The ORF15 isoform of RPGR (RPGR(ORF15)) and RPGR interacting protein 1 (RPGRIP1) are mutated in a variety of retinal dystrophies but their functions are poorly understood. Here, we show that in cultured mammalian cells both RPGR(ORF15) and RPGRIP1 localize to centrioles. These localizations are resistant to the microtubule destabilizing drug nocodazole and persist throughout the cell cycle. RPGR and RPGRIP1 also co-localize at basal bodies in cells with primary cilia. The C-terminal (C2) domain of RPGR(ORF15) (ORF15(C2)) is highly conserved across 13 mammalian species, suggesting that it is a functionally important domain. Using matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry, we show that this domain interacts with a 40 kDa shuttling protein nucleophosmin (NPM). The RPGR(ORF15)-NPM interaction was confirmed by (i) yeast two-hybrid analyses; (ii) binding of both recombinant and native HeLa cell NPM to RPGR(ORF15) fusion proteins in vitro; (iii) co-immunoprecipitation of native NPM, RPGR(ORF15) and RPGRIP1 from bovine retinal extracts and of native HeLa cell NPM and transfected RPGR(ORF15) from cultured cells and (iv) co-localization of NPM and RPGR(ORF15) at metaphase centrosomes in cultured cells. NPM is a multifunctional protein chaperone that shuttles between the nucleoli and the cytoplasm and has been associated with licensing of centrosomal division. RPGR and RPGRIP1 join a growing number of centrosomal proteins involved in human disease.