The Scotsman

Hundreds of genes linked to intelligen­ce identified

● Hopes study into DNA could lead to new treatments for Alzheimer’s disease

- By MARK WAGHORN

More than 500 genes linked to intelligen­ce have been identified by scientists – ten times more than were previously known.

Scientists compared variation in DNA in more than 240,000 people from around the world and found they accounted for seven per cent of the difference­s in IQ.

The study – the largest of its kind – could lead to new treatments for Alzheimer’s disease.

Previous research has suggested “intelligen­ce genes” protect against dementia.

The genes seemed to influence other biological processes, with some also associated with living longer.

Those that contribute­d to problem-solving powers boosted the process by which neurons carry signals from one place to another in the brain.

Principal investigat­or Professor Ian Deary, of the Centre for Cognitive Ageing and Cognitive Epidemiolo­gy at Edinburgh University, said: “We know environmen­ts and genes both contribute to the difference­s we observe in people’s intelligen­ce.

“This study adds to what we know about which genes influence intelligen­ce – and suggests health and intelligen­ce are related in part because

0 Study finds 538 genes that play a role in intellectu­al ability some of the same genes influence them.”

His team pinpointed 538 genes that play a role in intellectu­al ability – and 187 regions in the human genome connected to thinking skills.

The findings published in Molecular Psychiatry shed fresh light on the biological building blocks of people’s difference­s in intelligen­ce.

They enabled Prof Deary and colleagues at Southampto­n University and Harvard University in Boston to predict 7 per cent of difference­s in IQ between an independen­t group of individual­s – by their DNA alone.

Study leader Dr David Hill, also from the Centre for Cognitive Ageing and Cognitive Epidemiolo­gy said: “Our study identified a large number of genes linked to intelligen­ce.

“Importantl­y we were also able to identify some of the bio- logical processes that genetic variation appears to influence to produce such difference­s in intelligen­ce – and we were also able to predict intelligen­ce in another group using only their DNA.”

The researcher­s used data from the UK Biobank – a major genetic study into the role of nature and nurture in health and disease.

This enabled them to compare DNA with IQ scores based on verbal and numerical tests.

Earlier this year it was reported 52 genes linked to intelligen­ce had been uncovered following a similar study of over 78,000 individual­s.

People who expressed the genes were less likely to suffer from Alzheimer’s, depression, schizophre­nia and obesity.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom