Polygenic Profile of Elite Strength Athletes
- PMID: 33278272
- DOI: 10.1519/JSC.0000000000003901
Polygenic Profile of Elite Strength Athletes
Abstract
Moreland, E, Borisov, OV, Semenova, EA, Larin, AK, Andryushchenko, ON, Andryushchenko, LB, Generozov, EV, Williams, AG, and Ahmetov, II. Polygenic profile of elite strength athletes. J Strength Cond Res 36(9): 2509-2514, 2022-Strength is a heritable trait with unknown polygenic nature. So far, more than 200 DNA polymorphisms associated with strength/power phenotypes have been identified majorly involving nonathletic populations. The aim of the present study was to investigate individually and in combination the association of 217 DNA polymorphisms previously identified as markers for strength/power phenotypes with elite strength athlete status. A case-control study involved 83 Russian professional strength athletes (53 weightlifters, 30 powerlifters), 209 Russian and 503 European controls. Genotyping was conducted using micro-array analysis. Twenty-eight DNA polymorphisms (located near or in ABHD17C , ACTG1 , ADCY3 , ADPGK , ANGPT2 , ARPP21 , BCDIN3D , CRTAC1 , DHODH , GBE1 , IGF1 , IL6 , ITPR1 , KIF1B , LRPPRC , MMS22L , MTHFR , NPIPB6 , PHACTR1 , PLEKHB1 , PPARG , PPARGC1A , R3HDM1 , RASGRF1 , RMC1 , SLC39A8 , TFAP2D , ZKSCAN5 genes) were identified to have an association with strength athlete status. Next, to assess the combined impact of all 28 DNA polymorphisms, all athletes were classified according to the number of "strength" alleles they possessed. All highly elite strength athletes were carriers of at least 22 (up to 34) "strength" alleles, whereas 27.8% of Russian controls had less than 22 "strength" alleles ( p < 0.0001). The proportion of subjects with a high (≥26) number of "strength" alleles was significantly greater in highly elite strength athletes (84.8%) compared with less successful strength athletes (64.9%; odd ratio [OR] = 3.0, p = 0.042), Russian (26.3%; OR = 15.6, p < 0.0001) or European (37.8%; OR = 6.4, p < 0.0001) controls. This is the first study to demonstrate that the likelihood of becoming an elite strength athlete depends on the carriage of a high number of strength-related alleles.
Copyright © 2020 National Strength and Conditioning Association.
References
-
- Ahmetov II, Gavrilov DN, Astratenkova IV, et al. The association of ACE, ACTN3 and PPARA gene variants with strength phenotypes in middle school-age children. J Physiol Sci 63: 79–85, 2013.
-
- Ahmetov II, Mozhayskaya IA, Lyubaeva EV, Vinogradova OL, Rogozkin VA. PPARG Gene polymorphism and locomotor activity in humans. Bull Exp Biol Med 146: 630–632, 2008.
-
- Ahmetov II, Vinogradova OL, Williams AG. Gene polymorphisms and fiber-type composition of human skeletal muscle. Int J Sport Nutr Exerc Metab 22: 292–303, 2012.
-
- Al-Khelaifi F, Yousri NA, Diboun I, et al. Genome-wide association study reveals a novel association between MYBPC3 gene polymorphism, endurance athlete status, aerobic capacity and steroid metabolism. Front Genet 11: 595, 2020.
-
- Ben-Zaken S, Eliakim A, Nemet D, Meckel Y. Genetic variability among power athletes: The stronger vs. the faster. J Strength Cond Res 33: 1505–1511, 2019.
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Miscellaneous