Bacteriorhodopsin (bR) is a light-harvesting membrane protein that represents a promising sensitizer of TiO2 for photovoltaic and photoelectrochemical devices. However, despite numerous experimental studies, the molecular-level understanding of the bR/TiO2 hybrid system is still unsatisfactory. In this contribution, we report the construction and analysis of an atomistic model of such a system. To do so, both steered molecular dynamics-molecular dynamics and quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics computations are applied to four different bR orientations on the anatase TiO2 surface. The resulting bR/TiO2 models are then used to compute the light absorption maxima changes relative to those of bR. We show that all four models reproduce the experimentally observed blue-shift value induced by bR binding on TiO2 and could be used to study the binding and binding-induced protein modifications. We conclude that the constructed models could provide a basis for future studies aiming to simulate the complex long-range electron transfer mechanism in bR/TiO2-based solar energy conversion devices as well as in engineering bR to achieve enhanced efficiencies.

In Silico Study of a Bacteriorhodopsin/TiO2 Hybrid System at the Molecular Level

Coppola, Carmen;Ienco, Andrea;Parisi, Maria Laura;Sinicropi, Adalgisa
2025

Abstract

Bacteriorhodopsin (bR) is a light-harvesting membrane protein that represents a promising sensitizer of TiO2 for photovoltaic and photoelectrochemical devices. However, despite numerous experimental studies, the molecular-level understanding of the bR/TiO2 hybrid system is still unsatisfactory. In this contribution, we report the construction and analysis of an atomistic model of such a system. To do so, both steered molecular dynamics-molecular dynamics and quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics computations are applied to four different bR orientations on the anatase TiO2 surface. The resulting bR/TiO2 models are then used to compute the light absorption maxima changes relative to those of bR. We show that all four models reproduce the experimentally observed blue-shift value induced by bR binding on TiO2 and could be used to study the binding and binding-induced protein modifications. We conclude that the constructed models could provide a basis for future studies aiming to simulate the complex long-range electron transfer mechanism in bR/TiO2-based solar energy conversion devices as well as in engineering bR to achieve enhanced efficiencies.
2025
Istituto di Chimica dei Composti OrganoMetallici - ICCOM -
photovoltaic and photoelectrochemical devices, sensitizers, molecular dynamics-molecular dynamics and quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics computations
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/540242
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