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GWAS Study

Large-scale genome-wide analyses of stuttering.

Polikowsky HG, Scartozzi AC, Shaw DM et al.

40721530 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
13977 Participants
133 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

PH
Polikowsky HG
SA
Scartozzi AC
SD
Shaw DM
PD
Pruett DG
CH
Chen HH
PL
Petty LE
PA
Petty AS
LE
Lowther EJ
CS
Cho SH
YY
Yu Y
MS
Mozaffari S
AC
Avery CL
HK
Harris KM
GR
Gordon RL
BJ
Beilby JM
VK
Viljoen KZ
JR
Jones RM
HC
Huff CD
HH
Highland HM
KS
Kraft SJ
BJ
Below JE
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Developmental stuttering is a highly heritable, common speech condition characterized by prolongations, blocks and repetitions of speech. Although stuttering is highly heritable and enriched within families, the genetic architecture is largely understudied. We reasoned that there are both shared and distinct genetic variants impacting stuttering risk within sex and ancestry groups. To test this idea, we performed eight primary genome-wide association analyses of self-reported stuttering that were stratified by sex and ancestry, as well as secondary meta-analyses of more than one million individuals (99,776 cases and 1,023,243 controls), identifying 57 unique loci. We validated the genetic risk of self-reported stuttering in two independent datasets. We further show genetic similarity of stuttering with autism, depression and impaired musical rhythm across sexes, with follow-up analyses highlighting potentially causal relationships among these traits. Our findings provide well-powered insights into genetic factors underlying stuttering.

2,480 African ancestry male cases, 11,497 African ancestry male controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

13977
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
African unspecified, Hispanic or Latin American, European, East Asian
Ancestry
Chapter IV

AI-Generated Summary

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