Genes (May 2022)

Concussion-Associated Polygenic Profiles of Elite Male Rugby Athletes

  • Mark R. Antrobus,
  • Jon Brazier,
  • Peter C. Callus,
  • Adam J. Herbert,
  • Georgina K. Stebbings,
  • Praval Khanal,
  • Stephen H. Day,
  • Liam P. Kilduff,
  • Mark A. Bennett,
  • Robert M. Erskine,
  • Stuart M. Raleigh,
  • Malcolm Collins,
  • Yannis P. Pitsiladis,
  • Shane M. Heffernan,
  • Alun G. Williams

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/genes13050820
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5
p. 820

Abstract

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Due to the high-velocity collision-based nature of elite rugby league and union, the risk of sustaining a concussion is high. Occurrence of and outcomes following a concussion are probably affected by the interaction of multiple genes in a polygenic manner. This study investigated whether suspected concussion-associated polygenic profiles of elite rugby athletes differed from non-athletes and between rugby union forwards and backs. We hypothesised that a total genotype score (TGS) using eight concussion-associated polymorphisms would be higher in elite rugby athletes than non-athletes, indicating selection for protection against incurring or suffering prolonged effects of, concussion in the relatively high-risk environment of competitive rugby. In addition, multifactor dimensionality reduction was used to identify genetic interactions. Contrary to our hypothesis, TGS did not differ between elite rugby athletes and non-athletes (p ≥ 0.065), nor between rugby union forwards and backs (p = 0.668). Accordingly, the TGS could not discriminate between elite rugby athletes and non-athletes (AUC ~0.5), suggesting that, for the eight polymorphisms investigated, elite rugby athletes do not have a more ‘preferable’ concussion-associated polygenic profile than non-athletes. However, the COMT (rs4680) and MAPT (rs10445337) GC allele combination was more common in rugby athletes (31.7%; p p COMT (rs4680) and MAPT (rs10445337) assists rugby athletes in achieving elite status. These findings need exploration vis-à-vis sport-related concussion injury data and could have implications for the management of inter-individual differences in concussion risk.

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