Abstract

Retinal is the photon absorbing chromophore of rhodopsin and other visual pigments, enabling the vertebrate vision process. The effects of the protein environment on the primary photoexcitation process of retinal were studied by time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) and the algebraic diagrammatic construction through second order (ADC(2)) combined with our recently introduced reduction of virtual space (RVS) approximation method. The calculations were performed on large full quantum chemical cluster models of the bluecone (BC) and rhodopsin (Rh) pigments with 165-171 atoms. Absorption wavelengths of 441 and 491 nm were obtained at the B3LYP level of theory for the respective models, which agree well with the experimental values of 414 and 498 nm. Electrostatic rather than structural strain effects were shown to dominate the spectral tuning properties of the surrounding protein. The Schiff base retinal and a neighboring Glu-113 residue were found to have comparable proton affinities in the ground state of the BC model, whereas in the excited state, the proton affinity of the Schiff base is 5.9 kcal/mol (0.26 eV) higher. For the ground and excited states of the Rh model, the proton affinity of the Schiff base is 3.2 kcal/mol (0.14 eV) and 7.9 kcal/mol (0.34 eV) higher than for Glu-113, respectively. The protein environment was found to enhance the bond length alternation (BLA) of the retinyl chain and blueshift the first absorption maxima of the protonated Schiff base in the BC and Rh models relative to the chromophore in the gas phase. The protein environment was also found to decrease the intensity of the second excited state, thus improving the quantum yield of the photoexcitation process. Relaxation of the BC model on the excited state potential energy surface led to a vanishing BLA around the isomerization center of the conjugated retinyl chain, rendering the retinal accessible for cis-trans isomerization. The energy of the relaxed excited state was found to be 30 kcal/mol (1.3 eV) above the minimum ground state energy, and might be related to the transition state of the thermal activation process.

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