The primary event that initiates vision is the photoinduced isomerization of retinal in the visual pigment Rhodopsin. Here we use a scaled quantum-mechanics/molecular-mechanics potential that reproduces the isomerization path determined with multiconfigurational perturbation theory to follow the excited state evolution of bovine Rhodopsin. The analysis of a 140 femtosecond trajectory provides an unprecedented description of the electronic and geometrical changes that prepare the system for decay to the ground state. The data uncover a complex change of the retinal backbone that, at ca. 60 femtosecond delay, is converted into a space saving “asynchronous bicycle-pedal or crankshaft” motion leading to a conical intersection on a 110 femtosecond time scale. It is shown that the twisted structure achieved at decay features a momentum that provides a natural route towards the photorhodopsin structure recently resolved using femtosecond-stimulated Raman spectroscopy. The asynchronous bicycle-pedal motion is then quenched during the photorhodopsin to bathorhodopsin relaxation yielding a single isomerized double bond. While promptly excited during the initial excited state relaxation, hydrogen-out-of-plane wagging does not seem to play a critical role in the decay

Tracking the Excited State Time Evolution of the Visual Pigment with Multiconfigurational Quantum Chemistry

F Santoro;
2007

Abstract

The primary event that initiates vision is the photoinduced isomerization of retinal in the visual pigment Rhodopsin. Here we use a scaled quantum-mechanics/molecular-mechanics potential that reproduces the isomerization path determined with multiconfigurational perturbation theory to follow the excited state evolution of bovine Rhodopsin. The analysis of a 140 femtosecond trajectory provides an unprecedented description of the electronic and geometrical changes that prepare the system for decay to the ground state. The data uncover a complex change of the retinal backbone that, at ca. 60 femtosecond delay, is converted into a space saving “asynchronous bicycle-pedal or crankshaft” motion leading to a conical intersection on a 110 femtosecond time scale. It is shown that the twisted structure achieved at decay features a momentum that provides a natural route towards the photorhodopsin structure recently resolved using femtosecond-stimulated Raman spectroscopy. The asynchronous bicycle-pedal motion is then quenched during the photorhodopsin to bathorhodopsin relaxation yielding a single isomerized double bond. While promptly excited during the initial excited state relaxation, hydrogen-out-of-plane wagging does not seem to play a critical role in the decay
2007
Istituto di Chimica dei Composti OrganoMetallici - ICCOM -
Istituto per i Processi Chimico-Fisici - IPCF
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/42699
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