476,404 views
42 votes
42 votes
Is the enzyme for lactose being made with the repressor not in place?

User Jaget
by
3.2k points

1 Answer

26 votes
26 votes

The lactase is an enzyme in the small intestine that breaks lactose into simpler sugar forms (galactose and glucose) that can be absorbed to generate energy. That sugar is important for gene regulation because it is linked to the Lac operon, the repressor for this structure prevents the DNA transcription, if the repressor is not in place the operon works and the enzyme is produced, being the lac repressor innately active in the absent of lactose.

User Eunjin
by
3.1k points
Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.