Magnesium L-Threonate vs Molybdenum

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

Magnesium L-ThreonateMolybdenum
CategoryMineralsMinerals
Standard Dose1000-2000mg magnesium L-threonate daily (providing ~144mg elemental Mg per 2000mg)75-250 mcg daily
TimingSplit dose: 1 capsule morning, 2 capsules before bed (or per product label). Evening dose supports sleep and overnight memory consolidation.With meals. Often included in multimineral formulas.
Cycle Durationongoingongoing (via multimineral)
Evidence Levelmoderate_humanmoderate_human

Mechanism

Magnesium L-threonate (Magtein) was specifically developed by MIT researchers to cross the blood-brain barrier efficiently. L-threonate, a metabolite of vitamin C, acts as a carrier to increase brain magnesium concentration by ~15% (compared to negligible CNS penetration from other Mg forms). Elevated brain Mg2+ enhances NMDA receptor signaling fidelity, increases synaptic density in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex, promotes BDNF expression, and enhances both short-term and long-term memory via potentiation of pre-synaptic release probability at hippocampal CA3-CA1 synapses.

Standard Dosing

1000-2000mg magnesium L-threonate daily (providing ~144mg elemental Mg per 2000mg)

Timing

Split dose: 1 capsule morning, 2 capsules before bed (or per product label). Evening dose supports sleep and overnight memory consolidation.

Cycle Duration

ongoing

Side Effects

  • Drowsiness
  • Headache (initial)
  • Mild GI discomfort
  • Cost (significantly more expensive than other Mg forms)

Contraindications

  • Severe renal insufficiency
  • Myasthenia gravis

Best Stacking Partners

Lion's ManePhosphatidylserineOmega-3 (DHA)Bacopa Monnieri
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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