Entity Details

Primary name RP1L1_HUMAN
Entity type UniProt
Source Source Link

Details

AccessionQ8IWN7
EntryNameRP1L1_HUMAN
FullNameRetinitis pigmentosa 1-like 1 protein
TaxID9606
Evidenceevidence at transcript level
Length2400
SequenceStatuscomplete
DateCreated2004-02-16
DateModified2021-06-02

Ontological Relatives

GenesRP1L1

GO terms

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GOName
GO:0001750 photoreceptor outer segment
GO:0005874 microtubule
GO:0005930 axoneme
GO:0007601 visual perception
GO:0032391 photoreceptor connecting cilium
GO:0035082 axoneme assembly
GO:0035556 intracellular signal transduction
GO:0042461 photoreceptor cell development
GO:0045494 photoreceptor cell maintenance
GO:0060041 retina development in camera-type eye

Subcellular Location

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Subcellular Location
Cell projection
Cytoplasm

Domains

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DomainNameCategoryType
IPR003533 Doublecortin domainDomainDomain
IPR036572 Doublecortin domain superfamilyFamilyHomologous superfamily
IPR040163 RP1/RP1L1/DCXFamilyFamily

Diseases

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Disease IDSourceNameDescription
613587 OMIMOccult macular dystrophy (OCMD)An inherited macular dystrophy characterized by progressive loss of macular function but normal ophthalmoscopic appearance. It is typically characterized by a central cone dysfunction leading to a loss of vision despite normal ophthalmoscopic appearance, normal fluorescein angiography, and normal full-field electroretinogram (ERGs), but the amplitudes of the focal macular ERGs and multifocal ERGs are significantly reduced at the central retina. The disease is caused by variants affecting the gene represented in this entry.
618826 OMIMRetinitis pigmentosa 88 (RP88)A form of retinitis pigmentosa, a retinal dystrophy belonging to the group of pigmentary retinopathies. Retinitis pigmentosa is characterized by retinal pigment deposits visible on fundus examination and primary loss of rod photoreceptor cells followed by secondary loss of cone photoreceptors. Patients typically have night vision blindness and loss of midperipheral visual field. RP88 is an autosomal recessive form. The disease may be caused by variants affecting the gene represented in this entry.