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A Hückel Model for the Excited-State Dynamics of a Protein Chromophore Developed Using Photoelectron Imaging

[Image: see text] Chemistry can be described as the movement of nuclei within molecules and the concomitant instantaneous change in electronic structure. This idea underpins the central chemical concepts of potential energy surfaces and reaction coordinates. To experimentally capture such chemical c...

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Autores principales: Anstöter, Cate S., Verlet, Jan R. R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2022
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9084545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35172580
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.accounts.1c00780
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author Anstöter, Cate S.
Verlet, Jan R. R.
author_facet Anstöter, Cate S.
Verlet, Jan R. R.
author_sort Anstöter, Cate S.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Chemistry can be described as the movement of nuclei within molecules and the concomitant instantaneous change in electronic structure. This idea underpins the central chemical concepts of potential energy surfaces and reaction coordinates. To experimentally capture such chemical change therefore requires methods that can probe both the nuclear and electronic structure simultaneously and on the time scale of atomic motion. In this Account, we show how time-resolved photoelectron imaging can do exactly this and how it can be used to build a detailed and intuitive understanding of the electronic structure and excited-state dynamics of chromophores. The chromophore of the photoactive yellow protein (PYP) is used as a case study. This chromophore contains a para-substituted phenolate anion, where the substituent, R, can be viewed as an acrolein derivative. It is shown that the measured photoelectron angular distribution can be directly related to the electronic structure of the para-substituted phenolate anion. By incrementally considering differing R groups, it is also shown that these photoelectron angular distributions are exquisitely sensitive to the conformational flexibility of R and that when R contains a π-system the excited states of the chromophore can be viewed as a linear combination of the π* molecular orbitals on the phenolate (π(Ph)*) and the R substituent (π(R)*). Such Hückel treatment shows that the S(1) state of the PYP chromophore has predominantly π(R)* character and that it is essentially the same as the chromophore of the green fluorescent protein (GFP). The S(1) excited-state dynamics of the PYP chromophore probed by time-resolved photoelectron imaging clearly reveals both structural (nuclear) dynamics through the energy spectrum and electronic dynamics through the photoelectron angular distributions. Both motions can be accurately assigned using quantum chemical calculations, and these are consistent with the intuitive Hückel treatment presented. The photoactive protein chromophores considered here are examples of where a chemists’ intuitive Hückel view for ground-state chemistry appears to be transferable to the prediction of photochemical excited-state reactivity. While elegant and insightful, such models have limitations, including nonadiabatic dynamics, which is present in a related PYP chromophore, where a fraction of the S(1) state population forms a nonvalence (dipole-bound) state of the anion.
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spelling pubmed-90845452022-05-10 A Hückel Model for the Excited-State Dynamics of a Protein Chromophore Developed Using Photoelectron Imaging Anstöter, Cate S. Verlet, Jan R. R. Acc Chem Res [Image: see text] Chemistry can be described as the movement of nuclei within molecules and the concomitant instantaneous change in electronic structure. This idea underpins the central chemical concepts of potential energy surfaces and reaction coordinates. To experimentally capture such chemical change therefore requires methods that can probe both the nuclear and electronic structure simultaneously and on the time scale of atomic motion. In this Account, we show how time-resolved photoelectron imaging can do exactly this and how it can be used to build a detailed and intuitive understanding of the electronic structure and excited-state dynamics of chromophores. The chromophore of the photoactive yellow protein (PYP) is used as a case study. This chromophore contains a para-substituted phenolate anion, where the substituent, R, can be viewed as an acrolein derivative. It is shown that the measured photoelectron angular distribution can be directly related to the electronic structure of the para-substituted phenolate anion. By incrementally considering differing R groups, it is also shown that these photoelectron angular distributions are exquisitely sensitive to the conformational flexibility of R and that when R contains a π-system the excited states of the chromophore can be viewed as a linear combination of the π* molecular orbitals on the phenolate (π(Ph)*) and the R substituent (π(R)*). Such Hückel treatment shows that the S(1) state of the PYP chromophore has predominantly π(R)* character and that it is essentially the same as the chromophore of the green fluorescent protein (GFP). The S(1) excited-state dynamics of the PYP chromophore probed by time-resolved photoelectron imaging clearly reveals both structural (nuclear) dynamics through the energy spectrum and electronic dynamics through the photoelectron angular distributions. Both motions can be accurately assigned using quantum chemical calculations, and these are consistent with the intuitive Hückel treatment presented. The photoactive protein chromophores considered here are examples of where a chemists’ intuitive Hückel view for ground-state chemistry appears to be transferable to the prediction of photochemical excited-state reactivity. While elegant and insightful, such models have limitations, including nonadiabatic dynamics, which is present in a related PYP chromophore, where a fraction of the S(1) state population forms a nonvalence (dipole-bound) state of the anion. American Chemical Society 2022-02-17 2022-05-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9084545/ /pubmed/35172580 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.accounts.1c00780 Text en © 2022 American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Anstöter, Cate S.
Verlet, Jan R. R.
A Hückel Model for the Excited-State Dynamics of a Protein Chromophore Developed Using Photoelectron Imaging
title A Hückel Model for the Excited-State Dynamics of a Protein Chromophore Developed Using Photoelectron Imaging
title_full A Hückel Model for the Excited-State Dynamics of a Protein Chromophore Developed Using Photoelectron Imaging
title_fullStr A Hückel Model for the Excited-State Dynamics of a Protein Chromophore Developed Using Photoelectron Imaging
title_full_unstemmed A Hückel Model for the Excited-State Dynamics of a Protein Chromophore Developed Using Photoelectron Imaging
title_short A Hückel Model for the Excited-State Dynamics of a Protein Chromophore Developed Using Photoelectron Imaging
title_sort hückel model for the excited-state dynamics of a protein chromophore developed using photoelectron imaging
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9084545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35172580
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.accounts.1c00780
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