| Literature DB >> 30919020 |
Yordi J van de Vegte1, Balewgizie S Tegegne2, Niek Verweij1, Harold Snieder2, Pim van der Harst3,4,5.
Abstract
The acute heart rate response to exercise, i.e., heart rate increase during and heart rate recovery after exercise, has often been associated with all-cause and cardiovascular mortality. The long-term response of heart rate to exercise results in favourable changes in chronotropic function, including decreased resting and submaximal heart rate as well as increased heart rate recovery. Both the acute and long-term heart rate response to exercise have been shown to be heritable. Advances in genetic analysis enable researchers to investigate this hereditary component to gain insights in possible molecular mechanisms underlying interindividual differences in the heart rate response to exercise. In this review, we comprehensively searched candidate gene, linkage, and genome-wide association studies that investigated the heart rate response to exercise. A total of ten genes were associated with the acute heart rate response to exercise in candidate gene studies. Only one gene (CHRM2), related to heart rate recovery, was replicated in recent genome-wide association studies (GWASs). Additional 17 candidate causal genes were identified for heart rate increase and 26 for heart rate recovery in these GWASs. Nine of these genes were associated with both acute increase and recovery of the heart rate during exercise. These genes can be broadly categorized into four categories: (1) development of the nervous system (CCDC141, PAX2, SOX5, and CAV2); (2) prolongation of neuronal life span (SYT10); (3) cardiac development (RNF220 and MCTP2); (4) cardiac rhythm (SCN10A and RGS6). Additional 10 genes were linked to long-term modification of the heart rate response to exercise, nine with heart rate increase and one with heart rate recovery. Follow-up will be essential to get functional insights in how candidate causal genes affect the heart rate response to exercise. Future work will be required to translate these findings to preventive and therapeutic applications.Entities:
Keywords: Exercise; Genetics; Heart rate increase; Heart rate recovery
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30919020 PMCID: PMC6529381 DOI: 10.1007/s00018-019-03079-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Life Sci ISSN: 1420-682X Impact factor: 9.261
Heritability estimates for the acute and long-term effect of exercise on heart rate response
| Heritability type | Heritability | Type of exercise | Population |
| Author, year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acute response: heart rate increase | |||||
| Family | 0.32 | Submaximal treadmill test | General population | 2053 | Ingelsson et al. (2007) [ |
| SNP-based | 0.22 | Submaximal bicycle | General population | 58,818 | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| SNP-based | 0.17 | Submaximal bicycle | General population | 66,800 | Ramirez J et al. (2018) [ |
| Acute response: heart rate recovery | |||||
| Familya | 0.34 | Submaximal treadmill test | General population | 2053 | Ingelsson et al. (2007) [ |
| Twins and siblingb | 0.60 and 0.65 | Maximal bicycle | General population | 491 | Nederend et al. (2016) [ |
| SNP-basedc | 0.22 | Submaximal bicycle | General population | 58,818 | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| SNP-basedc | 0.12 | Submaximal bicycle | General population | 66,665 | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
| Trainings response: heart rate increase | |||||
| Familyd | 0.34 | Submaximal bicycle | General population | 481 | An et al. (2003) [ |
| Familyd | 0.36 | Submaximal bicycle | Participants with high blood pressure | 529 | Rice et al. (2002) [ |
Heritability estimates for the acute and long-term effect of exercise on heart rate response
aHeart rate recovery measured after 180 s
bHeart rate recovery measured after, respectively, 60 and 180 s
cHeart rate recovery measured after 60 s
d20 weeks during endurance training program at submaximal (50W) levels
Summary of genes involved in acute heart rate increase
| Gene | Variant | Chromosome/position | Minor/major allele/MAF | Type of study | Increase/decrease | Type of exercise test | Population | Author; year | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Del intron 16 | 17:63488529 | Deletion/insertion | Candidate | – | > 5.00 × 10−2 | Maximal and submaximal bicycle | General | Rankinen et al. (2000) [ |
|
| rs544215 | 8:26712028 | C/T/0.46 | Candidate | ↓ | 5.00 × 10−3 | Standard Bruce | General | Ingelsson et al. (2007) [ |
|
| rs3787441 | 20:4205059 | G/A/0.27 | Candidate | ↓ | 7.00 × 10−3 | Standard Bruce | General | Ingelsson et al. (2007) [ |
|
| rs1801253 | 10:114045297 | C/G/0.28 | Candidate | ↓ | < 5.00 × 10−2 | Maximal | Patients in cardiac rehab | Defoor et al. (2005) [ |
|
| rs1801252 | 10:114044277 | G/A/0.21 | Candidate | ↓ | < 5.00 × 10−2 | Maximal | Patients in cardiac rehab | Defoor et al. (2005) [ |
|
| rs1042713 | 5:148826877 | A/G/- | Candidate | ↓ | < 5.00 × 10−2 | Hand grip test | General | Eisenach et al.(2003)[ |
|
| rs28495552 | 7:116113744 | C/G/0.50 | GWAS | ↓ | 2.80 × 10−11 | Submaximal bicycle | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
|
| rs10497529 | 2:179839888 | A/G/0.04 | GWAS | ↑ | 2.50 × 10−9 | Submaximal bicycle | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
|
| rs7121 | 20:58903752 | C/T/0.37 | Candidate | ↑ | <5.00 × 10−2 | Ergometer | Referred for exercise test | Nieminen et al. (2006) [ |
|
| rs1480470 | 12:66412130 | A/G/0.37 | GWAS | ↑ | 3.40 × 10−08 | Submaximal bicycle | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
|
| rs12906962 | 15:95312071 | C/T/0.32 | GWAS | ↓ | 3.50 × 10−13 | Submaximal bicycle | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
|
| rs12906962 | 15:95312071 | C/T/0.33 | GWAS | ↓ | 2.70 × 10−14 | Submaximal bicycle | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
|
| rs6847149 | 4:111157701 | – | GWAS | – | 2.74 × 10−06 | Standard Bruce | General | Vasan et al. (2007) [ |
|
| rs1799983 | 7:150999023 | T/G/0.26 | Candidate | ↓ | 4.00 × 10−2 | Naughton protocol | Post-menopausal women | Hand et al. (2006) [ |
|
| rs11190709 | 10:102552663 | G/A/0.12 | GWAS | ↑ | 1.30 × 10−11 | Submaximal bicycle | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
|
| rs12986417 | 19:30109533 | A/G/0.35 | GWAS | ↓ | 1.00 × 10−9 | Submaximal bicycle | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
|
| rs7255293 | 19:30104198 | G/A/0.42 | GWAS | ↓ | 3.20 × 10−9 | Submaximal bicycle | General | Ramirez et al.(2018)[ |
|
| rs236352 | 6:36817113 | A/G/0.34 | GWAS | ↑ | 6.40 × 10−10 | Submaximal bicycle | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
|
| rs17180489 | 14:72885471 | C/G/0.14 | GWAS | ↑ | 2.50 × 10−11 | Submaximal bicycle | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
|
| rs272564 | 1:45012273 | C/A/0.28 | GWAS | ↓ | 7.40 × 10−12 | Submaximal bicycle | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
|
| rs58065122 | 8:10526186 | A/G/0.42 | GWAS | ↑ | 3.90 × 10−10 | Submaximal bicycle | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
|
| rs2819770 | 1:234237045 | – | GWAS | – | 3.53 × 10−6 | Standard Bruce | General | Vasan et al. (2007) [ |
|
| rs7433723 | 3:38784957 | G/A/0.42 | GWAS | ↓ | 4.50 × 10−8 | Submaximal bicycle | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
|
| rs4836027 | 5:121866990 | C/T/0.32 | GWAS | ↓ | 1.70 × 10−15 | Submaximal bicycle | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
|
| rs4836027 | 5:121866990 | C/T/0.31 | GWAS | ↓ | 9.90 × 10−21 | Submaximal bicycle | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
|
| rs4246224 | 12:24784139 | A/G/0.15 | GWAS | ↑ | 1.80 × 10−14 | Submaximal bicycle | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
|
| rs1343676 | 12:33537387 | T/C/0.51 | GWAS | ↓ | 1.50 × 10−11 | Submaximal bicycle | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
|
| rs1125313 | 18:52859261 | C/A/0.50 | GWAS | ↑ | 3.90 × 10−9 | Submaximal bicycle | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
Genes found to be associated with heart rate increase during exercise are shown in alphabetical order and are then ordered on the year published. Variation stands for either an SNP or deletion/insertion mutation. MAF stands for Minor Allele Frequency. Effects of a variant (in- or decrease) on heart rate increase during exercise are shown for the Minor Allele. Candidate stands for candidate gene study. GWAS stands for genome-wide association study. A hyphen is shown in case information which was not reported
aResults from only one candidate gene study on ACE are shown; largest study was chosen; G allele in case of deletion; in case of insertion ATACAGTCACTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTGAGACGGAGTCTCGCTCTGTCGCCC
bStatistics from gene time of exercise interaction are showed
cStandard Bruce protocol is a maximal exercise treadmill test
dStatistics from the generalized estimating equations (GEE) tests are shown; Alleles were not mentioned in this article. None reached genome-wide significance; however, these were the most suggestive results
eNaughton protocol is a maximal exercise treadmill test
Fig. 1Graphical representation of genes (shown in italic) involved in acute heart rate increase during exercise grouped by working mechanism (shown in bold). The left and left upper part of the figure shows the nervous system. The middle upper part zooms in on a peripheral sympathetic neuron and its synapse. The heart is displayed on the right; the upper right of the figure shows the aorta with next to it a pacemaker cell in the cardiac sinus node. In the middle of the figure, below, we zoom in on cardiac tissue and receptors. Adrenergic receptors are shown in red. Sodium, potassium, and calcium channels are shown in red, pink, and green, respectively
Summary of genes involved in acute heart rate recovery
| Gene | Variant | Chromosome/position | Minor/major allele/MAF | Increase/decrease | Type of study | Type of exercise test | Time (seconds after exercise) | Population | Author; year | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ACE | – | – | Deletion/insertion | – | < 1.00 × 10−2 | Candidate | Running for 25 min with heart rate between 165 and 170 | 1800 | Athletes | Voroshin et al. (2008) [ |
| ACHE | rs3757868 | 7:100482720 | A/G/0.18 | ↓ | 5.60 × 10−24 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 40 | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| ACHE | rs3757868 | 7:100482720 | A/G/0.18 | ↓ | 6.90 × 10−11 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
| ADRA1Ba | rs11953285 | 5:159324389 | C/A/0.13 | ↑ | 1.00 × 10−2 | Candidate | Standard Bruceb | 180 | General | Ingelsson et al. (2007) [ |
| ADRA2Bc | del301–303 | 2:96115249 | ./AAGAGGAG/0.37 | ↓ | 1.00 × 10−2 | Candidate | Maximal bicycle | 60 | General | Kohli et al. (2015) [ |
| ALG10B | rs4533105 | 12:38214611 | C/T/0.43 | ↓ | 1.90 × 10−13 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
| BCAT1 | rs4963772 | 12:24758480 | A/G/0.15 | ↑ | 1.20 × 10−28 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 40 | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| BCL11A | rs1372876 | 2:60025963 | A/C/0.41 | ↓ | 3.30 × 10−9 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
| CAV2 | rs1997571 | 7:116198621 | G/A/0.48 | ↓ | 1.70 × 10−12 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 20 | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| CAV2 | rs2109514 | 7:116159961 | A/G/0.50 | ↑ | 7.10 × 10−10 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
| CCDC141,TTN | rs17362588 | 2:179721046 | A/G/0.08 | ↓ | 3.10 × 10−9 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 10 | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| CCDC141,TTN | rs35596070 | 2:179759692 | A/C/0.14 | ↓ | 4.20 × 10−13 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 10 | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| CHRM2 | rs324640 | 7:136146251 | C/T/0.39 | ↓ | 8.00 × 10−3 | Candidate | Maximal bicycle | 60 | General | Hautala (2006) [ |
| CHRM2 | rs8191992 | 7:136158563 | A/T/0.37 | ↓ | 2.50 × 10−3 | Candidate | Maximal bicycle | 60 | General | Hautala (2006) [ |
| CHRM2d | rs324640 | 7:136146251 | C/T/0.44 | ↓ | 1.70 × 10−3 | Candidate | Symptom-limited maximal bicycle | 60 | Post-MI | Hautala (2009) [ |
| CHRM2d | rs8191992 | 7:136158563 | A/T/0.43 | ↓ | 1.60 × 10−3 | Candidate | Symptom-limited maximal bicycle | 60 | Post-MI | Hautala (2009) [ |
| CHRM2 | rs17168815 | 7:136624621 | T/G/0.16 | ↓ | 1.10 × 10−14 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| CHRM2 | rs6943656 | 7:136639436 | G/A/0.16 | ↓ | 2.30 × 10−10 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
| CLPB, INPPL1 | rs7130652 | 11:71984398 | T/G/0.07 | ↑ | 3.40 × 10−11 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 10 | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| CNTN3 | rs34310778 | 3:74783408 | C/T/0.43 | ↑ | 1.00 × 10−9 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 30 | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| CNTN3 | rs6549649 | 3:74786491 | C/G/0.64 | ↑ | 1.40 × 10−9 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
| GNG11 | rs180238 | 7:93550447 | C/T/0.35 | ↓ | 2.20 × 10−12 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 40 | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| GRIK2 | rs2224202 | 6:102053814 | A/G/0.19 | ↑ | 5.80 × 10−9 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 20 | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| KCNH8 | rs73043051 | 3:18883863 | C/T/0.22 | ↑ | 7.80 × 10−9 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| MCTP2 | rs12906962 | 15:95312071 | C/T/0.32 | ↓ | 5.10 × 10−9 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
| MED13L | rs61928421 | 12:116227249 | T/C/0.07 | ↓ | 4.30 × 10−15 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 40 | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| MED13L | rs11067773 | 12:11622895 | C/T/0.09 | ↓ | 3.10 × 10−11 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
| NDUFA11 | rs12974440 | 19:5894386 | A/G/0.08 | ↓ | 2.40 × 10−10 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 10 | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| NDUFA11 | rs12974991 | 19:5894584 | A/G/0.09 | ↓ | 2.10 × 10−9 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
| NEGR1 | rs61765646 | 1:72723211 | A/T/0.19 | ↑ | 1.10 × 10−13 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 10 | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| PAX2 | rs4917911 | 10:102559421 | G/A/0.11 | ↑ | 6.60 × 10−15 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
| PAX2 | rs7072737 | 10:102552663 | G/A/0.11 | ↑ | 1.10 × 10−17 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 40 | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| PRDM6 | rs151283 | 5:122446619 | A/C/0.28 | ↓ | 1.60 × 10−10 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| PRKAG2e | rs1029947 | 7:150713400 | – | – | 9.20 × 10−7 | GWAS | Standard Bruceb | 180 | General | Vasan et al. (2007) [ |
| PRKAG2e | rs1029946 | 7:150713454 | – | – | 3.89 × 10−6 | GWAS | Standard Bruceb | 180 | General | Vasan et al. (2007) [ |
| RGS6 | rs150330648 | 14:72844765 | T/G/0.01 | ↓ | 4.30 × 10−8 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
| RNF220 | rs272564 | 1:45012273 | C/A/0.29 | ↓ | 1.40 × 10−12 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| RNF220 | rs272564 | 1:45012273 | C/A/0.28 | ↓ | 8.80 × 10−10 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
| SCN10A | rs6795970 | 3:38766675 | A/G/0.40 | ↓ | 2.60 × 10−8 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
| SERINC2 | rs11589125 | 1:31894396 | T/C/0.06 | ↑ | 6.60 × 10−9 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| SKAP | rs2158712 | 7:26582733 | T/A/0.48 | ↓ | 2.80 × 10−13 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 10 | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| SNCAIP | rs1993875 | 5:121869310 | C/G/0.30 | ↓ | 9.50 × 10−9 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
| SOX5 | rs112630705 | 12:24773919 | A/G/0.15 | ↑ | 3.20 × 10−11 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
| SYT10 | rs6488162 | 12:33593127 | T/C/0.42 | ↓ | 2.60 × 10−66 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 10 | General | Verweij et al. (2018) [ |
| SYT10 | rs2218650 | 12: 33734783 | A/G/0.15 | ↓ | 1.10 × 10−26 | GWAS | Submaximal bicycle | 50 | General | Ramirez et al. (2018) [ |
Genes found to be associated with heart rate recovery after exercise are shown in alphabetical order and are then ordered on the year published. Mutation stands for either a SNP or deletion/insertion mutation. MAF stands for Minor Allele Frequency. Effect of variant (increase or decrease) on heart rate increase during exercise is shown for the minor allele. Candidate stands for candidate gene study. GWAS stands for genome-wide association study. MI stands for myocardial infarction. A hyphen is shown in case information which was not reported
aInsignificant after correction for multiple testing
bStandard Bruce protocol was used
cHeart rate recovery constant was used as measurement. This fits heart rate recovery to a first-order exponential decay curve
dCompared lowest and highest HRR quartile. Linear model showed no significant association
eStatistics from the family-based association tests are shown; Alleles were not mentioned in this article. None reached genome-wide significance. Results shown are the strongest associations
Fig. 2Graphical representation of genes (shown in italic) involved in acute heart rate recovery after exercise grouped by working mechanism (shown in bold). The left and left upper part of the figure shows the nervous system. The middle upper part zooms in on a parasympathetic neuron of the vagus nerve (twice) and its synapse. Note that although we zoom in on the brain stem (which is the main location of parasympathetic nuclei that innervate the vagus nerve), we actually show a peripheral parasympathetic neuron of the vagus nerve. The heart is displayed on the right; the upper right of the figure shows the aorta with next to it a pacemaker cell in the cardiac sinus node. In the middle of the figure, below, we zoom in on cardiac tissue and receptors. Cholinergic receptors and enzymes are shown in light blue and glutamate receptors in yellow. Sodium and potassium channels are shown in red and pink, respectively
Summary of genes involved in the long-term heart response to exercise
| Gene | Variant | Chromosome/position | Type of study | Training schedule | Type of exercise test | Population | Author; year | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heart rate increase | ||||||||
| CREB1a | rs2253206 | 2:208100223 | 1.6 × 10−5 | GWAS | 20 weeks, 3 times a day, 30–50 min at submaximal HR | Submaximal bicycle | Healthy, but sedentary | Rankinen et al. (2012) [ |
| GCH1a | rs2057368 | 14:54373759 | 5.6 × 10−5 | GWAS | 20 weeks, 3 times a day, 30–50 min at submaximal HR | Submaximal bicycle | Healthy, but sedentary | Rankinen et al. (2012) [ |
| GPRIN3a | rs1560488 | 4:90444858 | 3.3 × 10−5 | GWAS | 20 weeks, 3 times a day, 30–50 min at submaximal HR | Submaximal bicycle | Healthy, but sedentary | Rankinen et al. (2012) [ |
| RBPMSa | rs2979481 | 8:30382328 | 3.8 × 10−6 | GWAS | 20 weeks, 3 times a day, 30–50 min at submaximal HR | Submaximal bicycle | Healthy, but sedentary | Rankinen et al. (2012) [ |
| MYLIPa | rs909562 | 6:16238312 | 3.2 × 10−5 | GWAS | 20 weeks, 3 times a day, 30–50 min at submaximal HR | Submaximal bicycle | Healthy, but sedentary | Rankinen et al. (2012) [ |
| OR6N2a | rs857838 | 1:157017174 | 7.6 × 10−5 | GWAS | 20 weeks, 3 times a day, 30–50 min at submaximal HR | Submaximal bicycle | Healthy, but sedentary | Rankinen et al. (2012) [ |
| PIWIL1a | rs4759659 | 12:129403241 | 5.7 × 10−5 | GWAS | 20 weeks, 3 times a day, 30–50 min at submaximal HR | Submaximal bicycle | Healthy, but sedentary | Rankinen et al. (2012) [ |
| TFECa | rs10248479 | 7:115395591 | 3.4 × 10−5 | GWAS | 20 weeks, 3 times a day, 30- 50 min at submaximal HR | Submaximal bicycle | Healthy, but sedentary | Rankinen et al. (2012) [ |
| YWHAQa | rs6432018 | 2:9639347 | 8.1 × 10−7 | GWAS | 20 weeks, 3 times a day, 30–50 min at submaximal HR | Submaximal bicycle | Healthy, but sedentary | Rankinen et al. (2012) [ |
| Heart rate recovery | ||||||||
| CHRM2b | rs324640 | 7:136146251 | 0.008 | Candidate | 2 weeks, 5 times a week, 40 min at submaximal HR | Maximal bicycle | Healthy, but sedentary | Hautala (2006) [ |
| CHRM2b | rs8191992 | 7:136158563 | 0.005 | Candidate | 2 weeks, 5 times a week, 40 min at submaximal HR | Maximal bicycle | Healthy, but sedentary | Hautala (2006) [ |
Genes found to be associated with changes in training-induced changes to heart rate increase and recovery are shown in alphabetical order. Variant stands for either a SNP or deletion/insertion mutation. Candidate stands for candidate gene study. GWAS stands for genome-wide association study
aAllele frequencies and betas are not mentioned in this study and direction (in- or decrease of response to training) can, therefore, not be determined
bMinor alleles of rs324640 and rs8191992 (respectively, A and C) decreased heart rate recovery
Fig. 3Possible follow-up of GWAS on heart rate response to exercise. Cell models based on pluripotent stem cells provide a potential functional model to study GWAS findings using experimental manipulations that cannot be performed in vivo. Complex mechanisms of genetic interplay could be studied in animals that share a high percentage of their genomic sequence with humans, including mice, fruit flies, and zebrafishes. Tools such as gene knockdowns can be used to manipulate the genomes of these animal models. The ultimate application of knowledge initiated by GWAS findings in heart rate response to exercise lies in the improvement of primary and secondary prevention and personalized medicine to improve human health