| Literature DB >> 33809928 |
Li-Ru Chen1,2, Kuo-Hu Chen3,4.
Abstract
Based on their nutrient composition, soybeans and related foods have been considered to be nutritious and healthy for humans. Particularly, the biological activity and subsequent benefits of soy products may be associated with the presence of isoflavone in soybeans. As an alternative treatment for menopause-related symptoms, isoflavone has gained much popularity for postmenopausal women who have concerns related to undergoing hormone replacement therapy. However, current research has still not reached a consensus on the effects of isoflavone on humans. This overview is a summary of the current literature about the processing of soybeans and isoflavone types (daidzein, genistein, and S-equol) and supplements and their extraction and analysis as well as information about the utilization of isoflavones in soybeans. The processes of preparation (cleaning, drying, crushing and dehulling) and extraction of soybeans are implemented to produce refined soy oil, soy lecithin, free fatty acids, glycerol and soybean meal. The remaining components consist of inorganic constituents (minerals) and the minor components of biologically interesting small molecules. Regarding the preventive effects on diseases or cancers, a higher intake of isoflavones is associated with a moderately lower risk of developing coronary heart disease. It may also reduce the risks of breast and colorectal cancer as well as the incidence of breast cancer recurrence. Consumption of isoflavones or soy foods is associated with reduced risks of endometrial and bladder cancer. Regarding the therapeutic effects on menopausal syndrome or other diseases, isoflavones have been found to alleviate vasomotor syndromes even after considering placebo effects, reduce bone loss in the spine and ameliorate hypertension and in vitro glycemic control. They may also alleviate depressive symptoms during pregnancy. On the other hand, isoflavones have not shown definitive effects regarding improving cognition and urogenital symptoms. Because of lacking standardization in the study designs, such as the ingredients and doses of isoflavones and the durations and outcomes of trials, it currently remains difficult to draw overall conclusions for all aspects of isoflavones. These limitations warrant further investigations of isoflavone use for women's health.Entities:
Keywords: isoflavones; menopause; soybeans
Year: 2021 PMID: 33809928 PMCID: PMC8004126 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22063212
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1The processing, components and functions of soybeans.
Figure 2The chemical structures of isoflavones including daidzin and genistin and their derivatives daidzein, genistein and S-equol (structurally similar to estrogen).
A summary of extraction techniques used for bioactive components (isoflavones and other polyphenols).
| Methods | Descriptions | Solvents | Advantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maceration extraction | Soybeans are left together with the solvent from hours up to days for maceration, and after that, filtration procedures clean off the extract from solid suspensions. | methanol acetone ethanol water | 1. very simple; |
| Soxhlet extraction | It uses solvent heating to the boiling point and the returning of the condensed vapors to the flask. This way, it can be run for as many cycles as desired. | ethanol water | 1. simple; 2. low cost |
| Ultrasound-assisted extraction (UAE) | It utilizes ultrasound to develop bubbles inside the solvent. These bubbles created by cavitation phenomenon induce wall cells’ disruption of the targets and speed up the penetration of the solvent into the target material. | ethanol water | 1. shorter extraction time; |
| Microwave-assisted extraction (MAE) | It uses microwaves, which can be absorbed by polar molecules (such as water), and facilitates diffusion of the solvent into vegetal samples and release of the solutes from the target material into the solvent. | Methanol ethanol water | 1. considerable savings in time, solvent amount, energy consumption; |
| Supercritical fluid extraction (SFE) | The extraction is facilitated by means of reaching a supercritical state which occurs when the temperature and pressure of the fluid are raised above its critical point. | carbon dioxide co-solvent | fast, selective and solvent saving |
| Accelerated solvent extraction (ASE) | To accelerate extraction, it involves solvents under high temperature and pressure but without reaching the critical point. | methanol ethanol acetone | more suitable for the extraction of phenolics compounds than UAE |
A brief summary of current evidence of studies regarding the preventive and therapeutic effects of isoflavones and soyfoods.
| Studies (Ref. No.) | Study Design | Contents | Main Preventive (P) and Therapeutic (T) Effects | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
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| [ | randomized controlled trial (RCT) | soy | T | no difference |
| [ | RCT | isoflavone tablets | T | no difference |
| [ | RCT | isoflavone from herbal supplement | T | isoflavones more effective than placebo |
| [ | prospective study | isoflavones extracted from soya bean | T | isoflavones more effective than placebo |
| [ | RCT, crossover | soy nut | T | soy more effective than placebo |
| [ | systematic review | natural vs. synthetic isoflavones | T | synthetic or combination isoflavones more effective than natural soy |
| [ | randomized crossover trial | soy protein | T | soy protein more effective than placebo |
| [ | RCT | daidzein-rich isoflavone aglycones | T | daidzein-rich isoflavone aglycones more effective than placebo |
| [ | observational prospective study | calcium, vitamin D3, inulin, soy isoflavones | T | soy supplement + inulin effective |
| [ | RCT | soy vs. hormone replacement therapy (HRT) | T | HRT more effective than soy; both are superior to placebo |
| [ | meta-analysis | soy extracts vs. HRT | T | HRT more effective than soy extracts; both are superior to placebo |
| [ | multicenter RCT | aglycone hypocotyl soy isoflavone | T | no difference |
| [ | systematic review, meta-analysis | soy isoflavone and equol | T | equol or isoflavone in equol-producers more effective than placebo |
| [ | observational study | equol-producer status | T | soy in equol-producers more effective than non-producers |
| [ | RCT | red clover extracts | T | red clover extracts more effective than placebo |
|
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| [ | meta-analysis | isoflavone | T | increase spinal bone mineral density (BMD) |
| [ | multicenter RCT | aglycone hypocotyl soy isoflavone | T | slow BMD loss |
| [ | systematic review and meta-analysis | isoflavone aglycone | T | preserve BMD |
|
| ||||
| [ | RCT | black cohosh or dietary soy | T | no effect on vaginal cytology |
| [ | prospective cohort study | dietary intake of isoflavones | T | no effect on stress or urge incontinence |
| [ | prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled study | isoflavones, calcium, vitamin D, inulin | T | May improve sexual function |
| [ | RCT | isoflavone | T | failed to yield an estrogenic effect on the urogenital tract and to relieve the vulvovaginal symptoms |
|
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| [ | randomized clinical trial | isoflavone supplements | T | loss of weight and fat mass, but interpretation difficult |
| [ | in vitro study | PPARγ binding and transactivational activity | T | red clover extracts may be used to treat metabolic syndrome |
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| [ | prospective study | food phytoestrogens | P | low dose phytoestrogen not protective |
| [ | randomized crossover trial | purified soybean extract | T | may improve systemic arterial compliance |
| [ | prospective study | isoflavones extracted from soya bean | T | no difference in lipoprotein lipids |
| [ | RCT | soy hypocotyl isoflavones | T | no effect on nitric oxide metabolism or blood pressure |
| [ | animal study | soy protein | T | HRT + soy harmful, soy or HRT not beneficial |
| [ | double-blind randomized study | soy protein +/− soy isoflavone | T | soy protein with isoflavones improved cardiovascular markers compared to soy protein alone |
| [ | 3 prospective cohort studies | isoflavones, tofu and soymilk | P | higher intake of isoflavones and tofu was associated with a moderately lower risk of developing coronary heart disease |
|
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| [ | systematic review | isoflavones and soy | T | may improve cognition |
| [ | cohort study | dietary phytoestrogens | T | better processing speed but worse verbal memory |
| [ | cross-sectional study | soy products and isoflavones | T | independent inverse relationships between intake of soy products and isoflavones and depressive symptoms during pregnancy |
| [ | animal study | isoflavone aglycone | T | significantly modulated muscle atrophy after denervation in mice, probably due to the decrease in apoptosis-dependent signaling |
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| [ | case-control study | soy products as part of daily intake | P | lower risk of breast cancer in premenopausal women |
| [ | case-control study | soy extracts | soy extracts may cause benign changes in breast | |
| [ | cohort study | dietary intake of soy isoflavones | P | lower recurrence of estrogen- and progesterone-receptor positive breast cancers receiving anastrazole therapy after surgery |
| [ | case-control study | dietary soyfood and isoflavone intake | P | reduced risk for overall colorectal cancer |
| [ | meta-analysis | soy foods | P | a high dietary intake of soy foods may reduce breast cancer risk |
| [ | prospective study | soy food and isoflavone | were not associated with the risk of endometrial cancer. | |
| [ | double-blind RCT | isoflavone soy protein | no effect on the rates of endometrial hyperplasia and cancer | |
| [ | prospective study | isoflavone, daidzein and genistein intake | P | are associated with a reduced risk of endometrial cancer |
| [ | population-based prospective study | total soy and isoflavones | P | are associated with a decreased risk of bladder cancer |