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  2. Monounsaturated fat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monounsaturated_fat

    Monounsaturated fats are found in animal flesh such as red meat, whole milk products, nuts, and high fat fruits such as olives and avocados. Algal oil is about 92% monounsaturated fat. Olive oil is about 75% monounsaturated fat. [10] The high oleic variety sunflower oil contains at least 70% monounsaturated fat. [11]

  3. Mono- and diglycerides of fatty acids - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mono-_and_diglycerides_of...

    E471 is mainly produced from vegetable oils (such as soybean, grapeseed, canola, sunflower, cottonseed, coconut, and palm oil) and plant pomace such as grape pomace or tomato pomace [5]), although animal fats are sometimes used and cannot be completely excluded as being present in the product. [6]

  4. Fatty acid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatty_acid

    Fatty acids can only be broken down in mitochondria, by means of beta-oxidation followed by further combustion in the citric acid cycle to CO 2 and water. Cells in the central nervous system, although they possess mitochondria, cannot take free fatty acids up from the blood, as the blood–brain barrier is impervious to most free fatty acids ...

  5. Fatty acid synthesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatty_acid_synthesis

    The diagrams presented show how fatty acids are synthesized in microorganisms and list the enzymes found in Escherichia coli. [2] These reactions are performed by fatty acid synthase II (FASII), which in general contain multiple enzymes that act as one complex. FASII is present in prokaryotes, plants, fungi, and parasites, as well as in ...

  6. Lecithin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lecithin

    Lecithin (/ ˈ l ɛ s ɪ θ ɪ n / LESS-ith-in; from the Ancient Greek λέκιθος lékithos "yolk") is a generic term to designate any group of yellow-brownish fatty substances occurring in animal and plant tissues which are amphiphilic – they attract both water and fatty substances (and so are both hydrophilic and lipophilic), and are ...

  7. Beta oxidation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beta_oxidation

    Fatty acids with an odd number of carbons are found in the lipids of plants and some marine organisms. Many ruminant animals form a large amount of 3-carbon propionate during the fermentation of carbohydrates in the rumen. [4] Long-chain fatty acids with an odd number of carbon atoms are found particularly in ruminant fat and milk. [5]

  8. Phospholipid-derived fatty acids - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phospholipid-derived_fatty...

    Gram-negative bacteria produce high levels of monounsaturated fatty acids (e.g. 16:1 omega-7 and 18:1 omega-9) during active metabolism but convert much of the unsaturated fatty acid composition to cyclopropane fatty acids (e.g. 17:0 cyclopropane and 19:0 cyclopropane) when metabolism and cell division slow due to shortage of nutrition or other ...

  9. Vegetable oil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vegetable_oil

    Like animal fats, vegetable fats are mixtures of triglycerides. [1] Soybean oil, grape seed oil, and cocoa butter are examples of seed oils, or fats from seeds. Olive oil, palm oil, and rice bran oil are examples of fats from other parts of plants. In common usage, vegetable oil may refer exclusively to vegetable fats which are liquid at room ...