Fucoxanthin is a carotenoid structure that is found in seaweed and microalgae, and perhaps the second most famous sea-based carotenoid (of the 750 known carotenoids, over 250 of them are exclusively marine-sourced[1]) behind astaxanthin only. It is hypothesized to comprise up to 10% of all carotenoids in nature[2] and it has a role in gathering light for energy production via forming something known as a chlorophyll a/c-fucoxanthin complex;[3][4] it is a primary carotenoid that transfers light energy to photosynthetic machinery for energy production in plants (unlike secondary carotenoids such as β-carotene and astaxanthin which prevent excess light from being transferred).[5][6] It is a component of many dietary seaweeds and is thought to confer health promoting benefits associated with seaweed and the Japanese diet.
Fucoxanthin is a pigment (specifically, a brown pigment and a type of carotenoid) found in seaweed and microalgae that is used to fix light and aid the process of photosynthesis
Fucoxanthin can be found in the following species of seaweed and algae:
- Fucus vesiculosus (Bladderwrack)[7] and other species including evanescens[8]
- Myagropsis myagroides at 9.01mg/g[9]
- Dictyota coriacea at 6.42mg/g[9]
- Himanthalia elongata[10]
- Petalonia binghamiae (Vinogradova) at 3.57+/-0.028 mg/g[11]
- Undaria Pinnatifida (Wakame)[12][13]
- Hijikia fusiformis (Hijiki)[13]
- Turbinaria turbinate at 0.59+/-0.08mg/g[14]
- Laminaria japonica (Ma-Kombu)[13]
- Ecklonia cava[9]
- The Sargassum family (fulvellum, coreanum, hemiphyllum, horneri, etc.)[13][9] with the species plagyophyllum having 0.71+/-0.01mg/g dry weight[14]
- Sea urchin gonads at 2mcg/g,[15] also contains astaxanthin at 1mcg/g
- Phaeodactylum tricornutum (Microalgae) at 15.42-16.51 mg/g[16]
- Odontella aurita (Microalgae) at 6.34-20.63mg/g dry weight depending on nitrogen availability[6]
- Isochrysis (species of microalgae) at 17mg/g (1.7% dry weight)[17]
Fucoxanthin is found in high levels in seaweed, although it is at even higher levels in microalgae; the level of fucoxanthin found in some particular species may be high enough to actually obtain the benefits of supplementation even when supplementing seaweed products
No fucoxanthin is found in the yolks of the eggs laid by hens fed fucoxanthin although metabolites such as fucoxanthinal are found.[18]