While molecules such as glucose move freely in the blood, triglycerides are carried in the blood by very low density lipoproteins (VLDLs) in the form of chylomicrons. A chylomicron resembles a droplet, with phospholipid heads and VLDLs facing water, the solvent of blood, while triglycerides are found within. The outer surface resembles that of a regular phospholipid bilayer. If the contents of a chylomicron are all lipids
A. then they should be soluble in blood plasma.
B. an inner layer is needed because phospholipids always form bilayers,
C. there is no need for an inner phospholipid layer in a chylomicron