Neral serves as the (Z)-isomer of citral, an acyclic monoterpenoid aldehyde central to lemon-like aromas in essential oils, plant defense signaling, and synthetic chemistry for fragrances and vitamins. It exhibits antimicrobial, insecticidal, and moderate cytotoxic effects primarily through membrane disruption and ROS generation.
Chemical Properties
Neral ((Z)-3,7-dimethylocta-2,6-dienal, C₁₀H₁₆O, MW 152.24 g/mol) appears as a pale yellow liquid (bp 228-229°C, density 0.892 g/cm³, refractive index nD20 1.487) with a softer, sweeter lemon odor than its (E)-geranial counterpart due to cis C2=C3 geometry. Its conjugated α,β-unsaturated aldehyde enables facile oxidation to nerolic acid, reduction to nerol, and acid-catalyzed cyclization to isopiperitenol; logP 3.37 limits water solubility to ~1.4 g/L. Industrial citral (60-70% geranial/30-40% neral) undergoes selective isomerization via base catalysis.
Biosynthetic Pathway
The MEP plastidial route converts GPP → geraniol → geranial/neral via NAD+-dependent alcohol dehydrogenases (ADH, EC 1.1.1.284) with isomerase activity; neral predominates in lemon balm (Melissa officinalis, 20-40% of volatiles) and lemongrass (Cymbopogon flexuosus, 5-15%). Emission bursts (10-50 μg g⁻¹ h⁻¹ dw) occur post-wounding; microbial titers reach 500 mg/L in engineered S. cerevisiae expressing geraniol dehydrogenases.

