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  2. Lipid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lipid

    The fatty acid structure is one of the most fundamental categories of biological lipids and is commonly used as a building-block of more structurally complex lipids. The carbon chain, typically between four and 24 carbons long, [23] may be saturated or unsaturated, and may be attached to functional groups containing oxygen, halogens, nitrogen ...

  3. Monounsaturated fat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monounsaturated_fat

    In biochemistry and nutrition, a monounsaturated fat is a fat that contains a monounsaturated fatty acid (MUFA), a subclass of fatty acid characterized by having a double bond in the fatty acid chain with all of the remaining carbon atoms being single-bonded. By contrast, polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) have more than one double bond.

  4. Fatty acid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatty_acid

    The more double bonds the chain has in the cis configuration, the less flexibility it has. When a chain has many cis bonds, it becomes quite curved in its most accessible conformations. For example, oleic acid, with one double bond, has a "kink" in it, whereas linoleic acid, with two double bonds, has a more pronounced bend.

  5. Glyceride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glyceride

    These structures vary in their fatty acid alkyl groups as they can contain different carbon numbers, different degrees of unsaturation, and different configurations and positions of olefins. [ 1 ] General structures of mono-, di-, and tri-acylglycerides with names according to the stereospecific numbering Fatty acid

  6. Sterol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sterol

    [4] [5] The most familiar type of animal sterol is cholesterol, which is vital to the structure of the cell membrane, and functions as a precursor to fat-soluble vitamins and steroid hormones. While technically alcohols, sterols are classified by biochemists as lipids ( fats in the broader sense of the term).

  7. Short-chain fatty acid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short-chain_fatty_acid

    Short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) are fatty acids of two to six carbon atoms. [1] The SCFAs' lower limit is interpreted differently, either with one, two, three or four carbon atoms. [ citation needed ] Derived from intestinal microbial fermentation of indigestible foods, SCFAs in human gut are acetic, propionic and butyric acid.

  8. Unsaturated fat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unsaturated_fat

    An unsaturated fat is a fat or fatty acid in which there is at least one double bond within the fatty acid chain. A fatty acid chain is monounsaturated if it contains one double bond, and polyunsaturated if it contains more than one double bond.

  9. Neutral fat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutral_fat

    Neutral fats, also known as true fats, are simple lipids that are produced by the dehydration synthesis of one or more fatty acids with an alcohol like glycerol. Neutral fats are also known as triacylglycerols, [1] these lipids are dense as well as hydrophobic due to their long carbon chain and are there main function is to store energy ...