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Mendelian Inheritance in Man and Its Online Version, OMIM
Victor A. McKusick The American Journal of Human Genetics Volume 80, Issue 4, Pages (April 2007) DOI: /514346 Copyright © 2007 The American Society of Human Genetics Terms and Conditions
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Figure 1 Twelve print editions of MIM, the first published in 1966 and the most recent, in three volumes, published in 1998 The American Journal of Human Genetics , DOI: ( /514346) Copyright © 2007 The American Society of Human Genetics Terms and Conditions
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Figure 2 Foreign-language editions of MIM: (left to right) Spanish (Mexican) edition, translated by Rudolfo Guzmán Toledano, 1976; Russian edition, translated by E. K. Gentera and V. I. Ivanova, 1976; and Mandarin edition, translated by Wilson H. Y. Lo and others (two volumes), 1996. The American Journal of Human Genetics , DOI: ( /514346) Copyright © 2007 The American Society of Human Genetics Terms and Conditions
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Figure 3 Growth of MIM and OMIM, in terms of total number of entries.
The American Journal of Human Genetics , DOI: ( /514346) Copyright © 2007 The American Society of Human Genetics Terms and Conditions
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Figure 4 Growth of information in MIM concerning mapping of genes and genetic loci to specific human chromosomes in the period up to the initiation of the Human Genome (Sequencing) Project. In 1968, when the first gene was assigned to a specific autosome (the Duffy blood group to the centromeric region of chromosome 1),27 MIM recorded 68 X-linked phenotypes with an asterisk, indicating confidence in X-linked inheritance. The American Journal of Human Genetics , DOI: ( /514346) Copyright © 2007 The American Society of Human Genetics Terms and Conditions
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