The chylomicrons are capable of transporting dietary triacyglycerols from the intestine to peripheral tissues. The liloprotein lipases can hydrolyze triacylglycerols. The remnants are then taken up by the liver with the aid of the apolipoprotein apoE and these remants are degraded in the liver.
The very low density lipoprotein tansports triacyglycerols from the liver to peripheral tissues instead. When it is hydrolyzed by lipoprotein lipase, it loses the triacyglycerols and gets transformed into low density lipoproteins.
whats helps digestion in intestines are enzymes-lipase,erepsin,maltase,sucrase and lactase and also its shape provide large surface area for this.
The pancreas
Lipase is an enzyme that the body uses to break down fats in food so they can be absorbed in the intestines. Lipase is produced by the pancreas.
Lipase is an enzyme responsible for breaking down fats into fatty acids and glycerol. It plays a crucial role in digestion, helping to absorb and metabolize dietary fats in the intestines. Lipase is also important for the body to utilize stored fat as an energy source.
Lipase is a digestive enzyme that in humans is secreted primarily by the pancreas. Its function is to break down fats in the digestive system into fatty acids and other components that can be absorbed by the intestines.
Lipids are broken down by lipase from the pancreas, located above the Intestines and below the stomach.
it can cause the small intestines to stretch but i dont know about the large intestines
The large intestine
Lipase digests fats (lipids) by breaking them down into fatty acids and glycerol. This enzyme is produced in the pancreas and released into the small intestine to aid in the digestion and absorption of fats from the diet.
The intestines are a tissue from your body.
your stomach and small intestines break food down and anything that gets to your large intestines exits your body through the anus
Stomach -> Small Intestines -> Large Intestines -> Through Anus and out of the body