Stereoselective Pharmacokinetics and Anti-inflammatory Activity of Amygdalin Epimers: Implications for Thermal and pH Stability in Amygdalin -Based Functional Foods

Abstract

Armeniacae semen amarum (ASA), the seed of Prunus armeniaca L, is widely consumed as both a food and a traditional medicinal ingredient. but thermal processing may induce epimerization of its key constituent amygdalin (Amy), potentially altering its bioactivity and safety. Here we compared the two epimers, R Amy and S Amy, for anti inflammatory activity, pharmacokinetics, and the R Amy stability under processing conditions. S-Amy was prepared via thermal-induced epimerization of R-Amy followed by β-glucosidase-mediated stereoselective hydrolysis. In LPS stimulated RAW264.7 macrophages, R Amy showed superior anti inflammatory activity to S Amy, attributed to stronger suppression of the TLR 4/NF κB/iNOS axis. Following oral administration in rats, both epimers underwent extensive metabolism in the gastrointestinal tract; notably, R Amy showed 1.90 fold and 1.84 fold higher Cmax and AUC(0-t) than S Amy, respectively. For the primary active metabolites R-prunasin (R-Pru) and S-prunasin (S-Pru) of Amy, the Cmax, AUC(0-t) and bioavailability (F) of R-Pru were 1.47-fold, 4.84-fold and 4.65-fold higher compared to S-Pru, respectively, indicating stereoselective absorption. Bidirectional epimerization between R-Amy and S-Amy was observed both in vivo and during thermal processing. Furthermore, we investigated the effects of compatibility materials with different physicochemical properties on the configurational stability of R-Amy during decoction. The results revealed that acidic conditions and specific food compatibilities significantly inhibited R-Amy epimerization, thereby preserving the more bioactive epimer, whereas alkaline conditions promoted its conversion. Collectively, these results reveal that processing-mediated control of Amy stereochemistry determines its metabolic disposition and biological activity, establishing a mechanistic rationale for enhancing ASA-based functional foods and therapeutics.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
01 Mar 2026
Accepted
02 May 2026
First published
18 May 2026

Food Funct., 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Stereoselective Pharmacokinetics and Anti-inflammatory Activity of Amygdalin Epimers: Implications for Thermal and pH Stability in Amygdalin -Based Functional Foods

W. Liu, X. Hu, M. Zhou, F. Cai, S. Zhang, J. Lei, W. Ma, S. Qi, W. Liu and C. Wang, Food Funct., 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D6FO00961A

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