Bipolar patients display stoichiometric imbalance of gene expression in post-mortem brain samples

Mol Psychiatry. 2024 Apr;29(4):1128-1138. doi: 10.1038/s41380-023-02398-0. Epub 2024 Feb 13.

Abstract

Bipolar disorder is a severe neuro-psychiatric condition where genome-wide association and sequencing studies have pointed to dysregulated gene expression as likely to be causal. We observed strong correlation in expression between GWAS-associated genes and hypothesised that healthy function depends on balance in the relative expression levels of the associated genes and that patients display stoichiometric imbalance. We developed a method for quantifying stoichiometric imbalance and used this to predict each sample's diagnosis probability in four cortical brain RNAseq datasets. The percentage of phenotypic variance on the liability-scale explained by these probabilities ranged from 10.0 to 17.4% (AUC: 69.4-76.4%) which is a multiple of the classification performance achieved using absolute expression levels or GWAS-based polygenic risk scores. Most patients display stoichiometric imbalance in three to ten genes, suggesting that dysregulation of only a small fraction of associated genes can trigger the disorder, with the identity of these genes varying between individuals.

MeSH terms

  • Autopsy / methods
  • Bipolar Disorder* / genetics
  • Bipolar Disorder* / metabolism
  • Brain* / metabolism
  • Female
  • Gene Expression / genetics
  • Genetic Predisposition to Disease / genetics
  • Genome-Wide Association Study* / methods
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Multifactorial Inheritance / genetics
  • Phenotype
  • Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide / genetics