PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Marina Riera AU - Víctor Abad-Morales AU - Rafael Navarro AU - Sheila Ruiz-Nogales AU - Pilar Méndez-Vendrell AU - Borja Corcostegui AU - Esther Pomares TI - Expanding the retinal phenotype of <em>RP1</em>: from retinitis pigmentosa to a novel and singular macular dystrophy AID - 10.1136/bjophthalmol-2018-313672 DP - 2020 Feb 01 TA - British Journal of Ophthalmology PG - 173--181 VI - 104 IP - 2 4099 - http://bjo.bmj.com/content/104/2/173.short 4100 - http://bjo.bmj.com/content/104/2/173.full SO - Br J Ophthalmol2020 Feb 01; 104 AB - Purpose This study aimed to identify the underlying genetic cause(s) of inherited retinal dystrophy (IRD) in 12 families of Kuwaiti origin affected by macular dystrophy and four Spanish patients affected by retinitis pigmentosa (RP).Methods Clinical diagnoses were based on standard ophthalmic evaluations (best-corrected visual acuity, retinography, fundus autofluorescence imaging, optical coherence tomography, electroretinography and visual field tests). Panel-based whole exome sequencing was used to simultaneously analyse 224 IRD genes in one affected member of each family. The putative causative variants were confirmed by Sanger sequencing and cosegregation analyses. Haplotype analysis was performed using single nucleotide polymorphisms.Results A homozygous missense mutation c.606C&gt;A (p.Asp202Glu) in RP1 was found to be the molecular cause of IRD in all 12 families from Kuwait. These patients exhibited comparable symptoms, including progressive decline in visual acuity since adolescence. Fundus autofluorescence images revealed bilateral macular retinal pigment epithelium disturbances, with neither perimacular flecks nor peripheral alterations. A shared haplotype spanning at least 1.1 Mb was identified in all families, suggesting a founder effect. Furthermore, RP1 variants involving nonsense and/or frameshifting mutations (three of them novel) were identified in three Spanish autosomal-recessive RP families and one dominant RP pedigree.Conclusion This study describes, for the first time, a macular dystrophy phenotype caused by an RP1 mutation; establishing a new genotype-phenotype correlation in this gene, expanding its mutation spectrum and further highlighting the clinical heterogeneity associated with IRD.