Comparing E1102 - Glucose oxidase vs E1104 - lipase

Synonyms
E1102
Glucose oxidase
E1104
lipase
Products

Found in 30 products

Found in 442 products

Search rank & volume
#295810 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#5755K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×3.52
over-aware

×17.99
over-aware

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 2 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Interest over time for 2 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Popular questions
  1. What does glucose oxidase do?

    It’s an enzyme that oxidizes glucose to D-glucono-delta-lactone (which becomes gluconic acid) while producing hydrogen peroxide and consuming oxygen; in foods it acts as an oxygen scavenger/antioxidant and can strengthen dough.

  2. Cytochrome oxidase is used in which stage of the aerobic respiration of glucose?

    Cytochrome c oxidase works in the electron transport chain (oxidative phosphorylation), the final stage of aerobic respiration; this is a different enzyme from the food additive glucose oxidase (E1102).

  3. Glucose oxidase produces what?

    Hydrogen peroxide and D-glucono-delta-lactone (which hydrolyzes to gluconic acid), while consuming oxygen.

  4. How does glucose oxidase work?

    It is an FAD-dependent oxidoreductase that binds beta-D-glucose, oxidizes it to D-glucono-delta-lactone, and reduces oxygen to hydrogen peroxide—removing oxygen and generating a mild antimicrobial oxidant.

  5. How much hydrogen peroxide does glucose oxidase produce?

    Stoichiometry is 1 mole of H2O2 per mole of glucose oxidized (about 34 mg H2O2 per mmol of glucose); in foods the actual amount formed depends on available glucose and oxygen and may be further decomposed or consumed.

  1. What is lipase in blood test?

    Lipase is a fat‑digesting enzyme; the blood test measures your own pancreatic lipase to assess pancreatic inflammation or injury (e.g., acute pancreatitis), not the food additive E1104.

  2. What is high lipase milk?

    It refers to expressed breast milk that develops a soapy or rancid smell/taste because natural lipase breaks down milk fats during storage; it’s generally safe but some babies may refuse it.

  3. What does lipase test for?

    It’s mainly used to detect or monitor acute pancreatitis and other pancreatic disorders, where elevated pancreatic lipase in blood suggests inflammation or duct obstruction.

  4. How to prevent high lipase in breastmilk?

    You can’t change natural levels, but scalding freshly expressed milk (about 60–62°C/140–144°F for a few minutes, then cool quickly) inactivates lipase and prevents off‑flavors; prompt chilling/freezing and clean handling also help.

  5. What causes high lipase milk?

    Normal variation in a mother’s milk lipase and storage factors (time and temperature) can increase fat breakdown, leading to a soapy/rancid taste; this is due to natural milk enzymes, not added E1104.