716 - How Much Do Genetics Affect Progress? (Research Review w/ Dr. Brandon Roberts)
Choose Hard with Cody McBroom
Cody McBroom
4.9 • 825 Ratings
🗓️ 17 February 2022
⏱️ 25 minutes
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Summary
The concept of human variation in the ability to respond to exercise training was proposed almost 30 years ago. In a series of standardized and carefully monitored exercise training experiments conducted with groups of sedentary young men and women, 18–30 years of age, it was shown that there were large interindividual differences in the response to training, i.e., trainability.
Let’s begin with an example: Height, which is important for sports like basketball and volleyball, is estimated to be 80% heritable. This means that if you don’t have tall parents you probably won’t be an elite level athlete in those two sports. This data set also found that genetic factors explained 59% of variation in body mass index and 50-60% in the strength measures. The main problem is that we don’t know which genes are responsible for changing performance.
In research, most of the genetic studies have focused on aerobic endurance, specifically using VO2max, which measures the maximal amount of oxygen you can utilize during an exercise test. The heritability of VO2max is about 50%. Muscle strength and power heritability is somewhere between 30-80% depending on the type of exercise.
The most comprehensive data on the individual differences in trainability come from the HERITAGE Family Study, in which 742 healthy but sedentary subjects followed a highly standardized, well-controlled, laboratory-based endurance-training programme for 20 weeks. The authors found that after adjustment for age, sex, baseline maximal oxygen uptake and baseline body mass and composition the heritability of the maximal oxygen uptake response to 20 weeks of standardized exercise training reached 47%. That’s not very much.
In science, we often use animals to do experiments. Several selection experiments have confirmed the concept that there is a substantial genetic component to the trainability of exercise performance traits. For instance, in one study on selection for high and low responses to treadmill training in rats, the mean running distance increase of the founder population was 222 meters (Troxell et al. 2003). Pairs of lowest and of highest responders to training were mated, and their offspring were later exposed to the same treadmill training programme. Offspring from the low line did not differ in trainability from the founders, while those from the high line improved their running distance by more than 60% over the low line. These results also revealed that the narrow heritability of running performance trainability reached 43% in rodents.
Moving back to humans, two of the most studied genes are angiotensin converting enzyme I (ACE I/D) and alpha-actinin 3 (ACTN3).
The ACE I/D polymorphism was the first genetic factor to be associated with human performance. The ACE gene codes for angiotensin-1 converting enzyme, part of the renin-angiotensin system responsible for controlling blood pressure by regulating body fluid levels. The I allele, which represents an insertion of 287 bp, is associated with lower serum and tissue ACE activity and improved performance in endurance sports. The deleted form of the variant (D allele) is associated with higher circulating and tissue ACE activity and enhanced performance at sports short bursts of power. The literature on the ACE allele is somewhat controversial, with a recent meta-analysis indicating that here was no statistically significant association bet
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Welcome to the tailored life podcast, the one and only fitness and nutrition podcast. |
| 0:10.3 | It goes way beyond just training and nutrition and helps you create a life by design. |
| 0:15.9 | I'm your host, Cody McBroom, and today I have our chief science officer, Dr. Brandon Roberts, on the podcast because we are |
| 0:21.8 | going to dive into some research. So we have this week's research review. And this topic is going |
| 0:27.1 | to be really cool for a couple reasons. Number one, I think this is the, this and hormones are |
| 0:32.9 | up there as like the two biggest scapegoats for people when they're not getting the results they |
| 0:37.3 | want. |
| 0:38.2 | And what we're talking about today is genetics. But the other reason this is really cool is because |
| 0:41.7 | I did a podcast on how much do genetics matter. And it's always nice when I have you come on and |
| 0:47.5 | kind of school me on the research a little bit deeper because I can kind of discuss my experience |
| 0:51.6 | of what I interpret the research to say, but obviously this is |
| 0:55.1 | what you do for a living man. You're an expert in this. So I'm excited for this. And I'm hoping that |
| 0:59.7 | I'm always like on the underdog side of this. Like let's hope that they don't affect us too much because |
| 1:05.7 | it gives us all more of a chance. But nonetheless, this is something that people are constantly |
| 1:10.3 | blaming their lack of success in the gym, their lack of success with their physique on. And I think |
| 1:16.0 | it's important that we address this. So I'm really excited for this topic. And the specific |
| 1:19.0 | question that you're going to be answering today is how much do genetics affect performance, |
| 1:23.4 | which obviously we can tie into numerous aspects of hypertrophy, fat, all those kind of things later on. |
| 1:29.9 | But man, why don't you kind of get into what you pulled up in addressing the question specifically? |
| 1:34.9 | Yeah, yeah. So when people think genetics, it's kind of like this vague term, right? It's like, |
| 1:39.9 | what does that even mean? Like what is a gene? Like I have, you know, copies of DNA inside me and all my cells |
| 1:46.6 | and they tell what, tell the other cells what to do |
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