Posted by Chantel M. research contributed US National Library of Medicine
National Institutes of Health
In the study to assesse the effects of soy
IF, endogenous microbial equol production, and dietary racemic equol in
a 3 × 2 × 2 factorial experiment using gnotobiotic apoE-null mice (n =
9-11/group/sex), posted in PubMed, found that After 16 wk of dietary treatment, serum isoflavonoid profiles varied with sex, soy IF amount, and intestinal microbiota status. There were no treatment effects on tissues of male
mice. In females, reproductive tissue phenotypes differed by
equol-producing ability (i.e., microbiota status) but not dietary equol
or IF content. Equol producers had lower uterine weight, vaginal
epithelial thickness, total uterine area, endometrial area, and
endometrial luminal epithelial height compared with nonproducers (P <
0.05 for all), with an association between microbiota status and
estrous cycle (P > chi-square = 0.03). Exogenous equol reduced
expression of progesterone receptor (PGR) and the proliferation marker
Ki67 (P < 0.0001) in vaginal epithelium and endometrium; for
endogenous equol, only PGR was reduced (P < 0.0005). Our findings
indicate that equol diminishes estrogen-dependent tissue responses in
apoE-null mice.
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