31 research outputs found
Designing Conical Intersections for Light-Driven Single Molecule Rotary Motors: From Precessional to Axial Motion
In
the past, the design of light-driven single molecule rotary
motors has been mainly guided by the modification of their ground-state
conformational properties. Further progress in this field is thus
likely to be achieved through a detailed understanding of light-induced
dynamics of the system and the ways of modulating it by introducing
chemical modifications. In the present theoretical work, the analysis
of model organic chromophores and synthesized rotary motors is used
for rationalizing the effect of electron-withdrawing heteroatoms (such
as a cationic nitrogen) on the topography and branching plane of mechanistically
relevant conical intersections. Such an analysis reveals how the character
of rotary motion could be changed from a precessional motion to an
axial rotational motion. These concepts are then used to design and
build quantum chemical models of three distinct types of Schiff base
rotary motors. One of these models, featuring the synthetically viable
indanylidenepyrroline framework, has conical intersection structures
consistent with an axial rotation not hindered by ground-state conformational
barriers. It is expected that this type of motor should be capable
of funneling the photon energy into specific rotary modes, thus achieving
photoisomerization quantum efficiencies comparable to those seen in
visual pigments
Conical Intersection and Potential Energy Surface Features of a Model Retinal Chromophore: Comparison of EOM-CC and Multireference Methods
This work investigates the performance of equation-of-motion
coupled-cluster
(EOM-CC) methods for describing the changes in the potential energy
surfaces of the penta-2,4-dieniminium cation, a reduced model of the
retinal chromophore of visual pigments, due to dynamical electron
correlation effects. The ground-state wave function of this model
includes charge-transfer and diradical configurations whose weights
vary along different displacements and are rapidly changing at the
conical intersection between the ground and the first excited states,
making the shape of the potential energy surface sensitive to a balanced
description of nondynamical and dynamical correlation. Recently, variational
(MRCISD) and perturbative (MRPT2) approaches for including dynamical
correlation in CASSCF-based calculations were tested along three representative
ground state paths. Here, we use the same three paths to compare the
performance of single-reference EOM-CC methods against MRCISD and
MRCISD+Q. We find that the spin-flip variant of EOM-CCSD with perturbative
inclusion of triple excitations (dT or fT) produces potential energy
profiles of the two lowest electronic states in quantitative agreement
with MRCISD+Q (our highest-quality reference method). The nonparallelity
errors and differences in vertical energy differences of the two surfaces
along these scans are less than 1.4 kcal/mol (EOM-SF-CCSDÂ(dT) versus
MRCISD+Q). For comparison, the largest error of MRCISD versus MRCISD+Q
is 1.7 kcal/mol. Our results show that the EOM-CC methods provide
an alternative to multireference approaches and may be used to study
photochemical systems like the one used in this work
Inverse versus Normal Dithienylethenes: Computational Investigation of the Photocyclization Reaction
The understanding of the intimate
electronic processes in photochromes
is essential to optimize the properties of light-controllable devices.
For one of the most studied classes of molecular switches, namely,
dithienylethenes, the relative efficiencies of the normal and inverse
structures remained puzzling. Indeed, despite a larger ratio of the
active antiparallel conformers for the latter, the quantum yields
of cyclization of inverse dithienylethenes do not exceed those of
its normal counterpart. In the present contribution, we provide the
first explanation of this experimental outcome using multireference
ab initio quantum chemistry. We demonstrate the existence of a fluorescent
intermediate on the S<sub>1</sub> state of the inverse system that
generates a photochemically unreactive conformation in the ground
state. This study paves the way toward a rational development of efficient
molecular photochromes presenting a photon-quantitative response
Combined Self-Consistent-Field and Spin-Flip TammâDancoff Density Functional Approach to Potential Energy Surfaces for Photochemistry
We present a new approach to calculating potential energy
surfaces
for photochemical reactions by combining self-consistent-field calculations
for single-reference ground and excited states with symmetry-corrected
spin-flip TammâDancoff approximation calculations for multireference
electronic states. The method is illustrated by an application with
the M05-2X exchange-correlation functional to <i>cis</i>â<i>trans</i> isomerization of the penta-2,4-dieniminium
cation, which is a model (with three conjugated double bonds) of the
protonated Schiff base of retinal. We find good agreement with multireference
configuration interaction-plus-quadruples (MRCISD+Q) wave function
calculations along three key paths in the strong-interaction region
of the ground and first excited singlet states
Impact of Electronic State Mixing on the Photoisomerization Time Scale of the Retinal Chromophore
Spectral data show
that the photoisomerization of retinal protonated
Schiff base (rPSB) chromophores occurs on a 100 fs time scale or less
in vertebrate rhodopsins, it is several times slower in microbial
rhodopsins and it is between one and 2 orders of magnitude slower
in solution. These time scale variations have been attributed to specific
modifications of the topography of the first excited state potential
energy surface of the chromophore. However, it is presently not clear
which specific environment effects (e.g., electrostatic, electronic,
or steric) are responsible for changing the surface topography. Here,
we use QM/MM models and excited state trajectory computations to provide
evidence for an increase in electronic mixing between the first and
the second excited state of the chromophore when going from vertebrate
rhodopsin to the solution environments. Ultimately, we argue that
a correlation between the lifetime of the first excited state and
electronic mixing between such state and its higher neighbor, may
have been exploited to evolve rhodopsins toward faster isomerization
and, possibly, light-sensitivity
Systematic Excited State Studies of Reversibly Switchable Fluorescent Proteins
The reversibly switchable fluorescent
proteins Dronpa, rsFastLime,
rsKame, Padron, and bsDronpa feature the same chromophore but display
a 40 nm variation in absorption maxima and an only 18 nm variation
in emission maxima. In the present contribution, we employ QM/MM models
to investigate the mechanism of such remarkably different spectral
variations, which are caused by just a few amino acid replacements.
We show that the models, which are based on CASPT2//CASSCF level of
QM theory, reproduce the observed trends in absorption maxima, with
only a 3.5 kcal/mol blue-shift, and in emission maxima, with an even
smaller 1.5 kcal/mol blue-shift with respect to the observed quantities.
In order to explain the variations across the series, we look at the
chromophoreâs electronic structure change during absorption
and emission. Such analysis indicates that a change in charge-transfer
character, which is more pronounced during absorption, triggers a
cascade of hydrogen-bond-network rearrangements, suggesting preparation
to an isomerization event. We also show how the contribution of Arg
89 and Arg 64 residues to the chromophore conformational changes correlate
with the spectral variations in absorption and emission. Furthermore,
we describe how the conical intersection stability is related to the
proteinâs photophysical properties. While for the Dronpa, rsFastLime,
and rsKame triad, the stability correlates with the photoswitching
speed, this does not happen for bsDronpa and Padron, suggesting a
less obvious photoisomerization mechanism
Relationship between Excited State Lifetime and Isomerization Quantum Yield in Animal Rhodopsins: Beyond the One-Dimensional LandauâZener Model
We show that the speed of the chromophore
photoisomerization of
animal rhodopsins is not a relevant control knob for their light sensitivity.
This result is at odds with the momentum-driven tunnelling rationale
(i.e., assuming a one-dimensional LandauâZener model for the
decay: Zener, C. Non-Adiabatic Crossing of Energy Levels. <i>Proc. R. Soc. London, Ser. A</i> <b>1932,</b> 137 (833),
696â702) holding that a faster nuclear motion through the conical
intersection translates into a higher quantum yield and, thus, light
sensitivity. Instead, a model based on the phase-matching of specific
excited state vibrational modes should be considered. Using extensive
semiclassical hybrid quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics trajectory
computations to simulate the photoisomerization of three animal rhodopsin
models (visual rhodopsin, squid rhodopsin and human melanopsin), we
also demonstrate that phase-matching between three different modes
(the reactive carbon and hydrogen twisting coordinates and the bond
length alternation mode) is required to achieve high quantum yields.
In fact, such âphase-matchingâ mechanism explains the
computational results and provides a tool for the prediction of the
photoisomerization outcome in retinal proteins
Effects of the Protein Environment on the Spectral Properties of Tryptophan Radicals in <i>Pseudomonas aeruginosa</i> Azurin
Many
biological electron-transfer reactions involve short-lived
tryptophan radicals as key reactive intermediates. While these species
are difficult to investigate, the recent photogeneration of a long-lived
neutral tryptophan radical in two <i>Pseudomonas aeruginosa</i> azurin mutants (Az48W and ReAz108W) made it possible to characterize
the electronic, vibrational, and magnetic properties of such species
and their sensitivity to the molecular environment. Indeed, in Az48W
the radical is embedded in the hydrophobic core while, in ReAz108W
it is solvent-exposed. Here we use density functional theory and multiconfigurational
perturbation theory to construct quantum-mechanics/molecular-mechanics
models of Az48W<sup>â˘</sup> and ReAz108W<sup>â˘</sup> capable of reproducing specific features of their observed UVâvis,
resonance Raman, and electron paramagnetic resonance spectra. The
results show that the models can correctly replicate the spectral
changes imposed by the two contrasting hydrophobic and hydrophilic
environments. Most importantly, the same models can be employed to
disentangle the molecular-level interactions responsible for such
changes. It is found that the control of the hydrogen bonding between
the tryptophan radical and a single specific surface water molecule
in ReAz108W<sup>â˘</sup> represents an effective means of spectral
modulation. Similarly, a specific electrostatic interaction between
the radical moiety and a Val residue is found to control the Az48W<sup>â˘</sup> excitation energy. These modulations appear to be
mediated by the increase in nitrogen negative charge (and consequent
increase in hydrogen bonding) of the spectroscopic D<sub>2</sub> state
with respect to the D<sub>0</sub> state of the chromophore. Finally,
the same protein models are used to predict the relaxed Az48W<sup>â˘</sup> and ReAz108W<sup>â˘</sup> D<sub>2</sub> structures,
showing that the effect of the environment on the corresponding fluorescence
maxima must parallel that of D<sub>0</sub> absorption spectra
Assessment of Density Functional Theory for Describing the Correlation Effects on the Ground and Excited State Potential Energy Surfaces of a Retinal Chromophore Model
In
the quest for a cost-effective level of theory able to describe
a large portion of the ground and excited potential energy surfaces
of large chromophores, promising approaches are rooted in various
approximations to the exact density functional theory (DFT). In the
present work, we investigate how generalized KohnâSham DFT
(GKS-DFT), time-dependent DFT (TDDFT), and spin-restricted ensemble-DFT
(REKS) methods perform along three important paths characterizing
a model retinal chromophore (the penta-2,4-dieniminium cation) in
a region of near-degeneracy (close to a conical intersection) with
respect to reference high-level multiconfigurational wave function
methods. If GKS-DFT correctly describes the closed-shell charge transfer
state, only TDDFT and REKS approaches give access to the open-shell
diradical, one which sometimes corresponds to the electronic ground
state. It is demonstrated that the main drawback of the usual DFT-based
methods lies in the absence of interactions between the charge transfer
and the diradicaloid configurations. Hence, we test a new computational
scheme based on the State-averaged REKS (SA-REKS) approach, which
explicitly includes these interactions into account. The State-Interaction
SA-REKS (SI-SA-REKS) method significantly improves on the REKS and
the SA-REKS results for the target system. The similarities and differences
between DFT and wave function-based approaches are analyzed according
to (1) the active space dimensions of the wave function-based methods
and (2) the relative electronegativities of the allyl and protonated
Schiff base moieties
Origin of Fluorescence in 11-<i>cis</i> Locked Bovine Rhodopsin
The excited state lifetime of bovine rhodopsin (Rh) increases
from
ca. 100 fs to 85 ps when the C11îťC12 bond of its chromophore
is locked by a cyclopentene moiety (Rh5). To explain such an increase,
we employed <i>ab initio</i> multiconfigurational quantum
chemistry to construct computer models of Rh and Rh5 and to investigate
the shape of their excited state potential energy surfaces in a comparative
way. Our results show that the observed Rh5 fluorescence (Îť<sub>max</sub><sup>f</sup> = 620 nm) is due to a previously unreported
locally excited intermediate whose lifetime is controlled by a small
energy barrier. The analysis of the properties and decay path of such
an intermediate provides useful information for engineering rhodopsin
variants with augmented fluorescence efficiencies