Abstract
Photophysical and photochemical properties of the green fluorescent protein (GFP) chromophore and derivatives underlie their bioimaging applications. To date, ultrafast spectroscopic tools represent the key for unraveling fluorescence mechanisms toward rational design of this powerful biomimetic framework. To correlate the excited-state intramolecular proton transfer (ESIPT) with chromophore emission properties, we implement experimental and computational tool sets to elucidate real-time electronic and structural dynamics of two archetypal ortho-GFP chromophores (o-HBDI and o-LHBDI) possessing an intramolecular hydrogen bond to undergo efficient ESIPT, only differing in a bridge-bond constraint. Using excited-state femtosecond stimulated Raman spectroscopy (FSRS), a low-frequency phenolic (P)-ring-deformation mode (∼562 cm-1) was uncovered to accompany ESIPT. The tautomerized chromophore undergoes either rapid P-ring isomerization to reach the ground state with essentially no fluorescence for o-HBDI or enhanced (up to an impressive 180-fold in acetonitrile) and solvent-polarity-dependent fluorescence by P-ring locking in o-LHBDI. The significant dependence of the fluorescence enhancement ratio on solvent viscosity confirms P-ring isomerization as the dominant nonradiative decay pathway for o-HBDI. This work provides crucial insights into the dynamic solute-solvent electrostatic and steric interactions, enabling the application-specific improvement of ESIPT-capable molecules as versatile fluorescence-based sensors and imaging agents from large Stokes shift emission to brighter probes in physiological environments.
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