Bipolar disorder (BD) is a major psychiatric illness with a high global burden, unclear pathophysiology, and limited biological markers, leaving diagnosis reliant on behavioral criteria. While there is an increasing number of individual transcriptomic studies investigating genes involved in BD, comprehensive cross-tissue meta-analyses remain lacking. In this study, we conducted eight independent meta-analyses of differentially expressed genes (DEGs) across the whole brain, Brodmann area 9 (BA9), BA9 + BA46, and blood, integrating 19 publicly available postmortem brain datasets with 917 samples (386 BD patients, 531 controls) and six independent peripheral blood cohorts of 638 samples (316 BD, 322 controls). We identified enrichment of genes involved in mitochondrial bioenergetics and oxidative stress, as well as in synaptic structure, signaling, and neuroinflammatory pathways. These findings suggest coordinated disruption of neuronal metabolism and circuit function in BD. Additionally, we found several novel lncRNAs, miRNAs , and snoRNAs, including SNORD62B , SNORA70 , and SNORA10, not previously linked to BD. DrugBank annotation highlighted pharmacologically actionable genes, including SST , P2RY12 , and C3 , underscoring the therapeutic relevance of our findings. Together, these results establish an integrated molecular framework of BD pathogenesis involving impaired inhibitory circuitry, mitochondrial dysfunction, neuroimmune dysregulation, and non-coding RNA networks, while providing candidate biomarkers and druggable targets, such as SST, to guide future mechanistic and therapeutic studies. • 1983 genes in the brain and 768 in blood are significantly differentially expressed. • GABAergic neuron markers and synaptic genes are significantly downregulated in BD. • Neuroinflammatory pathways and non-coding RNAs are dysregulated in BD. • C3, P2RY12 , and SST are potential pharmacologically actionable genes in the brain.
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Aleksandra Panina
Uppsala University
Aleksandr V. Sokolov
Uppsala University
Jörgen Jönsson
Uppsala University
Neurobiology of Disease
Uppsala University
Latvijas Organiskās Sintēzes Institūts
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Panina et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a67dd6f353c071a6f09dd2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nbd.2026.107339