Molecular Mechanism of Spectral Tuning by Chloride Binding in Monkey Green Sensitive Visual Pigment.
Kazuhiro J FujimotoFumika MinowaMichiya NishinaShunta NakamuraSayaka OhashiKota KatayamaHideki KandoriTakeshi YanaiPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2023)
The visual pigments of the cones perceive red, green, and blue colors. The monkey green (MG) pigment possesses a unique Cl - binding site; however, its relationship to the spectral tuning in green pigments remains elusive. Recently, FTIR spectroscopy revealed the characteristic structural modifications of the retinal binding site by Cl - binding. Herein, we report the computational structural modeling of MG pigments and quantum-chemical simulation to investigate its spectral redshift and physicochemical relevance when Cl - is present. Our protein structures reflect the previously suggested structural changes. AlphaFold2 failed to predict these structural changes. Excited-state calculations successfully reproduced the experimental red-shifted absorption energies, corroborating our protein structures. Electrostatic energy decomposition revealed that the redshift results from the His197 protonation state and conformations of Glu129, Ser202, and Ala308; however, Cl - itself contributes to the blueshift. Site-directed mutagenesis supported our analysis. These modeled structures may provide a valuable foundation for studying cone pigments.