Genome‐wide association and replication studies for handedness in a Korean community‐based cohort

Author:

Song Youhyun12,Lee Dasom3,Choi Ja‐Eun3,Lee Ji Won45ORCID,Hong Kyung‐Won3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Family Medicine Gangnam Severance Hospital Yonsei University College of Medicine Seoul South Korea

2. Healthcare Research Team, Health Promotion Center Gangnam Severance Hospital Yonsei University College of Medicine Seoul South Korea

3. Theragen Bio Co. Ltd. Gyeonggi‐do South Korea

4. Department of Family Medicine Severance Hospital Yonsei University College of Medicine Seoul South Korea

5. Institute for Innovation in Digital Healthcare Yonsei University Seoul South Korea

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionHandedness is a conspicuous characteristic in human behavior, with a worldwide proportion of approximately 90% of people preferring to use the right hand for many tasks. In the Korean population, the proportion of left‐handedness is relatively low at approximately 7%–10%, similar to that in other East‐Asian cultures in which the use of the left hand for writing and other public activities has historically been oppressed.MethodsIn this study, we conducted two genome‐wide association studies (GWASs) between right‐handedness and left‐handedness, and between right‐handedness and ambidexterity using logistic regression analyses using a Korean community‐based cohort. We also performed association analyses with previously reported variants and our findings.ResultsA total of 8806 participants were included for analysis, and the results identified 28 left‐handedness‐associated and 15 ambidexterity‐associated loci; of these, two left‐handedness loci (NEIL3 [rs11726465] and SVOPL [rs117495448]) and one ambidexterity locus (PDE8B/WDR41 [rs118077080]) showed near genome‐wide significance. Association analyses with previously reported variants replicated ANKS1B (rs7132513) in left‐handedness and ANKIB1 (rs2040498) in ambidexterity.ConclusionThe variants and positional candidate genes identified and replicated in this study were largely associated with brain development, cerebral asymmetry, neurological processes, and neuropsychiatric diseases in line with previous findings. As the first East‐Asian GWAS related to handedness, these results may provide an intriguing reference for further human neurologic research in the future.

Funder

Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy

Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience

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