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Tagged: ascorbic-acid, l-ascorbic-acid, vitamin c
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Difference between Ascorbic acid and L-ascorbic acid. Is there any?
Posted by Ifa on May 7, 2021 at 7:54 amIs there any difference between Ascorbic acid and L-ascorbic acid?
If so, in what terms?
Pharma replied 3 years, 6 months ago 4 Members · 6 Replies -
6 Replies
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That depends on what characteristic you are talking about.
From an element standpoint, they have the identical chemical formula
From a structural standpoint, Ascorbic acid is a blend of l-ascorbic acid and d-ascorbic acid. (isomers). On a molecular level these compounds are mirror structures like you left hand and right hand.
From a functional standpoint, reportedly only the l-ascorbic acid isomer is biologically functional. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3673383/
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Perry said:That depends on what characteristic you are talking about.
From an element standpoint, they have the identical chemical formula
From a structural standpoint, Ascorbic acid is a blend of l-ascorbic acid and d-ascorbic acid. (isomers). On a molecular level these compounds are mirror structures like you left hand and right hand.
From a functional standpoint, reportedly only the l-ascorbic acid isomer is biologically functional. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3673383/
Thank you for your response!
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Nature only produces the L-enantiomer of ascorbic acid and most industrial processes also produce exclusively the L-form (starting from glucose and using fermentation). On the other hand, certain synthetic pathways may lead to either enantiopure products or a racemic mixtures but these are speciality syntheses which aren’t readily available to everyone or result from the original disused synthetic route, respectively.Both enantiomers act as antioxidants equally well whilst enzymes depending on it as co-factor can only use the L-form.There’s maybe a 99.99% chance that whenever you read or buy ascorbic acid it will be L-ascorbic acid and whenever vitamin C is mentioned, it always refers to the L- form.
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There is no difference between Ascorbic Acid and L-Ascorbic acid.
This molecule exists in two enantiomers. The L-from is Ascorbic acid; the D-form is called erythorbic acid.
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Pharma said:Nature only produces the L-enantiomer of ascorbic acid and most industrial processes also produce exclusively the L-form (starting from glucose and using fermentation). On the other hand, certain synthetic pathways may lead to either enantiopure products or a racemic mixtures but these are speciality syntheses which aren’t readily available to everyone or result from the original disused synthetic route, respectively.Both enantiomers act as antioxidants equally well whilst enzymes depending on it as co-factor can only use the L-form.There’s maybe a 99.99% chance that whenever you read or buy ascorbic acid it will be L-ascorbic acid and whenever vitamin C is mentioned, it always refers to the L- form.Herbnerd said:There is no difference between Ascorbic Acid and L-Ascorbic acid.
This molecule exists in two enantiomers. The L-from is Ascorbic acid; the D-form is called erythorbic acid.
Would this work in place of L-ascorbic acid in my vitamin C formula?
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As said, todays food, pharma, and cosmetic grade ascorbic acid is L-ascorbic acid. Only technical grades may sometimes still be the racemate.
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