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Guy A. Rouleau

Researcher at Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital

Publications -  935
Citations -  75050

Guy A. Rouleau is an academic researcher from Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Genome-wide association study. The author has an hindex of 129, co-authored 884 publications receiving 65892 citations. Previous affiliations of Guy A. Rouleau include Utrecht University & University of Helsinki.

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A closer look at the history and genetics of Tourette syndrome

TL;DR: The first known medical description of Tourette syndrome was given by Gilles de la Tourette as discussed by the authors in 1825, based on two cases, one of which was later followed by Jean-Martin Charcot.
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Letter to the editors: comment on "hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy II due to novel mutation in the HSN2 gene in Mexican families"

TL;DR: This report revealed a previously unreported mutation, which will affect the WNK1/HSN2 isoforms of W NK1 and not only the HSN2 coding region, and so it has been presented in a confusing manner for readers who may not be aware that the H SN2 region is in fact an exon of WNK 1.
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Transcriptional patterns of coexpression across autism risk genes converge on established and novel signatures of neurodevelopment

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that coexpression patterns from human post-mortem brain samples are significantly correlated with the transcriptional consequences of CRISPR perturbations of 15 neurodevelopmental genes in neuronal cell models, and leveraging convergent coexpression can identify novel ASD risk genes that are more likely to be underpowered and therefore missed by current large-scale sequencing studies.
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Restless legs syndrome mothers and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder children: what happened between them?

TL;DR: This study confirms the increased RLS risk in mothers of ADHD (and TS, most likely) children (with unknown paternal information due to the study design) and observes a significant association between presence of ADHD in the offspring and risk of having RLS.