Daidzin inhibits mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase and suppresses ethanol intake of Syrian golden hamsters

WM Keung, AA Klyosov… - Proceedings of the …, 1997 - National Acad Sciences
WM Keung, AA Klyosov, BL Vallee
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1997National Acad Sciences
Daidzin is the major active principle in extracts of radix puerariae, a traditional Chinese
medication that suppresses the ethanol intake of Syrian golden hamsters. It is the first
isoflavone recognized to have this effect. Daidzin is also a potent and selective inhibitor of
human mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH-2). To establish a link between these
two activities, we have tested a series of synthetic structural analogs of daidzin. The results
demonstrate a direct correlation between ALDH-2 inhibition and ethanol intake suppression …
Daidzin is the major active principle in extracts of radix puerariae, a traditional Chinese medication that suppresses the ethanol intake of Syrian golden hamsters. It is the first isoflavone recognized to have this effect. Daidzin is also a potent and selective inhibitor of human mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH-2). To establish a link between these two activities, we have tested a series of synthetic structural analogs of daidzin. The results demonstrate a direct correlation between ALDH-2 inhibition and ethanol intake suppression and raise the possibility that daidzin may, in fact, suppress ethanol intake of golden hamsters by inhibiting ALDH-2. Hamster liver contains not only mitochondrial ALDH-2 but also high concentrations of a cytosolic form, ALDH-1, which is a very efficient catalyst of acetaldehyde oxidation. Further, the cytosolic isozyme is completely resistant to daidzin inhibition. This unusual property of the hamster ALDH-1 isozyme accounts for the fact we previously observed that daidzin can suppress ethanol intake of this species without blocking acetaldehyde metabolism. Thus, the mechanism by which daidzin suppresses ethanol intake in golden hamsters clearly differs from that proposed for the classic ALDH inhibitor disulfiram. We postulate that a physiological pathway catalyzed by ALDH-2, so far undefined, controls ethanol intake of golden hamsters and mediates the antidipsotropic effect of daidzin.
National Acad Sciences