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Disodium 5’-inosinate
"Descrizione"
by Al222 (24085 pt)
2026-Jan-11 19:04

 Disodium 5’-inosinate Disodium inosinate : properties, uses, pros, cons, safety

Disodium inosinate – disodium salt of inosinic acid, more precisely inosine-5’-monophosphate (IMP)

Synonyms: disodium 5’-inosinate, sodium inosinate (technical use), IMP (technical use), INS 631 (international coding)
INCI / Functions (cosmetics): skin conditioning (emollient)

Definition

Disodium inosinate is a nucleotide (the salt of a ribonucleotide) used mainly as a flavor enhancer to strengthen and “extend” the perception of umami taste in food matrices. Chemically, it is the disodium salt of inosine-5’-monophosphate (IMP): a substance naturally present in various foods (especially meat and fish) and produced industrially under additive-grade specifications and controls.

From an application standpoint, the value of E631 is not to “create flavor” on its own, but to potentiate and make more persistent savory notes that are already present (or provided by other ingredients). In formulation, it is often paired with glutamates and/or other 5’-ribonucleotides (e.g., disodium guanylate) to achieve a stronger sensory effect at relatively low total use levels.

Main uses

Food.
In food applications, disodium inosinate is the additive E631 (functional class: flavor enhancer). It is used across many savory categories where a fuller taste impact is desired without proportionally increasing salt or added flavors: snacks, potato products, dehydrated preparations, seasonings, sauces, soups, noodles, and ready-to-eat foods. In practice, E631 performs best in matrices where umami components are already present (naturally or added), because it contributes to synergistic taste enhancement and improved persistence of savory perception.

From an industrial perspective, the decisive aspects are dosage control (often at low levels), achieving homogeneous distribution in dry blends or solutions, and alignment with labeling requirements: it may appear as “flavor enhancer: disodium inosinate” or as “E631”, depending on applicable rules and market practice.

Cosmetics.
In cosmetics, it appears as Disodium Inosinate (INCI) with the listed function skin conditioning (emollient). In practice, when used, it tends to behave more as a functional “system component” (supporting sensorial/conditioning within a matrix) than as a defining active. Its selection is typically linked to formulation strategy and product concept (e.g., texture and feel) and requires verification of stability and compatibility with preservative systems and fragrance.

Medicine.
It is not a “medical” ingredient in the strict sense. The physiological link is that IMP is a nucleotide; however, E631 use is primarily technological/food-related. Any clinical considerations are more connected to the broader dietary topic of purines than to therapeutic use.

Pharmaceutical.
It is not a common pharmaceutical excipient in standard dosage forms. It may, however, appear as a reference material or be used in research/analytical contexts. In such cases, attention centers on identity, purity, impurity profile, and batch traceability.

Industrial use.
Beyond food, disodium inosinate is available as a technical/laboratory substance for analytical or R&D purposes. Operational themes include correct assay basis (anhydrous vs hydrated), moisture control, storage, and powder handling.

Identification data and specifications

IdentifierValue
INCI nameDisodium Inosinate
EU food additiveE631
Chemical namedisodium inosine-5’-monophosphate (disodium 5’-inosinate)
Formula (anhydrous basis)C10H11N4Na2O8P
Molecular weight (anhydrous basis)392.17 g/mol
CAS number4691-65-0
EC/EINECS number225-146-4
Typical commercial appearancewhite crystals/powder, odorless (grade-dependent)


Chemical-physical properties (indicative)

PropertyValueNote
Water solubilityhighsupports use in dry mixes (with proper dispersion) and in solutions
Matrix stabilitygood under standard conditionsconfirm under extreme systems (high ionic strength, severe heat treatments)
Hygroscopicity/moisturepossible (grade-dependent)impacts flowability and dosing in premixes
Sensory profileumami flavor enhancertypically not an “aroma” by itself, but a potentiator


Functional role and practical mechanism

FunctionWhat it does in formulaTechnical note
Flavor enhancer (food)amplifies and prolongs umami perceptionoften combined with other umami contributors
Support for perceived salt/flavor reduction (food)improves roundness and overall taste fullnessvalidate via sensory panel and benchmark comparisons
Skin conditioning (cosmetics)sensorial/conditioning contribution within the systemgenerally not the primary element of the product concept


Formulation compatibility

In foods, E631 is generally straightforward to handle, but the sensory result depends on the matrix, incorporation method, and the presence of other savory/umami contributors. In dry blends, it is important to avoid segregation and ensure uniformity (premixes, compatible particle size, correct mixing sequence). In liquid or semi-liquid systems, high solubility helps, but it is still good practice to confirm behavior in the presence of high salt, proteins, flavors, and heat treatments.

In cosmetics (when used), compatibility should be checked case-by-case: as an ionic salt, it can influence rheology and sensorial profile in electrolyte-rich systems or polymer gels. Accelerated stability testing and thermal cycling remain essential to prevent issues (haze, viscosity drift, preservative interactions).

Use guidelines (indicative)

ApplicationTypical rangeTechnical note
Snacks, seasonings, savory preparations0.01–0.10%often synergistic with glutamates and/or other ribonucleotides
Soups/sauces/ready meals0.01–0.08%calibrate to the aroma profile and salt level
Dry premixes (noodles, seasoning blends)0.02–0.12%manage blend uniformity and moisture
Cosmetics (less common use)0.01–0.50%define based on sensorial target and finished-product stability


Quality, grades, and specifications

QC parameterWhat to check
Identitynaming alignment (E631/INCI), CAS/EC, analytical profile
Assaycompliance with specifications (often on anhydrous basis)
Moistureimpacts dosing, flowability, and premix stability
Impuritieslimits for metals/contaminants per spec and intended use
Appearance/color/odorlot-to-lot consistency and absence of off-notes
Microbiology (if required)especially for food grades with specific requirements


Safety, regulatory, and environment

From a toxicological standpoint, disodium inosinate is among additives for which international evaluations have historically indicated a favorable safety profile when used according to good practice and authorized conditions. Practically, correct management is mainly regulatory: use in permitted categories, compliance with any restrictions, and correct labeling.

Because E631 is a nucleotide, a sensible “awareness point” (not specific to the additive per se, but to purine intake in general) can concern consumers who have medical advice to limit purines: at typical use levels the impact is usually limited, but in sensitive contexts it is appropriate to align with case-specific nutritional/medical guidance.

In manufacturing, applying GMP (Good manufacturing practice; first occurrence) supports repeatability and process control. Benefit: improved batch consistency and reduced operational risk. In food contexts, HACCP (Hazard analysis and critical control points; first occurrence) remains central. Benefit: preventive risk management and a more robust quality system.

EFSA's Scientific Panel was unable to conclude on the safety of the additive for target species, consumers, users and the environment (1).

Formulation troubleshooting

ProblemPossible causeRecommended intervention
Sensory impact below expectationsmatrix low in umami notes, dose too low, missing synergyre-balance dosage, evaluate combinations with other umami contributors, validate with sensory panel
Premix lot-to-lot variabilitymoisture/hygroscopicity, particle size segregationcontrol moisture, use premixes, harmonize particle size, revise mixing process
Lumps or non-uniformity in liquidsdirect addition without dispersion, high viscositypre-dissolve, increase shear, optimize addition order
Off-notes perceivedaroma/extract quality, interactions with spices or proteinsrevise flavor system, reduce reactive factors, run shelf-life tests


Conclusion

Disodium inosinate (E631) is a highly efficient flavor enhancer, particularly useful for reinforcing umami perception and improving roundness and persistence in many savory matrices. Practical success depends more on the overall sensory strategy (synergies and matrix design) and on correct process and premix management than on chemical complexity. With appropriate specifications and a coherent quality approach, it remains a well-established and effective technical ingredient.

Mini-glossary

E631: EU code for disodium inosinate as a food additive.
IMP: inosine-5’-monophosphate, a nucleotide associated with umami perception; in foods it acts as a taste potentiator.
INS: International Numbering System for Food Additives.
Quantum satis: principle allowing an additive to be used “as much as needed” to achieve the technological effect, without exceeding what is necessary.
GMP: Good manufacturing practice; benefit: reduces variability and operational risks.
HACCP: Hazard analysis and critical control points; benefit: strengthens prevention and control across regulated supply chains.


Disodium Inosinate studies


  • Molecular Formula  C10H11O8N4Na2P·7.5H2
  • Molecular Weight    392.171 g/mol
  • CAS   4691‐65‐0
  • EC number   225‐146‐4

Synonyms:

  • Disodium 5'-inosinate
  • Sodium inosinate
  • Inosinic Acid
  • 5′-IMP-Na2
  • 5'-Inosinic Acid Disodium Salt
  • 5′-Inosinic acid disodium salt hydrate
  •  Inosine 5′-monophosphate disodium salt hydrate
  • Inosin-5'-monophosphate disodium
  • IMP
  • I-5′-P
  • MDL number MFCD00150372

References____________________________________________________________

(1) EFSA Panel on Additives and Products or Substances used in Animal Feed (FEEDAP); Bampidis V, Azimonti G, Bastos ML, Christensen H, Dusemund B, Fašmon Durjava M, Kouba M, López-Alonso M, López Puente S, Marcon F, Mayo B, Pechová A, Petkova M, Ramos F, Sanz Y, Villa RE, Woutersen R, Anguita M, Brozzi R, Galobart J, Manini P, Tarrés-Call J, Pettenati E. Safety and efficacy of a feed additive consisting of disodium 5'-inosinate (IMP) produced by Corynebacterium stationis KCCM 80235 for all animal species (CJ Europe GmbH). EFSA J. 2022 Mar 7;20(3):e07153. doi: 10.2903/j.efsa.2022.7153.

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