AI Article Synopsis

  • Bipolar disorder (BD) consists of two main types: BD I, which requires at least one manic episode, and BD II, which includes a hypomanic and a depressive episode; BD II is traditionally seen as less severe.
  • A study utilized genomic structural equation modeling (Genomic SEM) to examine the genetic differences between BD subtypes using recent data, analyzing their genetic correlations with various external traits and exploring the influence of schizophrenia and major depression.
  • Results indicated that BD II had a greater genetic overlap with non-psychiatric traits and major depression than BD I, suggesting a need for reevaluation of the severity distinction between the subtypes based on their genetic profiles.

Article Abstract

Background: Bipolar disorder (BD) is an overarching diagnostic class defined by the presence of at least one prior manic episode (BD I) or both a prior hypomanic episode and a prior depressive episode (BD II). Traditionally, BD II has been conceptualized as a less severe presentation of BD I, however, extant literature to investigate this claim has been mixed.

Methods: We apply genomic structural equation modeling (Genomic SEM) to investigate divergent genetic pathways across BD's two major subtypes using the most recent GWAS summary statistics from the PGC. We begin by identifying divergences in genetic correlations across 98 external traits using a Bonferroni-corrected threshold. We also use a theoretically informed follow-up model to examine the extent to which the genetic variance in each subtype is explained by schizophrenia and major depression. Lastly, transcriptome-wide SEM (T-SEM) was used to identify neuronal gene expression patterns associated with BD subtypes.

Results: BD II was characterized by significantly larger genetic overlap across non-psychiatric medical and internalizing traits (e.g. heart disease, neuroticism, insomnia), while stronger associations for BD I were absent. Consistent with these findings, follow-up modeling revealed a substantial major depression component for BD II. T-SEM results revealed 35 unique genes associated with shared risk across BD subtypes.

Conclusions: Divergent patterns of genetic relationships across external traits provide support for the distinction of the bipolar subtypes. However, our results also challenge the illness severity conceptualization of BD given stronger genetic overlap across BD II and a range of clinically relevant traits and disorders.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11552689PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0033291723002957DOI Listing

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