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. 1987 Dec;42(6):608-12.
doi: 10.1038/clpt.1987.207.

Disclosure of the metabolic retroversion of trimethylamine N-oxide in humans: a pharmacogenetic approach

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Disclosure of the metabolic retroversion of trimethylamine N-oxide in humans: a pharmacogenetic approach

M Al-Waiz et al. Clin Pharmacol Ther. 1987 Dec.

Abstract

Trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO), which is naturally occurring in dietary marine fish, is well absorbed and excreted apparently unchanged as judged by end-product analysis. Such observations may conceal the fact that the amine N-oxide has undergone a sequence of deoxygenation and oxygenation reactions only to revert to the parental form and be excreted as such--a process that we propose to call metabolic retroversion. To evaluate this phenomenon for TMAO we have investigated the fate of the orally administered substance in healthy volunteers and in four subjects previously phenotyped as having an inherited deficiency with respect to the metabolic N-oxidation of trimethylamine (TMA). Two of these subjects were typed as homozygous affected and the other two as "carriers." If substantial reduction of orally administered TMAO occurs during the course of its postulated retroverted metabolism, it was hypothesized that this would be revealed by the extensive urinary excretion of unoxidized TMA by the four affected subjects. After oral TMAO administration in the four healthy subjects, greater than 94% of the urinary TMA was in the form of TMAO and only less than 4% as the free base. However, after oral TMAO in the two homozygous-affected subjects, unoxidized TMA accounted for 35% and 51%, respectively, of the total urinary TMA, the balance being due to TMAO. For the carrier subjects, TMA accounted for 12% and 16% of the total urinary TMA after TMAO administration. It is thus clear that the urinary excretion of unoxidized TMA is increased greatly in affected subjects with an inherited deficiency of N-oxidation after the oral administration of TMAO.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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