Abstract

Proteorhodopsin (PR) is a proton-pumping rhodopsin, and it is known to exhibit a multi-phasic decay of the excited-state population in the primary process. So far, this complex excited-state decay has been attributed to the branching of the relaxation pathway on the excited-state potential energy surface. However, a recent ultrafast spectroscopic study on a sodium-pumping rhodopsin suggested that such a complex decay may originate from the heterogeneity in the ground state due to the acid-base equilibrium of the counterion of the protonated retinal Schiff base (PRSB). In this study, we studied the excited-state dynamics of PR at pH 11 and 4, in which the counterion of the PRSB, Asp97, is completely deprotonated and protonated, respectively. The obtained time-resolved absorption data revealed that the excited-state lifetime is decisively governed by the protonation state of Asp97, and the photoisomerization of the PRSB chromophore proceeds faster and more efficiently when Asp97 is deprotonated. This conclusion was further supported by high similarity of the excited-state dynamics between PR at pH 4 and the D97N mutant in which Asp97 is replaced with neutral Asn. The results of this study suggest that the protonation state of the PRSB counterion plays a decisive role in determining the excited-state dynamics and the photoisomerization reactivity of rhodopsins in general, by making a significant influence on the exited-state potential energy surface of the PRSB chromophore.

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