Zingerone (Phenolic Ketone · Anti-inflammatory · GI Comfort · Cooked Ginger Active)
| Compound | Zingerone (Vanillylacetone) |
| Chemical class | Phenylpropanoid-related — Phenolic Ketone (Ginger thermal degradation product) |
| CAS | 122-48-5 |
| Primary source | Zingiber officinale (dried and cooked ginger rhizome) |
| Key applications | Anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, GI comfort, anti-obesity, antiemetic |
| Claim strength | Moderate |
| Typical form | Dried ginger extract (zingerone enriched vs fresh); ginger powder (cooked) |
| Buy from Herbuno |
Name origin: From Zingiber (ginger genus) + -one (ketone suffix). Also called vanillylacetone — reflecting its structural similarity to vanillin (the aromatic aldehyde of vanilla). Zingerone is formed from 6-gingerol (the primary fresh ginger pungent compound) by a retro-aldol reaction during drying and heating — cooking ginger at temperatures above 100°C converts gingerols to shogaols and zingerone, explaining why cooked ginger has a distinctly different aroma and bioactivity profile from fresh ginger. Traditional use: Ginger (Zingiber officinale, Adrak in Hindi, Saunth/Sonth in dried form) has over 5,000 years of culinary and medicinal use across Indian (Ayurvedic), Chinese, Southeast Asian, and Mediterranean traditions — for nausea, digestive complaints, anti-inflammatory applications, and as a warming spice. Dried and cooked ginger preparations, which are richer in zingerone, have traditionally been preferred for GI and inflammatory conditions. Research trajectory: Zingerone has documented anti-inflammatory (NF-κB inhibition), antioxidant (Nrf2 activation, direct radical scavenging), anti-obesity (beta-3 adrenergic receptor activation, adipogenesis inhibition), and GI protective properties in preclinical research. Human clinical data are primarily from dried ginger extract studies. Commercial source: Available as a constituent of ginger powder and dried ginger extract. See sourcing options below.
Evidence for Zingerone Applications
Anti-inflammatory: Zingerone inhibits NF-κB and reduces prostaglandin synthesis with potency comparable to 6-gingerol in some assays. Activates Nrf2 antioxidant pathway. In vivo anti-inflammatory efficacy in arthritis and colitis animal models is documented. Claim strength: Moderate.
GI protective and antidiarrhoeal: Zingerone inhibits intestinal motility and reduces fluid secretion in diarrhoea models. It was specifically identified as the active responsible for dried ginger’s antidiarrhoeal activity (distinct from the antiemetic activity of 6-gingerol in fresh ginger). Relevant for GI comfort and antidiarrhoeal supplement formulations. Claim strength: Moderate.
Anti-obesity: Zingerone activates beta-3 adrenergic receptors (thermogenic — brown adipose tissue activation), inhibits pancreatic lipase (reducing fat absorption), and suppresses adipogenesis in cell models. In obese animal models, reduces body weight and visceral fat. Claim strength: Moderate (animal data; no isolated zingerone human RCT).
Antioxidant: Zingerone is a potent DPPH and ABTS radical scavenger. The vanillyl group (catechol-like character) and enone system both contribute to antioxidant activity. In vivo antioxidant protection in tissue oxidative stress models is documented. Claim strength: Moderate.
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Dosage & Formulator Specification
No established isolated zingerone human dose. Dried ginger extract clinical doses from nausea/antiemetic RCTs: 500–1,500 mg/day dried ginger (standardised to total gingerols + shogaols + zingerone content). For zingerone-enriched preparations, dried or cooked ginger extract (versus fresh ginger extract) is the appropriate specification — zingerone forms during heating and is negligible in fresh ginger. Specify extraction from dried/cooked rhizome and request total gingerol/shogaol/zingerone profile by HPLC on CoA.
Ginger Extract Powder and Ginger Powder from Zingiber officinale are commercially available — specify dried rhizome source for zingerone enrichment. Zingerone has better water solubility than gingerols (less lipophilic due to absence of the alkyl side chain) — compatible with aqueous and alcohol-based formulation systems. Pungency is lower than 6-gingerol or shogaols — an advantage for palatability in oral formulations targeting anti-inflammatory and GI applications where ginger pungency is undesirable.
Frequently Asked Questions — Zingerone
What is the difference between zingerone, gingerol, and shogaol?
Fresh ginger contains 6-gingerol as its primary pungent compound and bioactive. During drying and mild heating, 6-gingerol undergoes dehydration to form 6-shogaol (more pungent, more potent anti-inflammatory and anticancer activity than gingerol). At higher temperatures (cooking), 6-gingerol undergoes retro-aldol degradation to form zingerone + acetaldehyde. Zingerone is the least pungent of the three and has a characteristic sweet, spicy-warm aroma — the characteristic aroma of cooked gingerbread. Each has a distinct bioactivity profile with different optimal applications.
Why is dried ginger considered therapeutically different from fresh ginger in Ayurveda?
Ayurvedic texts distinguish Adrak (fresh ginger) and Saunth/Sonth (dried ginger) as having different properties and applications. This is pharmacologically justified — drying transforms the gingerol profile toward shogaols and zingerone. Dried ginger (Saunth) is preferred in Ayurveda for GI conditions (antidiarrhoeal, carminative — zingerone-mediated), respiratory conditions, and arthritis. Fresh ginger (Adrak) is preferred for nausea and acute immune applications (gingerol-mediated). Modern phytochemical research has validated this traditional distinction.
Can zingerone be positioned for a weight management supplement?
Yes — with appropriate claim-strength caveat. Zingerone’s beta-3 adrenergic receptor activation (thermogenic) and pancreatic lipase inhibition are mechanistically relevant for weight management. Combined with 6-shogaol (stronger thermogenic activity) and EGCG (catechin thermogenesis synergy), a ginger-green tea combination addresses multiple weight management mechanisms. Position as “may support healthy metabolism and weight management” — not for substantial weight loss claims without human RCT data for isolated zingerone.
Does zingerone have the same nausea-relief effects as fresh ginger?
The antiemetic activity of ginger is primarily attributed to 6-gingerol (5-HT3 receptor antagonism) rather than zingerone. Dried ginger retains some gingerol content alongside zingerone and shogaols. For nausea management, fresh ginger extract (higher gingerol content) is more directly relevant than dried ginger (where zingerone is enriched). For GI motility and anti-diarrhoeal applications, dried ginger (zingerone-enriched) is the preferred specification.
Related compounds: Thymoquinone, Artabsin, Bisabolol, Guaiol
Claim-strength scale – High = multiple human RCTs; Moderate = limited trials or strong preclinical convergence; Emerging = early-stage lab or animal data.
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