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Exercise and Your Genes: Why the Same Program Gives Different Results

Alis Lalishat profile image By
Alis Lalishat
|
Jun 27, 2026
|
53
Health
Genetics
exercise genetics
Summary
exercise genetics

Why does the same workout give different results? Genes like ACTN3 and training response (heritability ~47%) play a real role. Learn how to use gene data to design training that truly fits you.

Key Takeaways

  • The ACTN3 (R577X) gene is linked to "explosive power" muscle — people with the R allele often have an edge in power/speed sports.
  • Response to training (trainability) varies a lot between people; research finds VO2max improvement has a heritability of about 47%.
  • On the same program, some improve a lot while others barely move — partly due to genes.
  • But genes are not a verdict — the right type of training, done consistently, still matters most.

Ever felt like you train as hard as a friend and eat the same, but get different results? Part of the answer is in your genes. As someone who's always taken a proactive approach to health, I want to explain how genetics shapes exercise — and how far we can use that to our advantage.

ACTN3: The "Sprinter" vs "Endurance" Gene

ACTN3 is the most-studied gene for athletic performance. It makes a protein in fast-twitch muscle. People with the R allele often have an advantage in power and speed sports, while XX types tend to suit endurance better. That said, research is clear that ACTN3 alone doesn't determine who becomes a world-class athlete.

Why Does the "Same Program" Give Different Results?

This is the heart of it. The HERITAGE Family Study trained 481 participants on a standardized 20-week program and found VO2max gains varied dramatically — some barely improved, while others gained over 1 L/min. That variation has a heritability of about 47%, meaning genetics plays a real role, but not the whole one.

How Do You Use Gene Data for Exercise?

Knowing your genetic tendencies helps you train smarter — power-leaning people might emphasize heavy, low-rep strength work, while endurance-leaning people might focus on cardio and HIIT. Best paired with nutrigenomics and tracking your biological age to see the combined effect of lifestyle.

A Caution: Genes Don't Train For You

What I want to stress: gene results are a "compass," not a "ceiling." Even without standout alleles, correct, consistent training always improves your body — and genes predict only part of the outcome. Don't use them as an excuse to stop trying.

Author's Final Note

For me, the beauty here is getting to train with my body instead of fighting it. When you understand your strengths and weaknesses, exercise becomes more enjoyable and sustainable. Start understanding your body with a DNA test.

1. Can a gene test tell me which sport suits me?

It can help. Genes like ACTN3 indicate whether you lean toward power/explosive or endurance sports, helping you pick training types that fit.

2. If my genes aren't standout, is exercising pointless?

Not true. Even without standout genes, correct and consistent training always improves your body. Genes are a compass, not a ceiling.

3. Do genetics fully determine my exercise results?

Partly. The HERITAGE study found VO2max improvement from training has ~47% heritability, but the other half comes from other factors — so you can still improve through training.

References

  1. Effective utilization of genetic information for athletes and coaches: focus on ACTN3 R577X polymorphism. PubMed
  2. Genes to predict VO2max trainability: a systematic review. BMC Genomics. 2017. NCBI
  3. ACTN3: More than Just a Gene for Speed. Front Physiol. 2017. Frontiers
  4. A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of ACTN3 R577X Genotypes in Endurance vs Power Athletes. PMC. NCBI
  5. Familial aggregation of VO2max response to exercise training: HERITAGE Family Study. J Appl Physiol. 1999. PubMed
  6. Genomic predictors of the maximal O2 uptake response to standardized exercise training. HERITAGE. PubMed
Written by Alis Lalishat
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