Parabacteroides distinguishes bipolar disorder from schizophrenia: toward a microbial biomarker for differential diagnosis
Wang Majie, Hu Yifang, Huo Yuncui, Chen Yaping, Li Longhui, Jin Qianyan, Xie Weiwei, Cui Wei, Wang Yucheng

TL;DR
This study identifies a gut bacterium, Parabacteroides, that may help distinguish bipolar disorder from schizophrenia, offering a potential microbial biomarker for diagnosis.
Contribution
The study identifies Parabacteroides_B_862066 as a novel microbial biomarker for differentiating bipolar disorder from schizophrenia.
Findings
SCZ and BD patients showed reduced microbial diversity and distinct gut microbial profiles compared to healthy controls.
Parabacteroides_B_862066 abundance strongly differentiates SCZ from BD with high discriminative performance (AUC = 0.87).
SCZ showed pro-inflammatory profiles, while BD was linked to metabolic dysbiosis and lipid-related pathways.
Abstract
Schizophrenia (SCZ) and bipolar disorder (BD) are severe psychiatric disorders with overlapping clinical manifestations and shared biological mechanisms. Growing evidence implicates the gut microbiota in neuroimmune and metabolic regulation, suggesting a potential role in the pathophysiology and heterogeneity of psychiatric disorders. In this comparative study, fecal samples were collected from 43 patients with SCZ, 19 patients with BD, and 40 healthy controls (HC). Gut microbial composition was profiled using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Microbial diversity, taxonomic composition, and predicted functional pathways were analyzed, and associations between key taxa and clinical symptom dimensions were assessed. Both SCZ and BD patients exhibited significantly reduced microbial diversity and distinct alterations in gut microbial composition compared with HC. SCZ was characterized by a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGut microbiota and health · Tryptophan and brain disorders · Probiotics and Fermented Foods
