One large egg contains about 147mg of choline, a nutrient essential for brain function. Most Americans don't get enough of it.
Choline is classified as an essential nutrient, meaning the body cannot produce it in adequate quantities through endogenous synthesis and must obtain it from food. Despite this classification, choline was not officially recognized as essential by the National Academies of Medicine until 1998, making it one of the more recently acknowledged nutrients in the dietary canon. A single large egg contains approximately 147 milligrams of choline, primarily concentrated in the yolk. The Adequate Intake (AI) set by the National Academies is 425 mg/day for women and 550 mg/day for men. Three eggs per day would meet roughly 80 to 100% of this target. Most Americans eat far less and do not come close to adequate intake.
## The Biochemical Roles of Choline
Choline serves several distinct physiological functions. It is a structural component of phosphatidylcholine, the dominant phospholipid in cell membranes. It is the precursor to acetylcholine, a neurotransmitter involved in memory, muscle function, and autonomic nervous system signaling. It is a methyl donor through its conversion to betaine, participating in one-carbon metabolism pathways that also involve folate and vitamin B12. And it is essential for the production of VLDL particles in the liver; without adequate choline, fat accumulates in liver cells, a condition that can progress to non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.
This last function is clinically relevant. Studies by Zeisel and colleagues at the University of North Carolina have demonstrated that choline-deficient diets in healthy adults cause measurable liver damage within three weeks, with markers normalizing upon choline repletion. This work was central to establishing the 1998 AI values.
## Brain Development and the Choline Deficit in the Population
Choline is particularly critical during fetal development and in the first years of life. It contributes to hippocampal development and has been linked to long-term memory function. Research in rodent models showed decades ago that choline supplementation during pregnancy improved spatial memory in offspring, with effects persisting into old age. Human studies have since provided supporting evidence, though the effect sizes are more modest than those seen in animal models.
The 2003-2004 NHANES data, analyzed by Wallace and colleagues, found that fewer than 10% of Americans meet the AI for choline. Pregnant women are at particular risk, as demand increases substantially during pregnancy and choline is actively transported to the fetus. The American Medical Association and various obstetric nutrition guidelines now recommend attention to choline intake during pregnancy, though it is absent from most prenatal vitamins at adequate doses.
The primary dietary sources of choline are egg yolks, beef liver, and to a lesser degree, fish, chicken, legumes, and cruciferous vegetables. Among these, egg yolks stand out for concentration and accessibility. A single egg yolk provides more choline than most people obtain from any other single food. Removing yolks from the diet, whether for cholesterol management or preference, substantially reduces choline intake and is rarely compensated by other food choices.
## Choline and Cognitive Health in Aging Adults
Beyond development, choline continues to play a role in neural function across the lifespan. Acetylcholine is the neurotransmitter most closely associated with memory and executive function, and its deficit is a hallmark of Alzheimer's disease pathology. While choline supplementation has not been shown to prevent or reverse Alzheimer's, observational data suggest that adequate dietary choline is associated with better cognitive performance in older adults.
A 2011 study in the *American Journal of Clinical Nutrition* by Nurk et al. found that higher choline intake was associated with better cognitive performance across multiple domains in a Norwegian cohort of 2,195 adults aged 70 to 74. The association held after adjustment for major confounders. This is observational data and subject to the usual limitations, but it is consistent with the known biological roles of choline in neural signaling.
The practical takeaway is direct: egg yolks are the most accessible high-concentration dietary source of a nutrient that the majority of the population does not consume in adequate amounts. Arguments for removing yolks from the diet need to contend with this trade-off, not just the cholesterol and fat content of the yolk.