Posted by Chantel M. research contributed by US National Library of Medicine
National Institutes of Health
Equol [7-hydroxy-3-(4'-hydroxyphenyl)-chroman] is a nonsteroidal
estrogen of the isoflavone class. It is exclusively a product of
intestinal bacterial metabolism of dietary isoflavones and it possesses
estrogenic activity, having affinity for both estrogen receptors,
ERalpha and ERbeta. Equol is not produced in all healthy adults in response to dietary challenge with soy or daidzein. Several recent dietary intervention studies examining the health effects of soy isoflavones allude to the potential importance of equol by establishing that maximal clinical responses to soy protein diets are observed in people who are good "equol-producers"but not "nonequol producers" The clinical effectiveness of soy protein in cardiovascular, bone and menopausal health may be a function of the ability to biotransform soy
isoflavones to the more potent estrogenic isoflavone, equol. The
failure to distinguish those subjects who are "equol-producers" from
"nonequol producers" in previous clinical studies could plausibly
explain the variance in reported data on the health benefits of soy, posted in PubMed,
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