quetzalcoatl9 said:
theoretically, one molecule of enzyme will catalyze the breakdown of the entire gram of lactose (if given enough time). see what i mean?
open a book to the topic of enzyme kinetics. look at a lineweaver-burk plot for instance. i would imagine that lactase has been well studied already.
Yes I am thinking lactase would be well studied too. You are shaking a few cobwebs out of my head, mentioning
Lineweaver-Burk plots. I just looked at a http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/BiologyPages/E/EnzymeKinetics.html and recognize the general form from bygone biochemistry courses. Looking at them now, I realize I didn't fully appreciate the underlying principles of the variables. (But I could generate some great plots on exams

)
Another idea I was reminded of, is that enzymes are catalysts. (also recall that from high school biology) They lower the
activation energy needed to convert a substrate by binding with the substrate, changing its conformation to enable further breakdown to occur, without being changed in the process.
So how does the conversion of lactose proceed in a milk emulsion?
An
NIH site describes, "Adding a few drops of the enzyme will convert the lactose in milk or cream, making it more digestible for people with lactose intolerance."
At least in bacteria (and reasonable assumption, we share this pathway); in the
metabolism of lactose, other enzymes are synthesized and used in conversion, such as
lactose permease which actively transports the sugar molecules into the cell; and
beta galactosidase which cleaves lactose into galactose and glucose. These simple sugars can enter subsequent metabolic pathways to generate energy, etc..
So if these metabolic steps occur
in vivo; I wonder what exactly does lactose convert to, in enzyme treated milk? Perhaps the lactase is just binding with all the lactose present, so the converted lactose is just "lactase-bound-lactose". Then we would surely need more than one molecule of lactase
