Abstract
X-linked retinitis pigmentosa (XLRP) is a series of hereditary dystrophic diseases of the retina that occur in three clinically distinguishable variants: the classic form (McK31360), a type known as choroidoretinal dystrophy (McK30330), and a variant with golden-metallic or "tapetal" reflex in the heterozygote (McK30320). Controversy exists as to whether these phenotypic differences are due to clinical variability in disease expression, heterogeneity in disease alleles at a single locus, or a multiplicity of loci for XLRP. We have studied a single large kindred segregating for XLRP with the metallic fundus reflex in the heterozygote with restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs) from the short arm of the human X chromosome, and found measurable linkage to DXS7 (theta = 12.5 cMorgans at LOD = 2.5), the same RFLP previously shown by others to be tightly linked to the other forms of XLRP at theta = 3 cM. Although these estimates appeared to be different, each fell just within the 95% probability interval of the other and, therefore, were insufficient to prove or disprove that the metallic sheen form of XLRP is allelic with other forms of XLRP. Additional RFLPs at the DXS43 and the ornithine transcarbamoylase loci provided three-point crosses for determining the relative positions of DXS7 and XLRP, and supported an order that placed this form of XLRP distal to DXS7 on the Xp. Until the question of genetic heterogeneity is resolved, careful phenotypic characterization of the clinical type of XLRP present in families being used for linkage analyses is advisable.
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