1. Do variants in the coding regions of FOXP2, a gene implicated in speech disorder, confer a risk for congenital amusia?
- Author
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Peretz I, Ross J, Bourassa CV, Perreault LL, Dion PA, Weiss MW, Felezeu M, Rouleau GA, and Dubé MP
- Subjects
- Humans, Speech Disorders genetics, Language, Forkhead Transcription Factors genetics, Auditory Perceptual Disorders genetics
- Abstract
Congenital amusia is a lifelong disorder that compromises the normal development of musical abilities in 1.5-4% of the general population. There is a substantial genetic contribution to congenital amusia, and it bears similarities to neurodevelopmental disorders of language. Here, we examine the extent to which variants in the forkhead box P2 gene (FOXP2)-the first gene to be identified as causal in developmental speech deficits-are associated with the amusic trait. Using a cohort of 49 individuals with amusia, of which 27 were unrelated, the role of FOXP2 variants in amusia was evaluated. Fourteen variants were examined in the cohort. None segregated with the amusic trait among participants for whom family information was available; nor were they predicted to be deleterious to protein function. Thus, variants in FOXP2 are not likely to cause amusia. Implications for ongoing debates about the distinction between musicality and language are discussed., (© 2022 New York Academy of Sciences.)
- Published
- 2022
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