Understanding Endogenous Fat Production: Why the Body’s Own Lipid Machinery Matters Most
When people think about fat, they usually imagine the fats they eat. Yet the more important story begins after food enters the intestine. Dietary fats are not simply transferred unchanged into body stores. In the intestine, they are emulsified by bile acids , broken down by pancreatic and intestinal enzymes into fatty acids and monoglycerides, absorbed by enterocytes, repackaged into chylomicrons, and then delivered into circulation. From there, tissues take up, burn, remodel, store, or transform these lipid fragments according to the body’s own metabolic priorities. This is why fat biology cannot be reduced to dietary fat alone. The human body is an active lipid-producing and lipid-regulating system. It does not merely receive fats from food; it rebuilds them, synthesizes new ones, and uses them for energy storage, membrane formation, signaling, hormone production, and thermal regulation. In healthy conditions, this endogenous fat production is essential for life. In unhealthy condit...