A genome-wide association study of Chinese and English language phenotypes in Hong Kong Chinese children

Dyslexia and developmental language disorders are important learning difficulties. However, their genetic basis remains poorly understood, and most genetic studies were performed on Europeans. There is a lack of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) on literacy phenotypes of Chinese as a native lan...

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Veröffentlicht in:NPJ science of learning 2024-03, Vol.9 (1), p.26-26, Article 26
Hauptverfasser: Lin, Yu-Ping, Shi, Yujia, Zhang, Ruoyu, Xue, Xiao, Rao, Shitao, Yin, Liangying, Lui, Kelvin Fai Hong, PAN, Dora Jue, Maurer, Urs, Choy, Kwong-Wai, Paracchini, Silvia, McBride, Catherine, So, Hon-Cheong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Dyslexia and developmental language disorders are important learning difficulties. However, their genetic basis remains poorly understood, and most genetic studies were performed on Europeans. There is a lack of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) on literacy phenotypes of Chinese as a native language and English as a second language (ESL) in a Chinese population. In this study, we conducted GWAS on 34 reading/language-related phenotypes in Hong Kong Chinese bilingual children (including both twins and singletons; total N  = 1046). We performed association tests at the single-variant, gene, and pathway levels. In addition, we tested genetic overlap of these phenotypes with other neuropsychiatric disorders, as well as cognitive performance (CP) and educational attainment (EA) using polygenic risk score (PRS) analysis. Totally 5 independent loci (LD-clumped at r 2  = 0.01; MAF > 0.05) reached genome-wide significance ( p  0.3 and having at least 2 correlated SNPs (r 2  > 0.5) with p  
ISSN:2056-7936
2056-7936
DOI:10.1038/s41539-024-00229-7