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Differential genetic etiology of reading component processes as a function of IQ
Authors:Knopik Valerie S  Smith Shelley D  Cardon Lon  Pennington Bruce  Gayan Javier  Olson Richard K  DeFries John C
Institution:(1) Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, USA;(2) University of Nebraska Medical Center, USA;(3) University of Oxford, USA;(4) University of Denver, USA;(5) University of Oxford, USA;(6) Institute for Behavioral Genetics, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado
Abstract:Results obtained from previous studies of word recognition, reading component skills, and reading composite measures suggest that genetic factors may be more important as a cause for reading disability among children with higher IQ scores than among those with lower IQ scores. To investigate the genetic etiology of reading disability further, measures of word recognition, phonological decoding, orthographic coding, and phoneme awareness were obtained from a total of 465 twin pairs with a positive school history of reading problems. The basic and extended DeFries and Fulker (DF) multiple regression models for the analysis of selected twin data were employed to investigate the etiology of group deficits in reading and language skills, as well as to assess differential genetic etiology for the reading-related measures as a function of IQ. Data from 168 sibling pairs (drawn from the twins' families), including fraternal twin pairs and their siblings, as well as non-twin siblings of identical twins were subjected to single-marker analyses using the DF basic linkage model to examine evidence for linkage of a quantitative-trait locus (QTL) for reading and language deficits to the short arm of chromosome 6. Lastly, to investigate the possible differential influence of this QTL as a function of IQ, the sibling pair data were fitted to an extension of the DF basic linkage model. Results indicated that reading and language deficits are significantly heritable and that differential genetic influences as a function of IQ are evident for measures of word recognition and phonological decoding. Results obtained from linkage analyses confirmed the presence of a QTL on chromosome 6p that influences phonological and orthographic skills, as well as phoneme awareness measures, and suggest that this QTL may influence phoneme awareness differentially as a function of IQ: however, future analyses with considerably larger samples are needed to test the hypothesis of differential QTL influence more rigorously.
Keywords:Genetics  linkage analysis  multiple regression  reading disability  sibling-pair studies  twin studies  quantitative-trait loci
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