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Control of Protonated Schiff Base Excited State Decay within Visual Protein Mimics: A Unified Model for Retinal Chromophores

Artificial biomimetic chromophore-protein complexes inspired by natural visual pigments can feature color tunability across the full visible spectrum. However, control of excited state dynamics of the retinal chromophore, which is of paramount importance for technological applications, is lacking du...

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Autores principales: Demoulin, Baptiste, Maiuri, Margherita, Berbasova, Tetyana, Geiger, James H., Borhan, Babak, Garavelli, Marco, Cerullo, Giulio, Rivalta, Ivan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8906800/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34653286
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/chem.202102383
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author Demoulin, Baptiste
Maiuri, Margherita
Berbasova, Tetyana
Geiger, James H.
Borhan, Babak
Garavelli, Marco
Cerullo, Giulio
Rivalta, Ivan
author_facet Demoulin, Baptiste
Maiuri, Margherita
Berbasova, Tetyana
Geiger, James H.
Borhan, Babak
Garavelli, Marco
Cerullo, Giulio
Rivalta, Ivan
author_sort Demoulin, Baptiste
collection PubMed
description Artificial biomimetic chromophore-protein complexes inspired by natural visual pigments can feature color tunability across the full visible spectrum. However, control of excited state dynamics of the retinal chromophore, which is of paramount importance for technological applications, is lacking due to its complex and subtle photophysics/photochemistry. Here, ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy and quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics simulations are combined for the study of highly tunable rhodopsin mimics, as compared to retinal chromophores in solution. Conical intersections and transient fluorescent intermediates are identified with atomistic resolution, providing unambiguous assignment of their ultrafast excited state absorption features. The results point out that the electrostatic environment of the chromophore, modified by protein point mutations, affects its excited state properties allowing control of its photophysics with same power of chemical modifications of the chromophore. The complex nature of such fine control is a fundamental knowledge for the design of bio-mimetic opto-electronic and photonic devices. A joint experimental-computational study elucidates the photophysics of retinal Schiff bases embedded in artificial proteins capable of mimicking the color tunability of natural visual pigments as compared to solvated chromophores. Combining ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy with quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics simulations allowed monitoring nonlinear optical signals of the chromophore, shedding light on the complexity beyond the fine control of its excited state lifetime.
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spelling pubmed-89068002022-11-25 Control of Protonated Schiff Base Excited State Decay within Visual Protein Mimics: A Unified Model for Retinal Chromophores Demoulin, Baptiste Maiuri, Margherita Berbasova, Tetyana Geiger, James H. Borhan, Babak Garavelli, Marco Cerullo, Giulio Rivalta, Ivan Chemistry Article Artificial biomimetic chromophore-protein complexes inspired by natural visual pigments can feature color tunability across the full visible spectrum. However, control of excited state dynamics of the retinal chromophore, which is of paramount importance for technological applications, is lacking due to its complex and subtle photophysics/photochemistry. Here, ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy and quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics simulations are combined for the study of highly tunable rhodopsin mimics, as compared to retinal chromophores in solution. Conical intersections and transient fluorescent intermediates are identified with atomistic resolution, providing unambiguous assignment of their ultrafast excited state absorption features. The results point out that the electrostatic environment of the chromophore, modified by protein point mutations, affects its excited state properties allowing control of its photophysics with same power of chemical modifications of the chromophore. The complex nature of such fine control is a fundamental knowledge for the design of bio-mimetic opto-electronic and photonic devices. A joint experimental-computational study elucidates the photophysics of retinal Schiff bases embedded in artificial proteins capable of mimicking the color tunability of natural visual pigments as compared to solvated chromophores. Combining ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy with quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics simulations allowed monitoring nonlinear optical signals of the chromophore, shedding light on the complexity beyond the fine control of its excited state lifetime. 2021-11-25 2021-10-28 /pmc/articles/PMC8906800/ /pubmed/34653286 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/chem.202102383 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Demoulin, Baptiste
Maiuri, Margherita
Berbasova, Tetyana
Geiger, James H.
Borhan, Babak
Garavelli, Marco
Cerullo, Giulio
Rivalta, Ivan
Control of Protonated Schiff Base Excited State Decay within Visual Protein Mimics: A Unified Model for Retinal Chromophores
title Control of Protonated Schiff Base Excited State Decay within Visual Protein Mimics: A Unified Model for Retinal Chromophores
title_full Control of Protonated Schiff Base Excited State Decay within Visual Protein Mimics: A Unified Model for Retinal Chromophores
title_fullStr Control of Protonated Schiff Base Excited State Decay within Visual Protein Mimics: A Unified Model for Retinal Chromophores
title_full_unstemmed Control of Protonated Schiff Base Excited State Decay within Visual Protein Mimics: A Unified Model for Retinal Chromophores
title_short Control of Protonated Schiff Base Excited State Decay within Visual Protein Mimics: A Unified Model for Retinal Chromophores
title_sort control of protonated schiff base excited state decay within visual protein mimics: a unified model for retinal chromophores
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8906800/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34653286
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/chem.202102383
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