Literature DB >> 8024528

DNA markers associated with high versus low IQ: the IQ Quantitative Trait Loci (QTL) Project.

R Plomin1, G E McClearn, D L Smith, S Vignetti, M J Chorney, K Chorney, C P Venditti, S Kasarda, L A Thompson, D K Detterman.   

Abstract

General cognitive ability (intelligence, often indexed by IQ scores) is one of the most highly heritable behavioral dimensions. In an attempt to identify some of the many genes (quantitative trait loci; QTL) responsible for the substantial heritability of this quantitative trait, the IQ QTL Project uses an allelic association strategy. Allelic frequencies are compared for the high and low extremes of the IQ dimension using DNA markers in or near genes that are likely to be relevant to neural functioning. Permanent cell lines have been established for low-IQ (mean IQ = 82; N = 18), middle-IQ (mean IQ = 105; N = 21), and high-IQ (mean IQ = 130; N = 24) groups and for a replication sample consisting of even more extreme low-IQ (mean IQ = 59; N = 17) and high-IQ (mean IQ = 142; N = 27) groups. Subjects are Caucasian children tested from 6 to 12 years of age. This first report of the IQ QTL Project presents allelic association results for 46 two-allele markers and for 26 comparisons for 14 multiple-allele markers. Two markers yielded significant (p < .01) allelic frequency differences between the high- and the low-IQ groups in the combined sample-a new HLA marker for a gene unique to the human species and a new brain-expressed triplet repeat marker (CTGB33). The prospects for harnessing the power of molecular genetic techniques to identify QTL for quantitative dimensions of human behavior are discussed.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8024528     DOI: 10.1007/bf01067815

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Genet        ISSN: 0001-8244            Impact factor:   2.805


  31 in total

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5.  Estimating the power of a proposed linkage study for a complex genetic trait.

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Authors:  S H Li; M G McInnis; R L Margolis; S E Antonarakis; C A Ross
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Review 9.  The A1 allele at the D2 dopamine receptor gene and alcoholism. A reappraisal.

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  10 in total

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10.  Power of selective genotyping in genome-wide association studies of quantitative traits.

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Journal:  BMC Proc       Date:  2009-12-15
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