Ten mutations in the guanylate cyclase activator 1A (GUCA1A) have been previously identified and reported in patients with retinal degeneration, including patients from 12 families with cone-rod dystrophy (CORD) and in an isolated patient with retinitis pigmentosa (RP).
This paper reviews the published histopathologic findings of patients with retinitis pigmentosa (RP) or an allied disease in whom the responsible gene defect was identified, including 10 cases with dominant RP (cases with mutations in RHO, PRPC8, and RP1), three with dominant spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA7), three X-linked RP carrier females (RPGR), two with congenital retinal blindness (AIPL1 and RPE65), two with mitochondrial encephalomyopathy overlap syndrome (MTTL1), and one case each with dominant cone degeneration (GCAP1), X-linked cone degeneration (RCP), enhanced S-cone syndrome (NR2E3), and dominant late-onset retinal degeneration (CTRP5).
Individual patients with atypical or recessive retinitis pigmentosa (RP) had additional heterozygous GCAP1-T114I and GCAP2 gene changes (V85M and F150C) of unknown pathogenicity.
The patients analyzed included 52 with autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa, 36 with autosomal recessive retinitis pigmentosa, 3 with simplex retinitis pigmentosa, 12 with cone-rod dystrophy, 5 with rod-cone dystrophy, 3 with vitelliform macular dystrophy (Best's disease), 4 with macular dystrophy, 2 with cone dystrophy, 2 with fundus flavimaculatus, 2 with fundus albipunctatus, and 12 with retinitis pigmentosa with macular degeneration as well as 40 unrelated normal persons.