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Fungus Species Exists That Can Only Reproduce on Human Scalp Sweat

ZOE Science & Nutrition · How to unlock the secret power of mushrooms to heal your gut, cut cholesterol and protect your brain | Prof Robin May · June 5, 2026
Fungus Species Exists That Can Only Reproduce on Human Scalp Sweat
ZOE Science & Nutrition
ZOE Science & Nutrition
How to unlock the secret power of 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."
May revealed that Malassezia, a fungus that grows exclusively on human heads, can only reproduce when exposed to specific oils secreted in human sweat. This species demonstrates the deep evolutionary relationship between humans and fungi, illustrating how some fungal species have become so specialized they cannot complete their life cycle without human biochemistry. The finding challenges assumptions that all fungi on human skin are harmful parasites.

About this episode

In this episode of Zoe: Science and Nutrition, host Jonathan Wolf interviewed Professor Robin May, a microbiologist, UK government scientific advisor, and world expert on fungi-immune system interactions, to separate mushroom health claims from scientific reality. May opened with a striking revelation: fungi are more closely related to humans than to plants on the evolutionary tree, explaining why mushrooms contain unique compounds unavailable from plant-based diets. The conversation covered vitamin D content, revealing oyster mushrooms produce 100 times more than button mushrooms and that consumers can dramatically boost levels by placing mushrooms in sunlight for 1-2 hours. May discussed ergothioneine, a mysterious amino acid made only by fungi for which humans have a dedicated cellular transport protein despite scientists not understanding its function. He cautioned that raw mushrooms contain hydrazines—DNA-damaging compounds broken down by cooking—and warned against consuming large quantities uncooked. The discussion explored mushrooms' effects on brain health, immune function, and gut microbiome, with May expressing skepticism about lion's mane cognitive claims while acknowledging mushrooms serve as excellent prebiotic food for gut bacteria. May revealed that fungi naturally colonize human skin and gut at low levels, including Malassezia, a species that can only reproduce on human scalp sweat. He emphasized mushroom diversity matters, recommended trying oyster and shiitake varieties beyond button mushrooms, and suggested incorporating them as routine vegetables rather than special ingredients. May's key message: mushrooms offer genuine nutritional benefits—fiber, B vitamins, beta-glucans, selenium, potassium—but lack strong evidence for dramatic longevity or cognitive enhancement claims circulating on social media.

Key takeaways

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