| Literature DB >> 29143595 |
Evelina Georgiades1, Vassilis Klissouras2, Jamie Baulch3, Guan Wang4, Yannis Pitsiladis5,6.
Abstract
While the influence of nature (genes) and nurture (environment) on elite sporting performance remains difficult to precisely determine, the dismissal of either as a contributing factor to performance is unwarranted. It is accepted that a complex interaction of a combination of innumerable factors may mold a talented athlete into a champion. The prevailing view today is that understanding elite human performance will require the deciphering of two major sources of individual differences, genes and the environment. It is widely accepted that superior performers are endowed with a high genetic potential actualised through hard and prodigious effort. Heritability studies using the twin model have provided the basis to disentangle genetic and environmental factors that contribute to complex human traits and have paved the way to the detection of specific genes for elite sport performance. Yet, the heritability for most phenotypes essential to elite human performance is above 50% but below 100%, meaning that the environment is also important. Furthermore, individual differences can potentially also be explained not only by the impact of DNA sequence variation on biology and behaviour, but also by the effects of epigenetic changes which affect phenotype by modifying gene expression. Despite this complexity, the overwhelming and accumulating evidence, amounted through experimental research spanning almost two centuries, tips the balance in favour of nature in the "nature" and "nurture" debate. In other words, truly elite-level athletes are built - but only from those born with innate ability.Entities:
Keywords: Genes; Heritability; Nature; Nurture; Sport performance; Trainability; Twin studies
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29143595 PMCID: PMC5688461 DOI: 10.1186/s12864-017-4190-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Some key milestones in genomics, genetics, and exercise biology
| 1971 | Vassilis Klissouras/Twin Studies of |
| 1984 | Claude Bouchard/Twin Studies of trainability of |
| 1999 | Claude Bouchard/Heritage Family Study [ |
| 2000 | Hugh Montgomery/Candidate Gene Approach – |
| 2001 | The Human Genome Project - Initial sequencing and analysis of the human genome ( |
| 2003 | The ENCODE Project – large public research consortium aimed at identifying all functional elements in the human genome sequence ( |
| 2003 | Kathy North/ |
| 2007 | Yannis Pitsiladis/Genetics of East African Runners [ |
| 2008 | The 1000 Genomes Project – the largest public catalogue containing human variation and genotype data ( |
| 2016 | GAMES/The first GWAS of athletic performance [ |
| 2016 | The Athlome Project – call for international collaborated efforts in genetic discovery for elite human performance, muscle injury prevention and adaptive training [ |
*see Bouchard and Malina, 2014 [66] for a detailed account of the history of genomics, genetics, and exercise biology