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Photoreaction Dynamics of Red-Shifting Retinal Analogues Reconstituted in Proteorhodopsin.

Yusaku HontaniSrividya GanapathySean FrehanMiroslav KlozWillem J de GripJohn T M Kennis
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry. B (2019)
Microbial rhodopsins constitute a key protein family in optobiotechnological applications such as optogenetics and voltage imaging. Spectral tuning of rhodopsins into the deep-red and near-infrared spectral regions is of great demand in such applications because more bathochromic light into the near-infrared range penetrates deeper in living tissue. Recently, retinal analogues have been successfully used in ion transporting and fluorescent rhodopsins to achieve red-shifted absorption, activity, and emission properties. Understanding their photochemical mechanism is essential for further design of appropriate retinal analogues but is yet only poorly understood for most retinal analogue pigments. Here, we report the photoreaction dynamics of red-shifted analogue pigments of the proton pump proteorhodopsin (PR) containing A2 (all- trans-3,4-dehydroretinal), MOA2 (all- trans-3-methoxy-3,4-dehydroretinal), or DMAR (all- trans-3-dimethylamino-16-nor-1,2,3,4-didehydroretinal), utilizing femto- to submillisecond transient absorption spectroscopy. We found that the A2 analogue photoisomerizes in 1.4, 3.0, and/or 13 ps upon 510 nm light illumination, which is comparable to the native retinal (A1) in PR. On the other hand, the deprotonation of the A2 pigment Schiff base was observed with a dominant time constant of 67 μs, which is significantly slower than the A1 pigment. In the MOA2 pigment, no isomerization or photoproduct formation was detected upon 520 nm excitation, implying that all the excited molecules returned to the initial ground state in 2.0 and 4.2 ps. The DMAR pigment showed very slow excited state dynamics similar to the previously studied MMAR pigment, but only very little photoproduct was formed. The low efficiency of the photoproduct formation likely is the reason why DMAR analogue pigments of PR showed very weak proton pumping activity.
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