| Literature DB >> 18801770 |
Carlos A Muniesa1, Marta González-Freire, Catalina Santiago, José I Lao, Amaya Buxens, Juan C Rubio, Miguel A Martín, Joaquín Arenas, Felix Gomez-Gallego, Alejandro Lucia.
Abstract
In this study, genotype frequencies of several polymorphisms that are candidates to influence sports performance (ie, ACTN3 R577X, ACE ID, PPARGC1A Gly482Ser, AMPD1 C34T, CKMM 985bp/1170bp and GDF8 (myostatin) K153R) were compared in 123 nonathletic controls, 50 professional cyclists, 52 Olympic-class runners and 39 world-class rowers (medallists in world championships, lightweight category). Significant differences in genotype distributions among the groups were not found except for the ACE gene, that is, lower (p<0.05) proportion of II in rowers (10.3%) than in the total subject population (22.3%). In summary, sports performance is likely polygenic with the combined effect of hundreds of genetic variants, one possibly being the ACE ID polymorphism (at least in the sports studied here), but many others remain to be identified.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18801770 DOI: 10.1136/bjsm.2008.051680
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Sports Med ISSN: 0306-3674 Impact factor: 13.800