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Red/Green Color Tuning of Visual Rhodopsins: Electrostatic Theory Provides a Quantitative Explanation.

Florimond ColletteThomas RengerFrank MühMarcel Schmidt Am Busch
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry. B (2018)
We present a structure-based theory of the long-wavelength (red/green) color tuning in visual rhodopsins and its application to the analysis of site-directed mutagenesis experiments. Using a combination of electrostatic and molecular-mechanics methods, we explain the measured mutant-minus-wild-type absorption shifts and conclude that the dominant mechanism of the color tuning in these systems is electrostatic pigment-protein coupling. An important element of our analysis is the independent determination of protonation states of titratable residues in the wild type and the mutant protein as well as the self-consistent reoptimization of hydrogen atom positions, which includes the relaxation of the hydrogen bonding network and the reorientation of water molecules. On the basis of this analysis, we propose a "dipole-orientation rule" according to which both the position and the orientation of a polar group introduced in the protein environment determine the direction of the transition energy shift of the retinal chromophore.
Keyphrases
  • wild type
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • protein protein
  • optical coherence tomography
  • single molecule
  • molecular dynamics
  • high resolution
  • ionic liquid
  • small molecule
  • solid phase extraction
  • liquid chromatography