1. Genome-wide association analyses of child genotype effects and parent-of-origin effects in specific language impairment.
- Author
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Nudel, R., Simpson, N. H., Baird, G., O'Hare, A., Conti‐Ramsden, G., Bolton, P. F., Hennessy, E. R., Ring, S. M., Davey Smith, G., Francks, C., Paracchini, S., Monaco, A. P., Fisher, S. E., and Newbury, D. F.
- Subjects
SPECIFIC language impairment in children ,GENOMICS ,NEURAL development ,LANGUAGE disorders ,COGNITIVE processing of language ,SINGLE nucleotide polymorphisms ,CHROMOSOME replication - Abstract
Specific language impairment ( SLI) is a neurodevelopmental disorder that affects linguistic abilities when development is otherwise normal. We report the results of a genome-wide association study of SLI which included parent-of-origin effects and child genotype effects and used 278 families of language-impaired children. The child genotype effects analysis did not identify significant associations. We found genome-wide significant paternal parent-of-origin effects on chromosome 14q12 ( P = 3.74 × 10
−8 ) and suggestive maternal parent-of-origin effects on chromosome 5p13 ( P = 1.16 × 10−7 ). A subsequent targeted association of six single-nucleotide-polymorphisms ( SNPs) on chromosome 5 in 313 language-impaired individuals and their mothers from the ALSPAC cohort replicated the maternal effects, albeit in the opposite direction ( P = 0.001); as fathers' genotypes were not available in the ALSPAC study, the replication analysis did not include paternal parent-of-origin effects. The paternally-associated SNP on chromosome 14 yields a non-synonymous coding change within the NOP9 gene. This gene encodes an RNA-binding protein that has been reported to be significantly dysregulated in individuals with schizophrenia. The region of maternal association on chromosome 5 falls between the PTGER4 and DAB2 genes, in a region previously implicated in autism and ADHD. The top SNP in this association locus is a potential expression QTL of ARHGEF19 (also called WGEF) on chromosome 1. Members of this protein family have been implicated in intellectual disability. In summary, this study implicates parent-of-origin effects in language impairment, and adds an interesting new dimension to the emerging picture of shared genetic etiology across various neurodevelopmental disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
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