Six members of a family with autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa were found to have a cytosine-to-thymine transition mutation in the second nucleotide of codon 17 in the rhodopsin gene that resulted in a threonine to methionine change. Three members from another family with autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa showed a guanine-to-adenine transition mutation in the first nucleotide of codon 182 in the rhodopsin gene that resulted in a glycine to serine change. Each of these two mutations presented with a similar phenotype because both showed a regional predilection for pigmentary changes to occur in the inferior part of the retina as well as field impairment predominantly in the superior hemisphere. Electroretinographic amplitudes were more substantial than usually encountered in other forms of retinitis pigmentosa, a finding consistent with the better visual prognosis in patients with either of these two mutations. This article documents the association of two similar phenotypes of autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa with specific gene defects at a molecular level.