Familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy type 1 (FAP1, MIM176300) is an autosomal dominant disease caused by mutations in the transthyretin (TTR) gene. An extended Chinese kindred of FAP1 was first reported in Hong Kong in 1989, three of the four histologically proven subjects have deceased. TTR gene mutations were not studied then. A DNA-based diagnosis was performed on FAP1 by restriction analysis and direct DNA sequencing was carried out on a symptomatic member of this family who had undergone a liver transplantation. It showed a substitution of thymine by cytosine in the second base of codon 30 in exon 2 of the TTR gene, with the creation of a novel HhaI restriction endonuclease site. Valine is substituted by alanine (V30A) in the mutant TTR. Both restriction analysis and direct sequencing revealed the same mutation in one of the two asymptomatic siblings. This mutation was first reported in a FAP1 family of German descent.