Gala Regalia
Today marks the the annual Met Gala, a fundraiser for the Costume Institute of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, organized by fashion legend Anna Wintour. This year’s theme, “Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion,” points to a new exhibit of more than 250 long-dormant garments. Tonight’s gala—hosted by Jennifer Lopez, Chris Hemsworth, Bad Bunny, and Zendaya—features a dress-code theme of “The Garden of Time.”
The History of the Met Gala
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Runs in the Family
Today is the 70th anniversary of Roger Bannister becoming the first athlete to run a mile in less than four minutes. In doing so, he successfully defied a “psychological” barrier—the general belief that it was an impossible thing to do. Beyond mental fortitude, what else makes a superathelete? Bannister achieved his speed through scientific training methods and research into the mechanics of running, but other factors, notably genetics, may also play a role.
ACE
Some genes, particularly the ACE (angiotensin-converting enzyme) gene, have been associated with athletic ability. The ACE gene produces an enzyme that regulates blood pressure, and two different forms of the ACE gene—the D allele and the I allele—have been identified in elite athletes.
Endurance and power
Olympic-caliber distance runners typically possess the I allele, which can relax blood vessels, influence glucose uptake by skeletal muscle, and optimize oxygen utilization and energy production. But elite swimmers and sprinters—who rely more on power than endurance athletes do—typically have the D allele, which appears to facilitate increased growth of the types of muscle fibers that power athletes rely on for explosive speed.
Training and discipline
The other half of the elite-athlete equation relies on discipline and training, which takes advantage of the fact that genes are dynamic, switching between inactive and active states in reaction to what we do. Several genes, once activated by physical training, are linked to higher production of type 1 (slow twitch) muscle fibers, the dominant fiber type in endurance athletes. Other genes can adapt to exercise and training, including those involved in increasing cardiac output, maximal oxygen uptake, and oxygen delivery to muscles.
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