in frequency worldwide and is attributable to several d...
The persistent expression of lactase into adulthood in humans is a recent genetic adaptation that al...
Background: The ability of adult humans to digest the milk sugar lactose - lactase persistence - is ...
The ability to digest the milk sugar lactose as an adult (lactase persistence) is a variable genetic...
In most human populations, the ability to digest lactose contained in milk usually disappears in chi...
The lactase enzyme allows lactose digestion in fresh milk. Its activity strongly decreases after the...
Abstract: Lactase persistence (LP) is a well-studied example of a Mendelian trait under selection in...
The genetic trait of lactase persistence is attributable to allelic variants in an enhancer region u...