No association between the angiotensin-converting enzyme ID polymorphism and elite endurance athlete status
Journal of Applied Physiology 88(5): 1571-1575
Article 2000 English
Authors
TR
Tuomo Rankinen
BW
Bernd Wolfarth
JS
Jean‐Aimé Simoneau
Abstract
1 min read
Several studies have reported that the insertion (I) allele of the angiotensin-converting enzyme ( ACE) I/deletion (D) polymorphism is associated with enhanced responsiveness to endurance training and is more common in endurance athletes than in sedentary controls. We tested the latter hypothesis in a cohort of 192 male endurance athletes with maximal oxygen uptake ≥75 ml ⋅ kg −1 ⋅ min −1 and 189 sedentary male controls. The ACE ID polymorphism in intron 16 was typed with the three-primer polymerase chain reaction method. Both the genotype ( P = 0.214) and allele ( P = 0.095) frequencies were similar in the athletes and the controls. Further analyses in the athletes revealed no excess of the I allele among the athletes within the highest quartile (> 80 ml ⋅ kg −1 ⋅ min −1 ) or decile (>83 ml ⋅ kg −1 ⋅ min −1 ) of maximal oxygen uptake. These data from the GENATHLETE cohort do not support the hypothesis that the ACE ID polymorphism is associated with a higher cardiorespiratory endurance performance level.
Bernd Wolfarth, Miguel A. Rivera, Jean‐Michel Oppert, Marcel R. Boulay, France T. Dionne, Marie‐Christine Chagnon, Jacques Gagnon, Y. C. Chagnon, L. P russe, Joseph Keul, Claude Bouchard
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