The duodenum (part of the small intestine) is where the hepatopancreatic duct (common duct from the liver and pancreas) empties both bile and enzymes from the pancreas for chemical digestion.
The duodenum or small intestine.
The pancreas secretes pancreatic lipase, pancreatic amylase, chymotrypsin, and trypsin. The gall bladder stores bile from the liver, which it then secretes into the small intestine when triggered. NOTICE: Bile isn't actually an enzyme.
only liver produces bile small intestine cannot produce bile. shruti kukreti 8 d rajpal school
No, there are no enzymes in bile.
Bile
Neither.The gallbladder will store bile, but bile is not an enzyme. Bile is produced by the liver.
bile is an enzyme secreted from human liver,excess of liver toxification secretes more bile juice.
The pH for the enzyme in the gallbladder, known as bile salt hydrolase, is approximately 6.5 to 7.5. This pH range is optimal for the enzyme to function effectively in breaking down bile salts.
There are no enzymes in bile to the best of my knowledge. It is primarily composed of bile acids, bile pigments, cholesterol, and phospholipids. If enzymes do exist in bile they are in minut concentrations and are unnecessary for its functioning. The primary purpose of bile is to emulsify fats. What that means is they increase the surface area of fats so that enzymes may work on them more effectively. These enzymes are secreted by the pancrease. drazx is the original author of this answer
None :) (trick question)
amylase, pancreas , maltase, sucrase, lactase,bile hcl,
Lingual Lipase
The pancreatic extracts hydrolyze fat in presence of bile. The enzyme lipase in pancreas hydrolyzes fat when there are bile salts.