Menthone represents the principal ketone precursor and oxidation product of menthol in peppermint oil. It contributes characteristic minty-liquorice aromas and exhibits milder cooling, antimicrobial, and flavor-modulating effects compared to menthol, primarily through interactions with transient receptor channels and biological membranes.
Chemical Properties
Menthone (5-methyl-2-(1-methylethyl)cyclohexan-1-one, C₁₀H₁₈O, molecular weight 154.25 g/mol) is a colorless oily liquid with a boiling point of 207°C, melting point of -6°C, density of 0.895 g/cm³, and refractive index (nD20) of 1.450. It exists as four stereoisomers, with naturally predominant (-)-menthone (2S,5R) being more abundant than isomenthone, its cis-epimer (approximately 29% at equilibrium). The cyclic ketone can undergo stereospecific reduction to menthol and neomenthol via NADPH-dependent menthone reductase. Its logP value of 3.1 reflects low water solubility (~1 g/L).
Biosynthetic Pathway
Menthone is biosynthesized via the MEP pathway, where (-)-limonene is converted into (-)-piperitenone and subsequently into (-)-menthone through the action of cytochrome P450 hydroxylases (notably CYP71D13) and isomerases in the glandular trichomes of Mentha piperita. Menthone typically represents 15–30% of peppermint essential oil, with concentrations peaking prior to flowering. It exists in equilibrium with isomenthone (approximately 71:29 ratio) through enol tautomerization. Industrially, menthone can also be produced synthetically via oxidation of menthol using copper/chromium catalysts.

