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Why Does Milk Upset Your Stomach? The Lactose Intolerance Gene Explained

GeneusDNA profile image By
GeneusDNA
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Jun 27, 2026
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56
Did you know
Food
Genetics
lactose intolerance gene
Summary
lactose intolerance gene

Why does milk cause bloating and cramps? Lactose intolerance is driven by the LCT and MCM6 genes (-13910 C>T). Asians are affected more often than Europeans. Learn how genes decide it — and how results differ from real symptoms.

Key Takeaways

  • Lactose intolerance happens when the body makes less of the enzyme lactase as we grow up.
  • The main drivers are the LCT gene and a control region in the MCM6 gene — especially the SNP -13910 C>T (rs4988235).
  • Most Asian people tend toward "lactase non-persistence" (CC), so lactose intolerance is more common than in Europeans.
  • But gene results don't always match real symptoms, and intolerant people can still eat some dairy.

Bloating, cramps, or a dash to the bathroom every time you drink milk? You're not alone — and it isn't a "weak stomach," it's pure genetics. Let's look at why some bodies "stop digesting milk" as they grow up.

What Is Lactose, and Why Can't Some People Digest It?

Lactose is the sugar in milk, and the body needs the enzyme lactase to break it down. As infants we all make plenty of lactase, but as we grow many people make less (called lactase non-persistence). When undigested lactose reaches the colon, bacteria ferment it, producing gas, bloating, and diarrhea.

The Genes Behind It: LCT and MCM6

Lactase is made from the LCT gene, but the "switch" controlling whether it keeps working in adulthood sits in the neighboring MCM6 gene. The most-studied position is -13910 C>T:

  • CC — usually makes little lactase (adult lactose intolerance)
  • CT / TT — usually keeps making lactase (drinks milk comfortably)

Because it's genetic, lactose intolerance ties directly to nutrigenomics, just like spice tolerance genetics.

Why Is Lactose Intolerance Common in Asians?

The "drink milk for life" trait (lactase persistence) evolved in long-time dairy-herding populations such as Northern Europeans, where the T allele is common. Asian populations, without a continuous dairy history, are more often the CC genotype and so are more frequently lactose intolerant. It's a classic example of "gene-culture co-evolution."

A Key Point: Gene Results vs Real Symptoms

An important research finding: self-reported "milk sensitivity" often doesn't match the genotype. Some people believe they're intolerant but have a normal result, and in young children (especially under 6) gene results predict symptoms poorly, because lactase production is still changing with age. Many intolerant people can also eat yogurt or aged cheese, where lactose is already partly broken down.

Author's Final Note

Lactose intolerance isn't a "disorder" — it's a natural part of human genetics. Knowing your genotype lets you choose food with confidence instead of guessing. Curious what your milk-digesting genes look like? Start with a DNA test.

1. Does lactose intolerance mean no dairy at all?

Not always. Many lactose-intolerant people can still eat yogurt, aged cheese, or small amounts of milk, because the lactose is already partly broken down.

2. Can a DNA test show if I'm lactose intolerant?

It helps. The MCM6 (-13910 C>T) test indicates your tendency, but results don't always match real symptoms, and prediction is unreliable in young children.

3. Can I eat yogurt if I'm lactose intolerant?

Yes. Many intolerant people tolerate yogurt or aged cheese because fermentation has already broken down much of the lactose.

References

  1. Lactose intolerance: diagnosis, genetic, and clinical factors. PubMed
  2. Comparison of Lactase Variant MCM6 -13910 C>T Testing and Self-Report of Dairy Sensitivity in IBS Patients. PubMed
  3. A Comprehensive Look at the -13910 C>T LCT Gene Polymorphism. PMC. NCBI
  4. Frequency and Diagnostic Utility of the -13910C>T MCM6 Gene Polymorphism for Lactose Intolerance. PMC. NCBI
  5. Tracing the Distribution of European Lactase Persistence Genotypes Along the Americas. PMC. NCBI
  6. Frequency of Adult-Type Lactase Persistence LCT-13910C/T Genotypes (Czech populations). PMC. NCBI
Written by GeneusDNA
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