Adult sleep GWAS-derived polygenic scores demonstrated comparable associations with corresponding sleep phenotypes in Adolescents, suggesting genetic influences on sleep persist across developmental stages.
Question Do genetic variants that are associated with adult sleep/circadian phenotypes influence sleep phenotypes in adolescents?
Findings In a population-based birth cohort study (N = 3903), genetic influences on all adult sleep phenotypes (sleep duration, insomnia, daytime sleepiness, napping, and chronotype as indexed by polygenic scores derived from adult genome-wide association studies) were associated with their corresponding sleep/circadian phenotypes in adolescents aged 15 years.
Meaning Genetic variants identified in adult genome-wide association studies may also be relevant to a variety of sleep phenotypes in adolescence, suggesting that these variants index sleep phenotypes during a key developmental stage in which sleep disturbances typically emerge.








