The term soy isoflavones refers to three molecules that are present in food, although most famously contained in soy products; this includes:
- Genistein, and its glycoside Genistin at 30-60% of total soy isoflavones[2]
- Daidzein and its glycoside Daidzin at 40-60% of total soy isoflavones[2]
- Glycitein, and its glycoside Glycitin at around 1-13% of total isoflavones[2]
Of these, genistein and daidzein are seen as the major components of soy due to their relative quantities and equol is also researched a fair bit (despite being a metabolite of daidzein not naturally occurring in soy) due to its potency.
Soy isoflavone is a term used to refer to three isoflavone molecules (genistein, daidzein, and glycitein) as well as their glycosides and metabolites. The content of genistein and daidzein are pretty equivalent in food, with glycitein being much lower
Despite being called 'soy' isoflavones (referring to the Glycine max plant) these above isoflavones can be found in a variety of common food sources including:
Daidzein Genistein Glycitein
- Glycine max (Soybean; main source)[3] at 405-894µg/g (Genistein), 424-1,138µg/g (Daidzein), and 44-145µg/g Glycitein fresh weight[2]
- Black soybean at 579-831µg/g genistein, 452-599µg/g daidzein, and 37-41µg/g glycitein fresh weight[2]
- Green soybean at 335-701µg/g genistein, 630-650µg/g daidzein, and 39-44µg/g glycitein[2]
- Boiled soybean at 354-428µg/g genistein, 270-369µg/g daidzein, and 9-24µg/g glycitein[2]
- Roasted soybean at 892µg/g genistein, 970µg/g daidzein, and 144µg/g glycitein[2] and Kinako (roasted soybean flour) at 830-1,280µg/g genistein, and 1,181-1844µg/g daidzein, 80-100µg/g glycitein fresh weight[2]
- Okara at 48µg/g genistein, 45µg/g daidzein, and 12µg/g glycitein[2]
- Soy milk (1.9-13.9μg/g genistein and genistin)[4]
- Tofu (94.8-137.7μg/g combined genistein and genistin of which 80-112μg/g is genistein[4][4]) with 75-106μg/g daidzein and 24-29μg/g glycitein fresh weight[4]
- Fermented soy bean products (Miso and Natto) at 38.5-229.1μg/g genistein and 71.7-492.8μg/g genistin,[4] with other sources suggesting higher level of genistein (296-440μg/g and 101-319μg/g in natto and miso, respectively), daidzein (323-342μg/g in natto and 108-363μg/g in miso), and glycitein (37-69μg/g in natto and 12-54μg/g in miso)[4]
- Soy sauce at 1-4μg/mL genistein, 5-9μg/mL daidzein, and 1-2.5μg/mL glycitein[4]
- Other legumes (more than 400mg/kg dry weight)[5]
- Indian bread root[5]
- Soy protein isolate (80-107mg per 40g) which can be reduced by alcohol extraction (4.4-6mg per 40g) with an isoflavone breakdown of 53-57% genistein, 20-35% daidzein, and 11-23%[6][7]
When looking at food products, most soy based products seem to have practically comparable levels of isoflavones when looking at fresh weights (Kinako appears to have more due to a lower water content), although roasting and fermentation appear to increase the content of the aglycones (genistein, daidzein, glycitein) relative to the glycosides (genistin, daidzin, glycitin)
And other herbs that are sometimes used for supplemental or medicinal purposes including:
- Hydrocotyle sibthorpioides[8]
- Kudzu root (pueraria lobata)[9] and White Kwao Krua (Pueraria Mirifica) with the latter reaching 8.4-10.2% total estrogenic isoflavones by dry weight[10]
- Psoralea species, including Psoralea corylifolia[9]
- Butea Superba (Genistein and Daidzein)[11]
- Hibiscus Sabdariffa (Daidzein)[12]
- Oxytropis falcate (Genistin and Daidzein)[13]
The soy isoflavones are found in a wide variety of vegetables and legumes
Food sources are typically as Genistin, which is a Genistein molecule bound to a sugar. It is biologically inactive, and during high-temperature heating is reduced to a smaller sized simple glycoside[14] that can be hydrolyzed in the intestine to form the bioavailable genistein aglycone which is then absorbed.[3] The former processing is traditional Eastern Asia processing, and soy foods made from soy flour (from hexane treatment of soybean flakes) standard in North America can either have their isoflavones lost in the hexane extract or decarboxylate their complex glycoside (6′′-O-malonyl-7-O-β-D-glucoside) into another structure (6′′-O-acetyl-7-O-β-D-glucoside) with altered pharmacokinetics.[15] If not broken down into the simple glycoside by heat, genistein cannot be absorbed in the small intestine by the enzyme lactase phlorizin hydrolase.[16]
Fermenting of food sources tends to break the glycoside, and release the free aglcyone (Genistein). Additionally, the free aglycone can be hydroxylated with further fermantation, which increases the anti-oxidative potential of isoflavones.[17][15] Fermented soy sauces contain the compounds 6-hydroxygenistein, 8-hydroxygenistein, and genistein-7-tataric acid. These compounds are not in unfermented soy.[15]
Food products tend to contain the glycosides (isoflavone attached to a sugar) which is readily broken into the free isoflavone in some intestinal bacteria and during the fermentation process
The total intake of isoflavonoids in the japanese diet have been reported to be 27.80 mg per day (daidzein 12.02 mg, glycitein 2.30 mg, and genistein 13.48 mg).[2]
Daily intake of genistein has been suggested to be around 1.5-4.1mg per Japanese person.[4]
Daily intake of genistin has been suggested to be around 6.3–8.3mg per Japanese person.[4]