Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man is a continuously updated catalog of human genes and genetic disorders and traits, with a particular focus on the gene-phenotype relationship., approximately 9,000 of the over 25,000 entries in OMIM represented phenotypes; the rest represented genes, many of which were related to known phenotypes.
The content of MIM/OMIM is based on selection and review of the published peer-reviewedbiomedical literature. Updating of content is performed by a team of science writers and curators under the direction of Dr. Ada Hamosh at the McKusick-Nathans Institute of Genetic Medicine of Johns Hopkins University. While OMIM is freely available to the public, it is designed for use primarily by physicians and other health care professionals concerned with genetic disorders, by genetics researchers, and by advanced students in science and medicine. The database may be used as a resource for locating literature relevant to inherited conditions, and its [|numbering system] is widely used in the medical literature to provide a unified index for genetic diseases.
In cases of allelic heterogeneity, the MIM number of the entry is followed by a decimal point and a unique 4-digit number specifying the variant. For example, allelic variants in the HBB gene are numbered 141900.0001 through 141900.0538. Because OMIM has responsibility for the classification and naming of genetic disorders, these numbers are stable identifiers of the disorders.
Symbols preceding MIM numbers
Symbols preceding MIM numbers indicate the entry category:
An asterisk before an entry number indicates a gene.
A number symbol before an entry number indicates that it is a descriptive entry, usually of a phenotype, and does not represent a unique locus. The reason for the use of the number symbol is given in the first paragraph of the entry. Discussion of any gene related to the phenotype resides in another entry as described in the first paragraph.
A plus sign before an entry number indicates that the entry contains the description of a gene of known sequence and a phenotype.
A percent sign before an entry number indicates that the entry describes a confirmed Mendelian phenotype or phenotypic locus for which the underlying molecular basis is not known.
No symbol before an entry number generally indicates a description of a phenotype for which the Mendelian basis, although suspected, has not been clearly established or that the separateness of this phenotype from that in another entry is unclear.
A caret before an entry number means the entry no longer exists because it was removed from the database or moved to another entry as indicated.