Quick Comparison

5-HTPBlack Seed Oil
Half-Life2-5 hours6-8 hours (thymoquinone)
Typical DosageStandard: 50-200 mg daily. For mood: 50-100 mg 2-3 times daily. For sleep: 100-300 mg 30-60 minutes before bed. Start low — some people are very sensitive. Take with food to reduce nausea.Standard: 1-3 teaspoons oil daily, or 500-1000 mg standardized extract (minimum 2% thymoquinone). Take with food. Cold-pressed oil retains more bioactives. Taste is peppery/bitter — capsules available for those who dislike the taste.
AdministrationOral (capsules, tablets). Take with food to reduce GI side effects. Evening dosing preferred for sleep benefits.Oral (oil, softgels, capsules). Cold-pressed oil preferred. Take with food.
Research Papers10 papers9 papers
Categories

Mechanism of Action

5-HTP

5-HTP readily crosses the blood-brain barrier via the large neutral amino acid transporter (LAT1/SLC7A5), unlike serotonin itself which cannot. Once in the brain, aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase (AADC, also called DOPA decarboxylase) converts 5-HTP to serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine) using pyridoxal-5-phosphate (active vitamin B6) as a cofactor. This completely bypasses tryptophan hydroxylase (TPH2), the rate-limiting enzyme in the normal serotonin synthesis pathway from dietary L-tryptophan. The result is a reliable, dose-dependent increase in serotonin across multiple brain regions including the dorsal raphe nucleus, hippocampus, and prefrontal cortex. Elevated serotonin activates 5-HT1A autoreceptors (calming), 5-HT2A/2C postsynaptic receptors (mood modulation), and 5-HT3 receptors (gut-brain signaling). In the pineal gland, serotonin is converted by arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase (AANAT) to N-acetylserotonin, then by hydroxyindole O-methyltransferase (HIOMT) to melatonin — explaining the sleep-promoting effects.

Black Seed Oil

Thymoquinone is the primary bioactive, providing neuroprotection through multiple mechanisms: it scavenges reactive oxygen species (superoxide, hydroxyl radical, peroxynitrite) and upregulates Nrf2/ARE pathway, increasing glutathione (via GCLC, GSS), superoxide dismutase (SOD1/SOD2), and catalase. It inhibits NF-kB by preventing IkB-alpha degradation and blocking p65 nuclear translocation, reducing neuroinflammation and pro-inflammatory cytokine release. Thymoquinone inhibits acetylcholinesterase (AChE) at the peripheral anionic site, increasing synaptic acetylcholine. It modulates GABA-A receptors (positive allosteric modulation at benzodiazepine site), providing anxiolytic effects. Thymoquinone protects neurons from amyloid-beta toxicity by reducing oxidative stress and inhibiting beta-secretase (BACE1). It reduces tau hyperphosphorylation by inhibiting GSK-3beta and CDK5.

Risks & Safety

5-HTP

Common

Nausea, diarrhea, stomach cramps.

Serious

Serotonin syndrome when combined with SSRIs, SNRIs, MAOIs, or tramadol — DO NOT combine without medical supervision.

Rare

Eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome (historical concern from contaminated L-tryptophan, not confirmed with modern 5-HTP).

Black Seed Oil

Common

Mild gastrointestinal discomfort, burping.

Serious

May lower blood pressure and blood sugar — caution with relevant medications. May slow blood clotting.

Rare

Allergic reaction, contact dermatitis with topical use.

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