Biology, asked by yashpatil78, 10 months ago

why phospolipids are amphibathic​

Answers

Answered by Zisha7
1

Answer:

Phospholipids are amphipathic molecules. This means that they have a hydrophilic, polar phosphate head and two hydrophobic fatty acid tails. These components of the phospholipids cause them to orientate themselves, so the phosphate head can interact with water and the fatty acid tails can't, hence forming a bilayer.

Answered by amulya01
0

Answer:

Phospholipids are amphipathic molecules. This means that they have a hydrophilic, polar phosphate head and two hydrophobic fatty acid tails. These components of the phospholipids cause them to orientate themselves, so the phosphate head can interact with water and the fatty acid tails can't, hence forming a bilayer❤️

hope this helps and plz mark as brain liest❤️

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