Request JD-000057 Medical Affairs
Audience: Medical Affairs • completed
Routing confidence: 90% • Candidates: Medical Affairs, R&D, Commercial
Routing reasons: ML fallback: low confidence (41% < 57%); The document provides detailed explanations of lipids, their chemical nature, biosynthesis, and biological roles.; It includes biochemical pathways, types of lipids, and their function in the human body, which are relevant to medical and healthcare professionals.; The article is written with scientific terminology and references useful for medical education and communication rather than for commercial promotion or deep research.; It is reviewed and cited in a way that suits medical information dissemination and medical affairs teams who translate scientific data into clinical or educational content.
Why Routed Here
Medical Affairs
at 56.3%
▼
ML predicted Medical Affairs at 56.3% confidence. Runner-up: R And D at 27.1%.
Top contributing terms (Medical Affairs)
| Term | TF-IDF | Weight | Contribution | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
lipids |
0.1294 | 0.0607 | 0.0079 | |
fatty |
0.0514 | 0.0927 | 0.0048 | |
acids |
0.0876 | 0.0511 | 0.0045 | |
body |
0.0444 | 0.0924 | 0.0041 | |
lipid |
0.0636 | 0.0608 | 0.0039 | |
news |
0.0445 | 0.0804 | 0.0036 | |
saturated |
0.0746 | 0.0483 | 0.0036 | |
fatty acids |
0.088 | 0.0402 | 0.0035 |
Runner-up: R And D (27.1%)
| Term | TF-IDF | Weight | Contribution | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
and |
0.0373 | 0.0805 | 0.003 | |
biological |
0.0434 | 0.0687 | 0.003 | |
portfolio |
0.0199 | 0.1447 | 0.0029 | |
as they |
0.0449 | 0.0505 | 0.0023 | |
proteins |
0.0325 | 0.0709 | 0.0023 | |
this |
0.0232 | 0.0998 | 0.0023 | |
content |
0.0303 | 0.0589 | 0.0018 | |
making |
0.0157 | 0.1054 | 0.0016 |
All probabilities: Commercial: 16.6% · Medical Affairs: 56.3% · R And D: 27.1%
Source url
https://www.news-medical.net/life-sciences/What-are-Lipids.aspx
What are Lipids? Skip to content Menu Medical Home Life Sciences Home Become a Member Search Medical Home Life Sciences Home About Functional Food News Health A-Z Drugs Medical Devices Interviews White Papers More... MediKnowledge eBooks Posters Podcasts Newsletters Health & Personal Care Contact Meet the Team Advertise Search Become a Member Top Health Categories Coronavirus Disease COVID-19 Diet & Nutrition Artificial Intelligence Allergies Alzheimer's & Dementia Arthritis & Rheumatology Breast Cancer Breastfeeding Cold, Flu & Cough Dermatology Diabetes Eating Disorders Eye Health Gastrointe…
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What are Lipids? Skip to content Menu Medical Home Life Sciences Home Become a Member Search Medical Home Life Sciences Home About Functional Food News Health A-Z Drugs Medical Devices Interviews White Papers More... MediKnowledge eBooks Posters Podcasts Newsletters Health & Personal Care Contact Meet the Team Advertise Search Become a Member Top Health Categories Coronavirus Disease COVID-19 Diet & Nutrition Artificial Intelligence Allergies Alzheimer's & Dementia Arthritis & Rheumatology Breast Cancer Breastfeeding Cold, Flu & Cough Dermatology Diabetes Eating Disorders Eye Health Gastrointestinal Health Heart Disease Lung Cancer Mental Health Parkinson's Disease Pregnancy Sleep Urology View Health A-Z × Top Health Categories Coronavirus Disease COVID-19 Eating Disorders Diet & Nutrition Eye Health Artificial Intelligence Gastrointestinal Health Allergies Heart Disease Alzheimer's & Dementia Lung Cancer Arthritis & Rheumatology Mental Health Breast Cancer Parkinson's Disease Breastfeeding Pregnancy Cold, Flu & Cough Sleep Dermatology Urology Diabetes View Health A-Z Medical Home Life Sciences Home About News Life Sciences A-Z White Papers Lab Equipment Interviews Newsletters Webinars More... eBooks Posters Podcasts Contact Meet the Team Advertise Search Become a Member White Papers MediKnowledge eBooks Posters Podcasts Newsletters Health & Personal Care Contact Meet the Team Advertise Search Become a Member Webinars eBooks Posters Podcasts Contact Meet the Team Advertise Search Become a Member What are Lipids? Download PDF Copy By Michael Greenwood, M.Sc. Reviewed by April Cashin-Garbutt, MA (Editor) Lipids are molecules that contain hydrocarbons and make up the building blocks of the structure and function of living cells. Examples of lipids include fats, oils, waxes, certain vitamins (such as A, D, E and K), hormones and most of the cell membrane that is not made up of protein. Lipids are not soluble in water as they are non-polar, but are thus soluble in non-polar solvents such as chloroform. Human lipid bilayer - 3D Rendering. Image Credit: Crevis / Shutterstock What do Lipids Consist of? Lipids are mainly composed of hydrocarbons in their most reduced form, making them an excellent form of energy storage, as when metabolized the hydrocarbons oxidize to release large amounts of energy. The type of lipid found in fat cells for this purpose is a triglyceride, an ester created from glycerol and three fatty acids. Where do Lipids Come From? Excess carbohydrates in the diet are converted into triglycerides, which involves the synthesis of fatty acids from acetyl-CoA in a process known as lipogenesis, and takes place in the endoplasmic reticulum. In animals and fungi, a single multi-functional protein handles most of these processes, while bacteria utilize multiple separate enzymes. Some types of unsaturated fatty acids cannot be synthesized in mammalian cells, and so must be consumed as part of the diet, such as omega-3. Acetyl-CoA is also involved in the mevalonate pathway, responsible for producing a wide range of isoprenoids, which include important lipids such as cholesterol and steroid hormones. Hydrolysable and Non-hydrolysable Lipids Lipids that contain an ester functional group are hydrolysable in water. These include neutral fats, waxes, phospholipids, and glycolipids. Fats and oils are composed of triglycerides, made up of glycerol (1,2,3-trihydroxypropane) and 3 fatty acids to form a triester. Triglycerides are found in the blood, and stored in fat cells. Complete hydrolysis of triacylglycerols yields three fatty acids and a glycerol molecule. Non-hydrolyzable lipids lack such functional groups and include steroids and fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, and K). Fatty Acids Fatty acids are long chain carboxylic acids (typically 16 or more carbon atoms) which may or may not contain carbon-carbon double bonds. The number of carbon atoms are almost always an even number and are usually unbranched. Oleic acid is the most abundant fatty acid in nature. Related Stories Unprocessed beef does not worsen metabolic health in prediabetes New grant supports research into drug-induced brain toxicity Study shows membrane chemistry influences early cell-like compartment evolution The membrane that surrounds a cell is made up of proteins and lipids. Depending on the membrane’s location and role in the body, lipids can make up anywhere from 20 to 80 percent of the membrane, with the remainder being proteins. Cholesterol, which is not found in plant cells, is a type of lipid that helps stiffen the membrane. Image Credit: National Institute of General Medical Sciences Waxes/Fats and Oils These are esters with long-chain carboxylic acids and long-alcohols. Fat is the name given to a class of triglycerides that appear as solid or semisolid at room temperature, fats are mainly present in animals. Oils are triglycerides that appear as a liquid at room temperature, oils are mainly present in plants and sometimes in fish. Mono/Poly Unsaturated and Saturated Those fatty acids with no carbon-carbon double bonds are called saturated. Those that have two or more double bonds are called polyunsaturated. Oleic acid is monounsaturated, as it possesses a single double bond. Saturated fats are typically solids and are derived from animals, while unsaturated fats are liquids and usually extracted from plants. Unsaturated fats assume a particular geometry that prevents the molecules from packing as efficiently as they do in saturated molecules, leading to their propensity to exist as a liquid rather than a solid. Thus, the boiling point of unsaturated fats is lower than that of saturated fats. Synthesis and Function of Lipids in the Body Lipids are utilized directly, or otherwise synthesized, from fats present in the diet. There are numerous biosynthetic pathways to both break down and synthesize lipids in the body. The main biological functions of lipids include storing energy, as lipids may be broken down to yield large amounts of energy. Lipids also form the structural components of cell membranes, and form various messengers and signaling molecules within the body. Blood chemistry report showing normal liver function tests, and a lipid profile with high triglyceride levels. Image Credit: Stephen Barnes / Shutterstock Sources https://www.chemistry.ucla.edu/ https://www.albany.edu/ http://science.marshall.edu/castella/chm204/chap19.pdf https://publichealth.jhu.edu/2005/ocw https://www.uidaho.edu/sci www.biochem.wisc.edu/seminars/steenbock/symposium34/34th_Steenbock.pdf Further Reading All Lipids Content Lipid Biological Functions Lipid Metabolism Lipid Health and Nutrition Lipid Peroxidation More... Last Updated: Jul 20, 2023 Written by Michael Greenwood Michael graduated from the University of Salford with a Ph.D. in Biochemistry in 2023, and has keen research interests towards nanotechnology and its application to biological systems. Michael has written on a wide range of science communication and news topics within the life sciences and related fields since 2019, and engages extensively with current developments in journal publications. Download PDF Copy Citations Please use one of the following formats to cite this article in your essay, paper or report: APA Greenwood, Michael. (2023, July 20). What are Lipids?. News-Medical. Retrieved on February 17, 2026 from https://www.news-medical.net/life-sciences/What-are-Lipids.aspx. MLA Greenwood, Michael. "What are Lipids?". News-Medical . 17 February 2026. <https://www.news-medical.net/life-sciences/What-are-Lipids.aspx>. Chicago Greenwood, Michael. "What are Lipids?". News-Medical. https://www.news-medical.net/life-sciences/What-are-Lipids.aspx. (accessed February 17, 2026). Harvard Greenwood, Michael. 2023. What are Lipids? . News-Medical, viewed 17 February 2026, https://www.news-medical.net/life-sciences/What-are-Lipids.aspx. Suggested Reading Researchers discover how Mycoplasma pneumoniae acquires cholesterol from human hosts New oral drug safely lowers triglycerides and other blood lipids in Phase 1 trial Turning everyday eggs into powerful nutrient delivery systems Diabetic nephropathy shows severe biochemical abnormalities How microalgae, fish, and krill store omega-3s differently and why it matters New C-COMPASS software opens spatial proteomics and lipidomics to non-coders Three daily servings of full-fat dairy do not worsen weight or blood markers High-fat diets cause more damage to metabolic health than carbohydrates Comments Thank you Holley Yarton says: October 6, 2015 at 10:02 AM I was needing this page for bio. THANKS! 2 1 Reply LIFE SAVOR (BETTER THAN THE CANDY) lila gebhart says: November 24, 2019 at 9:36 AM this was super helpful for BIO. thank you! 0 2 Reply Basically the article is telling us that lipids are created by hydrocarbons Termicheal Brown says: August 17, 2020 at 11:21 PM Basically the article is telling us that lipids are created by hydrocarbons and lipids are excellent for giving us a curtain type of energy we need a day,study shows that most lipids are found in animals and fungi and a single multi-functional protein. 0 1 Reply The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News Medical. Cancel reply to comment Post a new comment Login (Logout) Quirky Comment Title Post Trending Stories Latest Interviews Top Life Sciences Articles Newly identified protein interaction fine-tunes cellular stress responses Gut bacteria use formic acid as an electron taxi Researchers identify a previously unknown cellular barrier in the brain Polygenic analysis provides new insight into hypermobile Ehlers–Danlos syndrome Type 2 diabetes and hypertension share a genetic link, study shows Advancing brain microphysiological systems (bMPS) Dr. Lena Smirnova Brain microphysiological systems are reshaping in vitro neurotoxicity testing through functional validation and advanced disease modeling. PhD researcher at LifeArc Natasha Bury Targeted protein degradation presents a promising strategy to address antimicrobial resistance, focusing on innovative approaches for gram-negative bacteria. Unveiling Hidden Potential: Organoids for Disease Modeling in Neuroscience Research Rosanna Zhang In our latest interview, News-Medical speaks with Rosanna Zhang from ACROBiosystems about utilizing organoids for disease modeling in the field of neuroscience research. Digital Twins in Precision Medicine and Drug Discovery What Is The Endothelial Glycocalyx And Why It Matters For Vascular Health Why the Evolution of Mesoderm Changed Animal Life Forever What Is the Difference Between siRNA and shRNA Knockdown Methods? What Is Bio-Monitoring? The Role of Spectroscopy in Real-Time Analysis Latest Life Science News From liquid handling to sample storage Study explores how reversible RNA editing could transform future cardiovascular medicine Hamilton Storage completes full transition to green refrigerants across automated portfolio Alzheimer’s plaques decline after CAR-T immune cell treatment in preclinical study Eppendorf collaborates with Dubai Police to automate forensics laboratories Newsletters you may be interested in Cholesterol ( Subscribe or Preview ) Nutrition ( Subscribe or Preview ) Hepatology ( Subscribe or Preview ) See all Newsletters » High Credibility: This website adheres to all nine standards of credibility and transparency. 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Lipids are diverse hydrocarbon-based molecules essential for energy storage, cell membrane structure, and signaling in living organisms.
Full breakdown — bullets, mind map, citations, risk & scorecard
Original URL and scraped document text
One-line Summary
Lipids are diverse hydrocarbon-based molecules essential for energy storage, cell membrane structure, and signaling in living organisms.
Decision Bullets
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Scientific Summary: Lipids serve critical functions including energy storage, structural roles in membranes, and acting as bioactive molecules; their biochemical diversity underlies varied physiological roles.
View citation support (1)
Lipids are mainly composed of hydrocarbons in their most reduced form, making them an excellent form of energy storage, as when metabolized the hydrocarbons oxidize to release large amounts of energy.
Offsets: 2131–2331
Confidence: 65% Medium
-
Evidence Gaps: Limited data on species-specific lipid biosynthesis variations and the implications of lipid structure on emerging membrane-associated diseases.
View citation support (1)
Depending on the membrane’s location and role in the body, lipids can make up anywhere from 20 to 80 percent of the membrane, with the remainder being proteins.
Offsets: 4322–4482
Confidence: 66% Medium
-
Medical Insights: Dietary intake of essential fatty acids is crucial; dysregulation in lipid metabolism can impact metabolic health including triglyceride-related disorders.
View citation support (1)
The type of lipid found in fat cells for this purpose is a triglyceride, an ester created from glycerol and three fatty acids.
Offsets: 2332–2458
Confidence: 72% Medium
-
Stakeholder Considerations: Nutritionists, clinicians, and pharmaceutical developers must account for lipid diversity and metabolism in dietary guidance and drug formulation.
View citation support (1)
No supporting quote found.
Confidence: 20% Weak
-
Next Steps: Further research into lipidomics for disease biomarkers and therapeutic targets, plus public health initiatives to address dietary lipid quality.
View citation support (1)
Suggested Reading Researchers discover how Mycoplasma pneumoniae acquires cholesterol from human hosts New oral drug safely lowers triglycerides and other blood lipids in Phase 1 trial Turning everyday eggs into powerful nutrient delivery systems Diabetic nephropathy shows severe biochemical abnormalities How microalga
Offsets: 7904–8224
Confidence: 69% Medium
Mind Map
mindmap
root((Lipids))
Composition
Hydrocarbons
Non-polar molecules
Types
Hydrolysable
Triglycerides
Phospholipids
Glycolipids
Non-hydrolysable
Steroids
Fat-soluble vitamins
Functions
Energy storage
Cell membrane structure
Signaling molecules
Dietary Aspects
Essential fatty acids
Saturated vs Unsaturated
Medical Relevance
Metabolic health
Lipid disorders
Research Needs
Lipidomics
Biosynthesis pathways
Disease associations
Tags
Key Clues
- Lipids are hydrocarbons and non-polar molecules
- Triglycerides store energy; composed of glycerol and fatty acids
- Lipids form major components of cell membranes
- Some fatty acids like omega-3 are essential and diet-derived
- Lipids are classified as hydrolysable (e.g. triglycerides) or non-hydrolysable (e.g. steroids)
- Saturated fats are solid at room temperature; unsaturated are liquid
- Cholesterol modulates membrane stiffness in animal cells
Citation & Risk Scorecard
| # | Bullet | Supporting Quote | Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
Scientific Summary: Lipids serve critical functions including energy storage, structural roles in membranes, and acting as bioactive molecules; their biochemical diversity underlies varied physiological roles.
|
"Lipids are mainly composed of hydrocarbons in their most reduced form, making them an excellent form of energy storage, as when metabolized the hydrocarbons oxidize to release large amounts of energy."
|
Medium |
| 2 |
Evidence Gaps: Limited data on species-specific lipid biosynthesis variations and the implications of lipid structure on emerging membrane-associated diseases.
|
"Depending on the membrane’s location and role in the body, lipids can make up anywhere from 20 to 80 percent of the membrane, with the remainder being proteins."
|
Medium |
| 3 |
Medical Insights: Dietary intake of essential fatty acids is crucial; dysregulation in lipid metabolism can impact metabolic health including triglyceride-related disorders.
|
"The type of lipid found in fat cells for this purpose is a triglyceride, an ester created from glycerol and three fatty acids."
|
Medium |
| 4 |
Stakeholder Considerations: Nutritionists, clinicians, and pharmaceutical developers must account for lipid diversity and metabolism in dietary guidance and drug formulation.
|
— | None |
| 5 |
Next Steps: Further research into lipidomics for disease biomarkers and therapeutic targets, plus public health initiatives to address dietary lipid quality.
|
"Suggested Reading Researchers discover how Mycoplasma pneumoniae acquires cholesterol from human hosts New oral drug safely lowers triglycerides and other blood lipids in Phase 1 trial Turning everyday eggs into powerful nutrient delivery systems Diabetic nephropathy shows severe biochemical abnormalities How microalga"
|
Medium |
Risk & Compliance
BETTER THAN
Suggestion: Specify the head-to-head data source. Cross-trial indirect comparisons must be labelled as such.
always
Suggestion: Add uncertainty qualifiers (e.g., may/might) or back the claim with a citation.
Metadata (Attempts & Trace Legend)
Attempt Timeline
Attempts
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Attempt 1 —
Passed
Lipids are diverse hydrocarbon-based molecules essential for energy storage, cell membrane structure, and signaling in living organisms.
Trace Legend
- Route Audience: Classifies the document into an audience.
- Specialist Generate: Produces one-line summary, key clues, decision bullets, mind map, and tags.
- Evaluate: Checks required sections, word count, and 3–5 bullet constraint.
- Persist Attempt: Saves the attempt record.
- Next Step: Decides whether to revise or persist results.
- Persist Results: Saves final clues and tags at the document level.
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