Chromosomal
Location of Human Genetic Diseases 
Nowhere is the growth of knowledge about disease-
causing mutations in human genes more apparent than
in the mapping of their locations to specific sites
on individual chromosomes. This progress is documented
in twelve published editions of Mendelian Inheritance
in Man. A Catalog of Human Genes and Disorders (MIM)
by Victor A. McKusick, M.D., at the Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine. Initiated in the early
1960s, its first edition in 1966 contained a total
of 1487 entries without a single autosomal gene mapped.
This was achieved in 1968 at the time of the second
edition (1545 entries). The subsequent editions reveal
an entry-doubling time of about 15 years (3368 in
the 6th edition (1983), 5710 entries in the 10th edition
(1992), 8587 entries in the 12th edition (1998) and
10848 on 21 September 1999 (Hamosh et al., 2000).
Since 1987 the McKusick catalog is internationally
available online from the National Library of Medicine
(Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man, OMIM, see references).
Regularly updated, OMIM has become a major source
of information on human genes and genetic diseases.
Each entry has a unique 6- digit identifying number
and is assigned to one of five catalogs according
to genetic category: (1) autosomal dominant, (2) autosomal
recessive, (3) X-chromosomal, (4) Y-chromosomal, and
(5) mitochondrial. Autosomal entries initiated since
1994 begin with the digit 6. The McKusick catalog
has provided a systematic basis for the genetics of
man comparable to the first periodic table of chemical
elements by Dimitrij I. Mendelyev in 1869 or to the
“Chronologisch-thematisches Verzeichnis sämtlicher
Tonwerke Wolfgang Amade Mozarts” by Ludwig Alois Ferdinand
Köchel in 1862.
A special feature of the McKusick catalog is a map
of disease-related gene loci assigned to specific
chromosomal sites, called The Morbid Anatomy of the
Human Genome. Since this first appeared in 1971 (3rd
edition) on a single page, the complete information
can no longer be presented in a readable printed version.
The map of disease loci presented here on the next
five pages, therefore, represents selected entries.
For complete information, the reader is referred to
the network of data available through OMIM. However,
the maps shown on the following pages do provide an
overview. More than 1000 disease genes have been mapped
as of early 2000. The McKusick catalog also reflects
an important difference between customary clinical
medicine and medical genetics. Whereas medicine classifies
diseases according to their main manifestations, organ
systems, age, gender, and other criteria related to
the phenotype, medical genetics focuses on the genotype.
The gene locus involved, the type of mutation, and
genetic heterogeneity provide the basis for disease
classification. This expands the concept of disease
beyond the clinical manifestation and age of onset
(see Childs, 1999).
- References
Antonarakis, S. E., McKusick, V.A.: OMIM passes
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25:11, 2000.
Boguski, M. S.: Hunting for genes in computer
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1995.
Boyadiv, S. A., Jabs, E.W.: Online Mendelian Inheritance
in Man (OMIM) as a knowledge
base for human developmental disorders.
Clin. Genet. 7:253–266, 2000.
Childs, B.: Genetic Medicine. Johns Hopkins
Univ. Press, Baltimore, 1999.
Hamosh, A., et al.: Online Mendelian Inheritance
in Man (OMIM). Hum. Mutat. 15:57–
61, 2000.
Lawrence, S., Giles, C.L.: Assessibility of information
in the Web. Nature 400:107–109,
1999.
McKusick, V.A.: Mendelian Inheritance in Man.
Catalog of Human Genes and Genetic Disorders.
12th ed. Johns Hopkins Univ. Press,
Baltimore, 1998. Online Version OMIM at:
(http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Omiml).
Pelz, J., Arendt, V., Kunze, J.: Computer assisted
diagnosis of malformation syndromes: an
evaluation of three databases (LDDB, POSSUM,
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63:257–267, 1996.
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