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Structure, spectroscopy, and spectral tuning of the gas-phase retinal chromophore : The β-ionone handle and alkyl group effect

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TLDR
The low-lying singlet states (i.e. S0, S1, and S2) of the chromophore of rhodopsin, the protonated Schiff base of 11-cis-retinal (PSB11), and of its all-trans photoproduct have been studied in isolated conditions by using ab initio multiconfigurational second-order perturbation theory.
Abstract
The low-lying singlet states (i.e. S0, S1, and S2) of the chromophore of rhodopsin, the protonated Schiff base of 11-cis-retinal (PSB11), and of its all-trans photoproduct have been studied in isolated conditions by using ab initio multiconfigurational second-order perturbation theory. The computed spectroscopic features include the vertical excitation, the band origin, and the fluorescence maximum of both isomers. On the basis of the S0-->S1 vertical excitation, the gas-phase absorption maximum of PSB11 is predicted to be 545 nm (2.28 eV). Thus, the predicted absorption maximum appears to be closer to that of the rhodopsin pigment (2.48 eV) and considerably red-shifted with respect to that measured in solution (2.82 eV in methanol). In addition, the absorption maxima associated with the blue, green, and red cone visual pigments are tentatively rationalized in terms of the spectral changes computed for PSB11 structures featuring differently twisted beta-ionone rings. More specifically, a blue-shifted absorption maximum is explained in terms of a large twisting of the beta-ionone ring (with respect to the main conjugated chain) in the visual S-cone (blue) pigment chromophore. In contrast, the chromophore of the visual L-cone (red) pigment is expected to have a nearly coplanar beta-ionone ring yielding a six double bond fully conjugated framework. Finally, the M-cone (green) chromophore is expected to feature a twisting angle between 10 and 60 degrees. The spectroscopic effects of the alkyl substituents on the PSB11 spectroscopic properties have also been investigated. It is found that they have a not negligible stabilizing effect on the S1-S0 energy gap (and, thus, cause a red shift of the absorption maximum) only when the double bond of the beta-ionone ring conjugates significantly with the rest of the conjugated chain.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Photoisomerization of Model Retinal Chromophores: Insight from Quantum Monte Carlo and Multiconfigurational Perturbation Theory

TL;DR: In this paper, the structural relaxation in the excited state of model retinal chromophores in the gas phase using the complete-active-space self-consistent theory (CASSCF), multiconfigurational second-order perturbation theory, quantum Monte Carlo (QMC), and coupled cluster (CC) methods was investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Theoretical Studies on the Color-Tuning Mechanism in Retinal Proteins

TL;DR: The results indicate that the present approach is useful for studying the absorption spectra and the mechanism of the color tuning in the retinal proteins.
Journal ArticleDOI

The color of rhodopsins at the ab initio multiconfigurational perturbation theory resolution.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that “brute force” quantum-mechanics/molecular- mechanics computations based on ab initio (i.e., first principles) multiconfigurational perturbation theory can reproduce the absorption maxima of a set of modified bovine rhodopsins with an accuracy allowing for the analysis of the factors determining their colors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electrostatic control of the photoisomerization efficiency and optical properties in visual pigments: on the role of counterion quenching.

TL;DR: A unified scenario is presented that discloses the relationship between spectroscopic and mechanistic properties in rhodopsins and allows to draw a solid mechanism for spectral tuning in color vision pigments: a tunable counterion shielding appears as the elective mechanism for L<-->M spectral modulation, while a retinal conformational control must dictate S absorption.
Journal ArticleDOI

S~1 and S~2 Excited States of Gas-Phase Schiff-Base Retinal Chromophores

TL;DR: Photoabsorption studies of 11-cis and all-trans Schiff-base retinal chromophore cations in the gas phase have been performed at the electrostatic ion storage ring in Aarhus and a second "dark" excited state (S2) just below 400 nm is reported for the first time.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Crystal Structure of Rhodopsin: A G Protein-Coupled Receptor

TL;DR: This article determined the structure of rhodopsin from diffraction data extending to 2.8 angstroms resolution and found that the highly organized structure in the extracellular region, including a conserved disulfide bridge, forms a basis for the arrangement of the sevenhelix transmembrane motif.
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Second-order perturbation theory with a complete active space self-consistent field reference function.

TL;DR: In this paper, the Fock-type one-electron operator was extended by allowing the zeroth-order Hamiltonian to have nonzero elements also in nondiagonal matrix blocks.
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Relationship between Absorption Intensity and Fluorescence Lifetime of Molecules

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors derived a modified 1/τ0=2.880×10−9n2/n2-1(gl/gu) ∫ edlnν, which should be valid for broad molecular bands when the transition is strongly allowed.
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Structure of bacteriorhodopsin at 1.55 A resolution.

TL;DR: The results indicate extensive involvement of bound water molecules in both the structure and the function of this seven-helical membrane protein.
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Melanopsin: An opsin in melanophores, brain, and eye.

TL;DR: Melanopsin mRNA is expressed in hypothalamic sites thought to contain deep brain photoreceptors and in the iris, a structure known to be directly photosensitive in amphibians, and expression in retinal and nonretinal tissues suggests a role in vision and nonvisual photoreceptive tasks.
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