Quick Comparison

Magnesium GlycinateVitamin D3
Half-Life12-17 hours15-25 days
Typical DosageStandard: 200-400 mg elemental magnesium daily (note: magnesium glycinate is ~14% elemental magnesium by weight, so 2000 mg magnesium glycinate provides ~280 mg elemental). Take in the evening for sleep benefits. Can be split into 2 doses.Standard: 2000-5000 IU daily. Optimal blood level: 40-60 ng/mL (100-150 nmol/L). Most adults need 4000-5000 IU to reach optimal levels. Take with fat for absorption. Get blood levels tested before supplementing — both deficiency and excess are harmful.
AdministrationOral (capsules, powder, tablets). Well-tolerated. Take with or without food.Oral (softgels, drops, tablets). D3 (cholecalciferol) preferred over D2 (ergocalciferol). Take with a fat-containing meal.
Research Papers8 papers10 papers
Categories

Mechanism of Action

Magnesium Glycinate

Magnesium is required for over 300 enzymatic reactions including neurotransmitter synthesis (tyrosine hydroxylase, tryptophan hydroxylase), energy production (ATPases, kinases, glycolytic enzymes), and DNA repair (PARP, DNA polymerases). In the brain, magnesium blocks NMDA receptors at the voltage-dependent Mg2+ binding site within the channel pore (GluN1/GluN2 subunits), preventing excessive calcium influx and excitotoxicity — Mg2+ is displaced only upon depolarization and glycine/glutamate binding. The glycine component activates inhibitory glycine receptors (GlyR alpha1/alpha2) in the brainstem and spinal cord, and serves as an obligatory co-agonist at the GluN1 glycine site of NMDA receptors. Glycine also modulates NMDA receptor function. Together, magnesium and glycine produce calming effects through complementary inhibitory mechanisms: reduced glutamatergic excitability and enhanced inhibitory neurotransmission.

Vitamin D3

Vitamin D (1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3) crosses the blood-brain barrier and binds to vitamin D receptors (VDR), a nuclear receptor expressed on neurons, astrocytes, microglia, and oligodendrocytes. VDR heterodimerizes with RXR and binds vitamin D response elements (VDREs) to regulate transcription. It upregulates neurotrophic factors: GDNF (glial cell line-derived), NGF, NT-3 via CREB and other transcription factors. Vitamin D promotes serotonin synthesis by upregulating tryptophan hydroxylase 2 (TPH2) and dopamine synthesis via tyrosine hydroxylase. It reduces neuroinflammation by suppressing microglial IL-1beta, TNF-alpha, and iNOS, and supports calcium homeostasis via regulation of L-type voltage-gated calcium channels and calbindin-D28k. Vitamin D regulates over 200 genes including those for neuroprotection, synaptic plasticity, and myelination.

Risks & Safety

Magnesium Glycinate

Common

Mild drowsiness (often desired), loose stools at high doses (less than with other forms).

Serious

Avoid high doses with kidney impairment.

Rare

Diarrhea, nausea.

Vitamin D3

Common

Generally very safe at standard doses.

Serious

Toxicity at very high doses (>10,000 IU daily for months) — causes hypercalcemia (nausea, kidney stones, cardiac arrhythmia).

Rare

Headache, metallic taste, nausea.

Full Profiles