Quick Comparison
| Magnesium L-Threonate | Zinc | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | 2-3 hours (threonate carrier), but brain magnesium levels increase cumulatively | Tissue zinc turns over over weeks |
| Typical Dosage | Standard: 1500-2000 mg Magnesium L-Threonate daily (providing 144 mg elemental magnesium). Often split into a daytime dose and a pre-bed dose. The Magtein brand uses 2000 mg daily (667 mg three times). | Standard: 15-30 mg elemental zinc daily. Do not exceed 40 mg daily long-term (can cause copper depletion). Zinc picolinate, zinc bisglycinate, and zinc carnosine are well-absorbed forms. Zinc oxide is poorly absorbed. Take with food to reduce nausea. If supplementing >15 mg daily, add 1-2 mg copper. |
| Administration | Oral (capsules, powder). The L-threonate form is specifically chosen for brain penetration. | Oral (capsules, tablets, lozenges). Take with food. Zinc picolinate or bisglycinate for best absorption. |
| Research Papers | 10 papers | 9 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
Magnesium L-Threonate
The L-threonate carrier forms stable complexes with magnesium and transports it across the blood-brain barrier via specific transporters more effectively than inorganic magnesium salts or other chelated forms. Once in the brain, magnesium acts as a voltage-dependent blocker of the NMDA receptor channel at the physiological magnesium binding site within the ion pore, preventing excessive calcium influx and glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity. Magnesium also serves as a cofactor for over 300 enzymes including those involved in neurotransmitter synthesis (tyrosine hydroxylase, glutamic acid decarboxylase), ATP production (creatine kinase, pyruvate kinase), and DNA/RNA polymerase. Elevated brain magnesium enhances synaptic density and plasticity in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex, likely through CREB-mediated gene expression and increased density of postsynaptic AMPA receptors.
Zinc
Zinc is released from synaptic vesicles (via ZnT3 transporter) during neurotransmission from glutamatergic mossy fiber and Schaffer collateral terminals. It modulates NMDA receptors — at high concentrations zinc blocks the channel at a distinct site from Mg2+, while at low concentrations it potentiates via the GluN2A subunit. Zinc modulates GABA-A receptors (positive allosteric at alpha1, negative at alpha2/3) and glycine receptors. It is required for BDNF synthesis (zinc finger transcription factors) and TrkB signaling. Zinc-dependent enzymes include carbonic anhydrase (CAII, pH regulation), Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1, antioxidant defense), and matrix metalloproteinases (synaptic remodeling). In the hippocampus, zinc modulates long-term potentiation (LTP) via CaMKII and MAPK/ERK pathways — the cellular basis of memory formation. Zinc also regulates presynaptic vesicle release.
Risks & Safety
Magnesium L-Threonate
Common
Drowsiness (often desired for sleep), mild headache initially, gastrointestinal discomfort.
Serious
None documented at standard doses. Magnesium toxicity is not a concern with oral supplementation in people with normal kidney function.
Rare
Diarrhea (less common than with other magnesium forms).
Zinc
Common
Nausea on empty stomach, metallic taste.
Serious
Long-term high-dose use (>40 mg daily) depletes copper, causing anemia and neurological problems.
Rare
Headache, diarrhea, reduced immune function (paradoxically) at very high doses.
Full Profiles
Magnesium L-Threonate →
A form of magnesium specifically designed to cross the blood-brain barrier and increase brain magnesium levels. Developed at MIT, it is the only magnesium form clinically shown to raise CSF magnesium concentrations. Brain magnesium is critical for synaptic plasticity, and deficiency (common in modern diets) impairs learning, memory, and sleep quality. Sold under the brand name Magtein.
Zinc →
An essential trace mineral concentrated in the brain's hippocampus, where it plays a critical role in synaptic transmission and memory formation. Zinc modulates NMDA and GABA receptors, supports BDNF expression, and is required for proper neurotransmitter release. Deficiency is common (estimated 17-25% of the global population) and directly impairs memory, attention, and mood.