The Cytochrome b m.14849T>C (S35P) Variant Induces Structural and Dynamic Alterations in the Heme bL Microenvironment in Multisystem Disease

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The Cytochrome b m.14849T>C (S35P) Variant Induces Structural and Dynamic Alterations in the Heme bL Microenvironment in Multisystem Disease

Authors

Yasar, E.; Demir, A. Y.; Dogru, S.

Abstract

Mitochondrial Complex III dysfunction is frequently associated with pathogenic variants in the MT-CYB gene, yet the functional consequences of many missense substitutions remain unresolved because they are classified as variants of uncertain significance (VUS). One such variant, m.14849T>C (p.Ser35Pro), has been reported in patients with multisystem mitochondrial phenotypes, including septo-optic dysplasia, cardiomyopathy, and exercise intolerance, although its structural impact on Cytochrome b function remains unclear. In this study, we employed 300 ns all-atom molecular dynamics simulations to assess structural and energetic consequences of the S35P substitution in the Cytochrome b subunit of human mitochondrial Complex III. The S35P variant did not induce global destabilization of the protein scaffold but instead promoted localized perturbations within the heme bL microenvironment. The mutation was associated with loss of a heme-proximal hydrogen-bonding network involving Ser35 and a decrease in electrostatic interaction energy between the protein matrix and the heme bL cofactor. Radial distribution function analysis further supported loosening of local packing around the prosthetic group. Consistent with these local changes, dynamics analyses indicated increased flexibility in distal transmembrane helices that form the heme-pocket scaffold and greater variability in the inter-heme Fe(bL) - Fe(bH) distance. Together, our findings suggest that S35P may exert functional effects by reorganizing the heme bL microenvironment rather than by inducing large-scale structural destabilization, underscoring the value of structure- and dynamics-based evaluation for mitochondrial VUS and suggesting a plausible mechanistic link to the pathophysiology of multisystem mitochondrial diseases.

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