Acrylamide in Food: From Maillard Reaction to Public Health Concern
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Methodology
3. Acrylamide: Definition and Properties
| Property | Description |
|---|---|
| Molecular Formula | C3H5NO |
| Other name | Prop-2-enamide |
| Molecular Weight | 71.08 g/mol |
| Melting Point | 84.5 °C |
| Boiling Point | 125 °C (under reduced pressure, e.g., 25 mmHg) or 192.6 °C (at atmospheric pressure) |
| Water Solubility | Very high (204 g/L 25 °C-on) |
| Toxicity Concerns | Neurotoxic, carcinogenic, genotoxic |
| Reactive Characteristics | Vinyl-amide compound with alkylating properties |
4. Formation Mechanism of Acrylamide
5. The Presence of Acrylamide in Different Food Systems
6. Health Implications of Acrylamide
6.1. Carcinogenic Potential
6.2. Neurotoxicity
6.3. Reproductive Effects
7. Regulatory Guidelines and Recommendations
7.1. Global Regulations
7.2. Food Safety Standards
8. Methods for Reducing Acrylamide in Food
8.1. Cooking Techniques and Ingredient Modifications
8.2. To What Extent Can Antioxidants Affect the Acrylamide Content?
8.3. Processing Innovations
9. Consumer Awareness and Education
10. General Discussion and Future Research Directions
11. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| Food Group | Typical Acrylamide Range (µg/kg) | Exposure Category | Key Influencing Factors | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vegetable chips | <750 | High | Asparagine and sugar content of the vegetables, frying conditions, lack of low-acrylamide cultivars, and consumer consumption patterns. | [43] |
| Breakfast cereals | <200 | High | Type of cereal (kamut, spelt, wheat), formulation composition, moisture content, and thermal processing conditions such as baking temperature and time. | [44] |
| Biscuits and cookies | <20 to 2144 µg/kg | Moderate to high | Dough composition, type of cereal or pseudo-cereal (e.g., rye, teff, oat), thermal treatment during baking, low moisture content, and consumption rate. | [45] |
| French fries | <20–1068 | Low to high | The reducing sugar content of the raw potato, moisture content, the color parameter of the fries, frying conditions, and operational procedures in food service establishments. | [46] |
| Potato crisps and snacks | 21 to 3444 | Moderate to high | Type of snack (potato crisps > other snacks), processing method (frying/baking), brand variability, and age-dependent consumption patterns. | [47] |
| Roasted coffee (dry) | 500 to 3800 | Moderate to high | Roasting time and temperature, coffee species (Robusta vs. Arabica), and precursor levels in raw beans (especially asparagine and sugars). | [48] |
| Instant coffee (dry) | <200 | High | Roasting intensity, brand differences, and coffee bean origin. | [49] |
| Cocoa and chocolate products | <30 to 490 | Low to high | Higher acrylamide in semi-finished cocoa suggests roasting, conching, and formulation drive its formation. | [50] |
| Study Type | Species | Exposure Route | Tumor Site | Dose Range (mg/kg/day) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carcinogenicity | Rattus norvegicus | Toxicity in the liver | Necrosis, granular cytoplasmic changes, and vacuolar degeneration in liver tissue | 2.0 mg/kg/day | [55] |
| Neurotoxicity | Male SD rats | Chronic acrylamide exposure | Dopaminergic neuron loss, neuroinflammation, and motor impairment | 0 mg/kg/day 0.5 mg/kg/day 5 mg/kg/day | [56] |
| Carcinogenicity | Wistar Han male and female rats | In utero exposure | Fibroadenomas of the mammary gland and thyroid gland follicular tumors | 0.5 mg/kg/day 1.5 mg/kg/day 3 mg/kg/day | [57] |
| Chronic toxicity and oncogenicity study | Fischer 344 rats | Chronic exposure | Tunica vaginalis mesothelioma | 0.01 mg/kg/day 0.1 mg/kg/day 0.5 mg/kg/day 2.0 mg/kg/day | [57,58,59] |
| Carcinogenicity and mutagenicity | Adult and neonatal mice | Synthesis and spectroscopic characterization of DNA adducts from reaction of GA with individual deoxynucleosides | Genotoxic, formation of N7-(2-carbamoyl-2-hydroxyethyl) guanine (N7-GA-Gua) in vivo | 0 mg/kg/day 1 mg/kg/day 10 mg/kg/day 50 mg/kg/day | [60] |
| Gene expression, neurochemistry, hormones, and histopathology | Male Fischer 344 rats | Subchronic acrylamide exposure | Cancer through endocrine disruption | 2.5 mg/kg/day 10 mg/kg/day 50 mg/kg/day | [61] |
| Carcinogenicity | Sprague Dawley rats | Endocrine exposure | Thyroid, adrenal glands, and testis | 5 mg/kg/day 10 mg/kg/day 15 mg/kg/day | [62] |
| Model System | Acrylamide Concentration and Exposure Duration | Observed Effect | Proposed Mechanism | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PC12 cells | 0.6 mM 1.25 mM 2.5 mM 5 mM for 24 h | Oxidative stress | ROS increased, MDA increased, GSH decreased; HO-1, NQO-1 increased; NF-kB (IkBa, p65), ERK1/2, JNK, and p38 increased. The MAPK pathway is a regulator of the upstream NF-κB and Nrf2 pathways. | [66,67] |
| SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cells/U251 | 0–500 μg/mL for 1, 3, or 5 days | Excitotoxicity and neuronal damage | EAAT2 dysfunction (decrease in EAAT2 expression). | [68] |
| PC12 cells | 0.5 mM for 12 h | Apoptosis | Phosphorylation of MAPKs significantly increases. | [69] |
| BV-2 cells | 0.5 mM 1 mM 2 mM for 24 h | Apoptosis | BDNF, Bcl-2/Bax, and p-Akt/Akt decreased. Cyto-c, cleavage-caspase-9, cleavage-caspase-3, and PARP increased. Mitochondrial respiration and anaerobic glycolysis decreased. | [66,70] |
| H1 hESC cells | 2.5 mM 5 mM for 24 h | Apoptosis and Oxidative stress | SOX2, TUJ1, GFAP, CTIP2, and SOX9 decreased. MAPK and Nrf2 increased. FTL, GCLC, GCLM, SLC7A11, and HMOX1 increased. Caspase-6, caspase-9, and c-FOS increased. Stimulated Tau hyperphosphorylation and suppressed neuronal differentiation. | [66,71] |
| Gastrocnemius motor plate in rats | 9 mg/kg 18 mg/kg 36 mg/kg for 21 days | Toxic to the motor plate | Changes in the structure of muscle fibers and nerve endings, resulting in AChE content. | [72] |
| Male C57BL/6 mice | 20 mg/kg/day for 4 weeks | Autophagy | ATG4B, LC3-II, Cathepsin D, and LAMP2a increased. Trx-1 siRNA enhances ACR-induced autophagy by regulating ITGAV. | [66] |
| Male SD rats | 50 mg/kg/day for 3–28 days | Neurotransmitter dysfunction | Neurological toxicity and weight loss. ACR-cysteine adduct (CEC) and 7S SNARE core complex increased. | [64,66] |
| Male C57/BL6J mice | Drinking water containing 0.003% acrylamide for 16 weeks | Brain–gut axis inflammation | Bmal1, Clock, SNAP-25, PSD-95, ZO-1, and Occludin decreased. IL-10, COX-2, TNF-a, and COX-2 increased. | [66,73] |
| Dosage-dependent neurotoxicity in humans | Daily high-dosage exposure | Numbness in limbs, muscular weakness, cognitive impairment, and axonal neuropathy | Terminal nerve damage in the PNS and CNS. | [66] |
| Human embryonic stem cells (H1hESC) | 2.5 mM and 5 mM for 24 h | Oxidative stress response | ACR inhibited neuron differentiation. | [66,71] |
| Barber and LoPachin exposed Sprague Dawley (SD) rats | 50 mg/kg/day for 28 days | ACR neurotoxicity | Weight loss and abnormal gait. | [64] |
| Adult male SD rats | 40 mg/kg/day ACR for 4 weeks | Oxidative stress | Death of hippocampal neurons and neurotoxicity. | [66] |
| Region/ Authority | Product Category | Benchmark Level (µg/kg) | Region/ Authority | Legal Status/ Acrylamide Content in Food | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| United Union | Potable water | Maximum allowable concentration is 0.1 µg/dm3 | Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) | Guidelines set the amount at 0.5 µg/dm3 | [72] |
| Regulation (EU) 2017/2158 | Wheat-based bread | 50 μg/kg | European Union | 70–430 μg/kg | [72,79,80,81] |
| Breakfast cereals | 300 μg/kg | European Union | 30–1400 μg/kg | ||
| Biscuits and cookies | 350 μg/kg | European Union | <30–3200 μg/kg | ||
| Fried potato products (except potato crisps and snacks) | 500 μg/kg | European Union | 200–2287 μg/kg | ||
| Potato crisps and snacks | 750 μg/kg | European Union | <50–3500 μg/kg | ||
| Roast coffee (dry) | 400 μg/kg | China | 16.5–263 μg/kg | [80,81,82] | |
| Instant coffee (dry) | 850 μg/kg | China | 32.2–673 μg/kg |
| Organization | Approach | Strategies | Notes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Codex Alimentarius Commission (CAC) | Voluntary Code of Practice |
| Supports global harmonization and fair trade; non-binding guidance (Codex Alimentarius Commission, 2009) | [83] |
| U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) | Non-binding guidance |
| No maximum limits; emphasizes shared responsibility (U.S. FDA, 2016) | [84] |
| JECFA (FAO/WHO) | Scientific risk assessment |
| Provides toxicological basis for global regulatory decisions (JECFA, 2013) | [85] |
| European Commission (EU) | Binding Regulation (EU 2017/2158) |
| Benchmark values for potato products, bakery items, cereals, coffee, baby foods; reference values, not legal limits | [19] |
| Year | Study | Specific Findings | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | In-house–validated LC-MS/MS method for survey of acrylamide in various processed foods from the Korean market | Acrylamide (AA) was detected in 274 Korean processed food samples at levels from below the detection limit to 1435 µg/kg, with the highest concentrations found in potato chips and French fries, followed by biscuits and tea, and LC-MS/MS analysis showed excellent repeatability (RSD < 5%) and recoveries of 94.5–107.6%, enabling sensitive quantification down to 10 µg/kg. | [90] |
| 2018 | Effect of Microwave Frying on Acrylamide Generation, Mass Transfer, Color, and Texture in French Fries | Microwave frying of potato strips at 315–600 W reduced acrylamide by 37–83% compared to deep-oil frying, producing potatoes with moisture and texture similar to chips, with a fat content below 20 g/100 g and acrylamide levels under 100 µg/kg. | [91] |
| 2023 | Comparative study of conventional frying and air frying on the quality of potatoes | Air-fried French fries contained about 48% less moisture than conventionally fried fries, showed fewer color changes, less surface damage, improved crunchiness, and more stable thermal and chemical properties, highlighting air frying as a viable alternative to reduce oil-related quality changes. | [92] |
| 2024 | Results of the BfR MEAL Study: Acrylamide in foods from the German market, with the highest levels in vegetable crisps | In 230 foods analyzed in the German Total Diet Study, acrylamide levels were highest in vegetable crisps (1430 µg/kg), followed by potato pancakes (558 µg/kg) and pan-fried potatoes (450 µg/kg), with French fries exceeding EU benchmark levels at browning degree 3, while oven-baked fries and air-fried sweet potatoes had the lowest levels, and popcorn, salty sticks, and dark chocolate contained 243, 190, and 130 µg/kg, respectively. | [93] |
| Labeling Practices | Public Health Campaigns |
|---|---|
| Indicate monitoring and reduction efforts | Educate consumers about acrylamide risks and safe cooking practices |
| Provide clear and consistent definitions | Foster joint efforts among health authorities and industry |
| Use standardized terminology | Promote safer cooking and ingredient choices |
| Present informative yet concise processing information | Develop uniform safety and awareness practices |
| Improve transparency and strengthen consumer trust | Encourage industry-wide collaboration and continuous monitoring |
| Research Area | Key Focus | Challenges | Future Directions | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Formation Mechanisms | Understanding acrylamide behavior in food matrices | Limited knowledge on interactions with lipids and molecular cross-linking | Investigate formation dynamics in complex matrices and lipid-rich environments. | [35] |
| Detection and Quantification | Improving analytical accuracy and QA/QC | Ineffective extraction in high-fat foods; lack of harmonization | Develop robust QA/QC protocols; validate new methods (HPLC, GC–MS) across food types. | [109] |
| Green and Innovative Mitigation | Reducing acrylamide formation during processing | Traditional methods are energy-intensive | Employ green techniques (vacuum frying, ohmic heating, PEF pretreatments); integrate AI-assisted modeling. | [95] |
| Real-Time Monitoring | Online control of food contaminants | Limited real-time surveillance systems | Implement sensor-based, Industry 4.0-integrated monitoring for Maillard contaminants. | [110] |
| Epidemiology and Health Risk | Understanding exposure and carcinogenicity | Inconclusive human data; variability in exposure | Improve exposure assessment using biomarkers (e.g., hemoglobin adducts) and refined food-frequency tools. | [111] |
| Related Compounds | Study of co-occurring contaminants | Insufficient research on 5-HMF and similar molecules | Examine 5-HMF roles in carcinogenesis and chronic disease pathways. | [112] |
| Industrial Application | Scaling lab findings to production | Lab-scale solutions are complex to apply in industry | Bridge the lab–industry gap; optimize frying conditions, oil blending, and additive use (citric acid, asparaginase). | [113] |
| Advanced Analytical Tools | Enhancing detection precision | Need for high-sensitivity methods | Utilize LC–MS/MS to detect acrylamide at ultra-trace levels (≤0.5 µg/kg) for strict QA. | [114] |
| Global Collaboration and Regulation | Coordinating food safety responses | Regional differences in regulation | Strengthen international harmonization (e.g., CODEX, EU initiatives) | [115] |
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Törős, G.; Alibrahem, W.; Kharrat Helu, N.; Jevcsák, S.; Ferroudj, A.; Prokisch, J. Acrylamide in Food: From Maillard Reaction to Public Health Concern. Toxics 2026, 14, 110. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics14020110
Törős G, Alibrahem W, Kharrat Helu N, Jevcsák S, Ferroudj A, Prokisch J. Acrylamide in Food: From Maillard Reaction to Public Health Concern. Toxics. 2026; 14(2):110. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics14020110
Chicago/Turabian StyleTörős, Gréta, Walaa Alibrahem, Nihad Kharrat Helu, Szintia Jevcsák, Aya Ferroudj, and József Prokisch. 2026. "Acrylamide in Food: From Maillard Reaction to Public Health Concern" Toxics 14, no. 2: 110. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics14020110
APA StyleTörős, G., Alibrahem, W., Kharrat Helu, N., Jevcsák, S., Ferroudj, A., & Prokisch, J. (2026). Acrylamide in Food: From Maillard Reaction to Public Health Concern. Toxics, 14(2), 110. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics14020110

