Abstract
Two members of a family with autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa were found to have a cytosine-to-thymine mutation in the second nucleotide of codon 267 in the rhodopsin gene that resulted in a proline-to-leucine change. Two members of another family with autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa showed a guanine-to-thymine mutation in the first nucleotide of codon 190 in the rhodopsin gene that resulted in an aspartate-to-tyrosine change. Three members from a third family with autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa were also found to have a mutation in codon 190; however, this guanine-to-adenine mutation in the first nucleotide of codon 190 resulted in an aspartate-to-asparagine change. The relatively less severe functional retinal impairment in our patients with a transmembrane codon 267 rhodopsin gene mutation is generally comparable with that observed in a previously described codon 58 transmembrane mutation. The two families with different intradiscal codon 190 mutations showed a considerable difference in severity of their disease.
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