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(Journal of Nutrition. 1999;129:1585-1592.)
© 1999 The American Society for Nutritional Sciences


Nutrient Metabolism

Intact Dietary Soy Protein, but Not Adding an Isoflavone-Rich Soy Extract to Casein, Improves Plasma Lipids in Ovariectomized Cynomolgus Monkeys1 ,2

Kathryn A. Greaves, John S. Parks, J. Koudy Williams and Janice D. Wagner3

3To whom correspondence and reprint requests should be addressed.

The dietary consumption of soy protein has been linked to a reduction in coronary heart disease and improvements in a number of related risk factors. Recent investigations have focused on isoflavone components of soy protein. The purpose of this study was to examine plasma lipids and lipoproteins, particularly LDL, with the intake of intact soy protein or casein-lactalbumin diets with and without a semipurified extract of soy, rich in isoflavones. Sixty ovariectomized cynomolgus monkeys were assigned to one of three groups fed diets containing the following: 1) casein-lactalbumin as the protein source (CAS; n = 20); 2) CAS plus a semipurified extract of soy, rich in isoflavones (ISO; n = 20); or 3) intact soy protein (SOY; n = 20) for 12 wk. Lipoproteins were fractionated by combined ultracentrifugation and HPLC. Isolated LDL particles were further subfractionated by dividing the LDL peak into three fractions for compositional analyses. The SOY group had significantly lower plasma total cholesterol, VLDL plus IDL cholesterol and LDL cholesterol, and significantly less HDL cholesterol than the CAS group. LDL particles from the SOY group had a significantly less cholesteryl ester than the CAS group. The semipurified extract of soy, rich in isoflavones, added to casein-lactalbumin protein did not have the same effects as intact soy protein on plasma lipids and lipoproteins. Other components of soy protein, either alone or in combination with isoflavones, may be involved in the effects seen in this study.


KEY WORDS: • cynomolgus monkeys • isoflavones • lipoproteins • menopause • soy protein




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