Magnesium Glycinate vs Molybdenum

Side-by-side comparison of mechanisms, dosing, interactions, and stacking potential.

Magnesium GlycinateMolybdenum
CategoryMineralsMinerals
Standard Dose200-400mg elemental magnesium daily75-250 mcg daily
TimingEvening/bedtime (promotes relaxation and sleep quality). Can split AM/PM.With meals. Often included in multimineral formulas.
Cycle Durationongoingongoing (via multimineral)
Evidence Levelstrong_humanmoderate_human

Mechanism

Magnesium is a cofactor for >600 enzymatic reactions including all ATP-dependent reactions (Mg-ATP is the true substrate), DNA/RNA polymerases, and ion channel regulation. Magnesium glycinate chelate provides highly bioavailable elemental magnesium bound to glycine. The glycine moiety itself is an inhibitory neurotransmitter (glycine receptors) and NMDA receptor co-agonist at the glycine binding site. The chelated form minimizes the osmotic laxative effect of ionic magnesium salts. Magnesium regulates NMDA receptor gating (voltage-dependent Mg2+ block), GABA-A receptor potentiation, HPA axis modulation, and parathyroid hormone secretion.

Standard Dosing

200-400mg elemental magnesium daily

Timing

Evening/bedtime (promotes relaxation and sleep quality). Can split AM/PM.

Cycle Duration

ongoing

Side Effects

  • Drowsiness
  • Mild GI discomfort
  • Loose stools (less than other Mg forms)
  • Hypotension at very high doses

Contraindications

  • Severe renal insufficiency (impaired Mg excretion — risk of hypermagnesemia)
  • Myasthenia gravis (Mg can worsen neuromuscular junction blockade)
  • Heart block (Mg slows AV conduction)

Best Stacking Partners

Vitamin D3Vitamin B6 (enhances Mg absorption)ZincTaurineVitamin K2
B

Molybdenum

Minerals

Mechanism

Molybdenum is the essential cofactor for three human enzymes: sulfite oxidase (converts toxic sulfite to sulfate — critical for sulfur amino acid metabolism), xanthine oxidase (purine catabolism to uric acid), and aldehyde oxidase (aldehyde detoxification, drug metabolism). The molybdenum cofactor (Moco) requires molybdopterin as a carrier. Sulfite oxidase is the most clinically significant — sulfite accumulation is neurotoxic. Molybdenum also plays a role in the metabolism of sulfur-containing amino acids and may support phase I/II detoxification pathways.

Standard Dosing

75-250 mcg daily

Timing

With meals. Often included in multimineral formulas.

Cycle Duration

ongoing (via multimineral)

Side Effects

  • Generally very well tolerated
  • Gout flares at high doses (increased uric acid production)
  • Copper depletion at very high doses
  • Joint pain (rare)

Contraindications

  • Gout (xanthine oxidase is the uric acid-producing enzyme — molybdenum supports this enzyme)
  • Copper deficiency

Best Stacking Partners

B-ComplexNACCopper (molybdenum can reduce copper)

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