← All stories
Health, Longevity & Biohacking

Unique Fungus Can Only Reproduce Using Human Head Sweat, Expert Reveals

ZOE Science & Nutrition · How to unlock the secret power of the mushrooms to heal your gut, cut cholesterol and protect your brain | Prof Robin May · June 4, 2026
Unique Fungus Can Only Reproduce Using Human Head Sweat, Expert Reveals
ZOE Science & Nutrition
ZOE Science & Nutrition
How to unlock the secret power of the mushrooms to heal your gut, cut cholesterol and protect your brain | Prof Robin May
"There is a fabulous demonstration that this particular fungus is completely required. So I have a colleague who says, 'It's a creepy feeling to think that there's an endangered species that can only have sex on your head.' It's the oils that you produce in your head that seem to be a signal for it to sporulate, to produce reproductive organs."
May disclosed that Malassezia, a fungal species living on human scalps, cannot reproduce without human sweat excretions, representing an extreme example of human-microbe co-evolution. This species exists nowhere else in nature and depends entirely on chemical signals from human sebaceous glands to complete its life cycle, challenging assumptions about human-microbe relationships and revealing the intimate biological partnerships shaping our ecosystem.

About this episode

On this episode of Zoe: Science and Nutrition, host Jonathan Wolf interviewed Professor Robin May, a microbiologist, UK government scientific advisor, and world expert on fungal immunology, to separate mushroom health claims from scientific evidence. May revealed that mushrooms are biologically closer to humans than to plants, sharing more recent evolutionary ancestry and containing unique compounds unavailable in plant-based diets—including ergothioneine, a rare amino acid that humans possess dedicated cellular machinery to absorb despite scientists not understanding its function. The conversation covered dramatic nutritional variation between species, with oyster mushrooms containing 100 times more vitamin D than button mushrooms, and May disclosed a simple method to boost vitamin D content by placing mushrooms in direct sunlight for one to two hours after purchase. Discussion expanded to the fungal kingdom's vastness—an estimated 1.5 million species, mostly unknown to science—and included revelations about five-mile fungal superorganisms living underground and a head-dwelling fungus that cannot reproduce without human sweat. May addressed popular health claims around brain protection, immune support, and longevity with measured skepticism, noting that while laboratory studies show promise for compounds like beta-glucan and ergothioneine, human clinical data remains limited. He emphasized mushrooms' likely benefits come primarily from feeding gut microbiome diversity rather than direct medicinal effects. May cautioned against raw consumption due to potential hydrazine content and food safety risks, recommended cooking methods that preserve nutrients, and advised consumers to think of mushrooms as everyday vegetables rather than exotic health supplements. The episode concluded with practical guidance on incorporating diverse mushroom species into regular diets.

Key takeaways

More stories More from ZOE Science & Nutrition