TY - JOUR
T1 - Ergothioneine for cognitive health, longevity and healthy ageing
T2 - where are we now?
AU - May-Zhang, Linda S.
AU - Cheah, Irwin K.
AU - Zajac, Ian T.
AU - Brindal, Emily
AU - Kakoschke, Naomi
PY - 2025/9/19
Y1 - 2025/9/19
N2 - As the global population ages, the prevalence of cognitive decline is rising, creating urgent demand for proactive strategies that support brain health and healthy aging. Ergothioneine, a unique dietary amino-thione absorbed via the OCTN1 transporter, has recently gained attention for its potential as a neuroprotective, longevity-promoting compound. This review synthesizes growing evidence from observational, interventional, and mechanistic studies. Observational data consistently associate low blood ergothioneine levels with cognitive impairment, neurodegenerative diseases, cardiovascular disorders, frailty, and mortality. Interventional trials in older adults suggest that ergothioneine supplementation may improve cognition, memory, sleep quality, and stabilize neurodegeneration biomarkers, with no safety concerns at doses up to 25 mg/day. Mechanistic studies reveal that ergothioneine acts through multiple pathways: mitigating oxidative stress, reducing neuroinflammation, preserving mitochondrial function, and potentially modulating neurogenesis and NAD+ metabolism, although some mechanisms require further investigation. Beyond cognition, ergothioneine shows promise in supporting other physiological systems relevant to aging, including cardiovascular, metabolic, gut, eye, auditory, liver, kidney, immune, skin, and lung health. Together, current evidence positions ergothioneine as a promising nutritional intervention for promoting cognitive resilience and systemic health in aging, although larger, long-term interventional trials are needed to confirm causality and optimize use.
AB - As the global population ages, the prevalence of cognitive decline is rising, creating urgent demand for proactive strategies that support brain health and healthy aging. Ergothioneine, a unique dietary amino-thione absorbed via the OCTN1 transporter, has recently gained attention for its potential as a neuroprotective, longevity-promoting compound. This review synthesizes growing evidence from observational, interventional, and mechanistic studies. Observational data consistently associate low blood ergothioneine levels with cognitive impairment, neurodegenerative diseases, cardiovascular disorders, frailty, and mortality. Interventional trials in older adults suggest that ergothioneine supplementation may improve cognition, memory, sleep quality, and stabilize neurodegeneration biomarkers, with no safety concerns at doses up to 25 mg/day. Mechanistic studies reveal that ergothioneine acts through multiple pathways: mitigating oxidative stress, reducing neuroinflammation, preserving mitochondrial function, and potentially modulating neurogenesis and NAD+ metabolism, although some mechanisms require further investigation. Beyond cognition, ergothioneine shows promise in supporting other physiological systems relevant to aging, including cardiovascular, metabolic, gut, eye, auditory, liver, kidney, immune, skin, and lung health. Together, current evidence positions ergothioneine as a promising nutritional intervention for promoting cognitive resilience and systemic health in aging, although larger, long-term interventional trials are needed to confirm causality and optimize use.
KW - Cognition
KW - Ergothioneine
KW - Healthy Aging
KW - Oxidative Stress
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105016575593&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1017/S0029665125101754
DO - 10.1017/S0029665125101754
M3 - Article
C2 - 40968729
AN - SCOPUS:105016575593
SN - 0029-6651
JO - Proceedings of the Nutrition Society
JF - Proceedings of the Nutrition Society
ER -