Bile or gall acts to some extent as a
surfactant, helping to
emulsify the lipids in food. Bile salt
anions are
hydrophilic on one side and
hydrophobic on the other side; consequently, they tend to aggregate around droplets of lipids (
triglycerides and
phospholipids) to form
micelles, with the hydrophobic sides towards the fat and hydrophilic sides facing outwards. The hydrophilic sides are negatively charged, and this charge prevents fat droplets coated with bile from re-aggregating into larger fat particles. Ordinarily, the micelles in the
duodenum have a diameter around 1–50
μm in humans. The dispersion of food fat into micelles provides a greatly increased surface area for the action of the enzyme
pancreatic lipase, which digests the triglycerides, and is able to reach the fatty core through gaps between the bile salts. A triglyceride is broken down into two fatty acids and a
monoglyceride, which are absorbed by the
villi on the intestine walls. After being transferred across the intestinal membrane, the fatty acids reform into triglycerides (), before being absorbed into the lymphatic system through
lacteals. Without bile salts, most of the lipids in food would be excreted in feces, undigested. Since bile increases the absorption of fats, it is an important part of the absorption of the fat-soluble substances, such as the
vitamins
A,
D,
E, and
K. Besides its digestive function, bile serves also as the route of excretion for bilirubin, a byproduct of
red blood cells recycled by the liver. Bilirubin derives from
hemoglobin by
glucuronidation. Bile tends to be
alkaline on average. The
pH of common duct bile (7.50 to 8.05) is higher than that of the corresponding gallbladder bile (6.80 to 7.65). Bile in the gallbladder becomes more
acidic the longer a person goes without eating, though resting slows this process. As an alkali, it also has the function of neutralizing excess
stomach acid before it enters the duodenum, the first section of the
small intestine.
Bile salts also act as
bactericides, destroying many of the microbes that may be present in the food. ==Clinical significance==