Abstract
The ability to digest lactose in adulthood is baised on point mutations within an upstream region of the lactase-(LPH-)gene. This region contains multiple binding sites for different transcription factors. The heterogenous distribution of the lactase persistence all over the world originates from the European history of humanity: in the course of the eighth millennium BC among a mainly lactose-intolerant population in the Near East evolved a cultural practice of dairy farming and milk consumption. As a result of the strong and positive selection the mutated alleles spread out rapidly. In the course of the seventh millennium BC many of these populations gradually settled Central Europe. The beginning of dairy farming in the north east of the African continent and on the Arabian Peninsula are based upon different point mutations. © 2009 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
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Höffeler, F. (2009). Geschichte und evolution der lactose(in)toleranz. Das erbe der frühen viehzüchter. Biologie in Unserer Zeit, 39(6), 378–387. https://doi.org/10.1002/biuz.200910405
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