- Arno, Gavin;
- Agrawal, Smriti A;
- Eblimit, Aiden;
- Bellingham, James;
- Xu, Mingchu;
- Wang, Feng;
- Chakarova, Christina;
- Parfitt, David A;
- Lane, Amelia;
- Burgoyne, Thomas;
- Hull, Sarah;
- Carss, Keren J;
- Fiorentino, Alessia;
- Hayes, Matthew J;
- Munro, Peter M;
- Nicols, Ralph;
- Pontikos, Nikolas;
- Holder, Graham E;
- UKIRDC;
- Black, Graeme;
- Hall, Georgina;
- Ingram, Stuart;
- Gillespie, Rachel;
- Manson, Forbes;
- Sergouniotis, Panagiotis;
- Inglehearn, Chris;
- Toomes, Carmel;
- Ali, Manir;
- McKibbin, Martin;
- Poulter, James;
- Khan, Kamron;
- Lord, Emma;
- Nemeth, Andrea;
- Downes, Susan;
- Yu, Jing;
- Lise, Stefano;
- Arno, Gavin;
- Fiorentino, Alessia;
- Ponitkos, Nikos;
- Plagnol, Vincent;
- Michaelides, Michel;
- Hardcastle, Alison J;
- Cheetham, Michael E;
- Webster, Andrew R;
- van Heyningen, Veronica;
- Asomugha, Chinwe;
- Raymond, F Lucy;
- Moore, Anthony T;
- Plagnol, Vincent;
- Michaelides, Michel;
- Hardcastle, Alison J;
- Li, Yumei;
- Cukras, Catherine;
- Webster, Andrew R;
- Cheetham, Michael E;
- Chen, Rui
Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is the most frequent form of inherited retinal dystrophy. RP is genetically heterogeneous and the genes identified to date encode proteins involved in a wide range of functional pathways, including photoreceptor development, phototransduction, the retinoid cycle, cilia, and outer segment development. Here we report the identification of biallelic mutations in Receptor Expression Enhancer Protein 6 (REEP6) in seven individuals with autosomal-recessive RP from five unrelated families. REEP6 is a member of the REEP/Yop1 family of proteins that influence the structure of the endoplasmic reticulum but is relatively unstudied. The six variants identified include three frameshift variants, two missense variants, and a genomic rearrangement that disrupts exon 1. Human 3D organoid optic cups were used to investigate REEP6 expression and confirmed the expression of a retina-specific isoform REEP6.1, which is specifically affected by one of the frameshift mutations. Expression of the two missense variants (c.383C>T [p.Pro128Leu] and c.404T>C [p.Leu135Pro]) and the REEP6.1 frameshift mutant in cultured cells suggest that these changes destabilize the protein. Furthermore, CRISPR-Cas9-mediated gene editing was used to produce Reep6 knock-in mice with the p.Leu135Pro RP-associated variant identified in one RP-affected individual. The homozygous knock-in mice mimic the clinical phenotypes of RP, including progressive photoreceptor degeneration and dysfunction of the rod photoreceptors. Therefore, our study implicates REEP6 in retinal homeostasis and highlights a pathway previously uncharacterized in retinal dystrophy.