Database Commons
Database Commons

a catalog of worldwide biological databases

Database Profile

Human FMO3 mutation database

General information

URL: http://human-fmo3.biochem.ucl.ac.uk/Human_FMO3
Full name:
Description: A human FMO3 mutation database is a locus-specific database system for maintaining data about allelic variants and distributing these via the World Wide Web. The database currently contains 24 entries and is accessible on the World Wide Web via the URL http://human-fmo3.biochem.ucl.ac.uk/Human_FMO3.
Year founded: 2003
Last update:
Version:
Accessibility:
Unaccessible
Country/Region: United Kingdom

Classification & Tag

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Data object:
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Major species:
Keywords:

Contact information

University/Institution: University College London
Address:
City:
Province/State:
Country/Region: United Kingdom
Contact name (PI/Team): Ian R. Phillips
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): i.r.phillips@qmul.ac.uk

Publications

12938085
Trimethylaminuria and a human FMO3 mutation database. [PMID: 12938085]
Hernandez D, Addou S, Lee D, Orengo C, Shephard EA, Phillips IR.

Trimethylaminuria (TMAuria), or fish-odor syndrome, is due to defective flavin-containing monooxygenase 3 (FMO3). In the liver, this protein catalyzes the NADPH-dependent oxidative metabolism of odorous trimethylamine (TMA), derived in the gut from dietary sources, to nonodorous trimethylamine N-oxide (TMA N-oxide). Affected individuals are unable to carry out this reaction and consequently exude a fishy body odor, due to the secretion of TMA in their breath and sweat and its excretion in their urine. This leads to a variety of psychosocial problems, including disruption of schooling, clinical depression, and attempted suicide. Twelve missense, three nonsense, and one gross deletion mutation are known to cause TMAuria. FMO3 is also a drug-metabolizing enzyme and compromised activity is expected to have implications for the efficacy of drug treatment and the possibility of adverse drug reactions both in TMAuric patients and in the general population. To date eight polymorphic variants, not associated with TMAuria, have been reported. A human FMO3 mutation database was created using MuStar, a locus-specific database system for maintaining data about allelic variants and distributing these via the World Wide Web. The database currently contains 24 entries and is accessible on the World Wide Web via the URL http://human-fmo3.biochem.ucl.ac.uk/Human_FMO3. Additional entries can be submitted via the curator of the database or via a web-based form.

Hum Mutat. 2003:22(3) | 66 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-20)

Ranking

All databases:
3421/6895 (50.399%)
Genotype phenotype and variation:
506/1005 (49.751%)
Health and medicine:
856/1738 (50.806%)
3421
Total Rank
63
Citations
2.864
z-index

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Record metadata

Created on: 2018-02-09
Curated by:
Lina Ma [2019-07-01]
Mengyu Pan [2018-09-21]
Mengyu Pan [2018-02-24]
Yang Zhang [2018-02-09]