The vibrational dynamics of the retinal chromophore all-trans-to-13-cis photoisomerization in bacteriorhodopsin has been studied with mid-infrared absorption spectroscopy at high time resolution (about 200 femtoseconds). After photoexcitation of light-adapted bacteriorhodopsin, the transient infrared absorption was probed in a broad spectral region, including vibrations with dominant C-C, C=C, and C=NH stretching mode amplitude. All photoproduct modes, especially those around 1190 reciprocal-centimeters that are indicative for a 13-cis configuration of the chromophore, rise with a time constant of approximately 0.5 picosecond. The results presented give direct vibrational-spectroscopic evidence for the isomerization taking place within 0.5 picosecond, as has been suggested by previous optical femtosecond time-resolved experiments but questioned recently by picosecond time-resolved vibrational spectroscopy experiments.
Femtosecond time-resolved transient absorption spectroscopy was employed to characterize for the first time the primary photoisomerization dynamics of a bacterial phytochrome system in the two thermally stable states of the photocycle. The 85-kDa phytochrome Cph1 from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803 expressed in Escherichia coli was reconstituted with phycocyanobilin (Cph1-PCB) and phycoerythrobilin (Cph1-PEB). The red-light-absorbing form Pr of Cph1-PCB shows an approximately 150 fs relaxation in the S(1) state after photoexcitation at 650 nm. The subsequent Z-E isomerization between rings C and D of the linear tetrapyrrole-chromophore is best described by a distribution of rate constants with the first moment at (16 ps)(-1). Excitation at 615 nm leads to a slightly broadened distribution. The reverse E-Z isomerization, starting from the far-red-absorbing form Pfr, is characterized by two shorter time constants of 0.54 and 3.2 ps. In the case of Cph1-PEB, double-bond isomerization does not take place, and the excited-state lifetime extends into the nanosecond regime. Besides a stimulated emission rise time between 40 and 150 fs, no fast relaxation processes are observed. This suggests that the chromophore-protein interaction along rings A, B, and C does not contribute much to the picosecond dynamics observed in Cph1-PCB but rather the region around ring D near the isomerizing C(15) [double bond] C(16) double bond. The primary reaction dynamics of Cph1-PCB at ambient temperature is found to exhibit very similar features as those described for plant type A phytochrome, i.e., a relatively slow Pr, and a fast Pfr, photoreaction. This suggests that the initial reactions were established already before evolution of plant phytochromes began.
Femtosecond time-resolved infrared spectroscopy was used to study the vibrational response of riboflavin in DMSO to photoexcitation at 387 nm. Vibrational cooling in the excited electronic state is observed and characterized by a time constant of 4.0 +/- 0.1 ps. Its characteristic pattern of negative and positive IR difference signals allows the identification and determination of excited-state vibrational frequencies of riboflavin in the spectral region between 1100 and 1740 cm (-1). Density functional theory (B3LYP), Hartree-Fock (HF) and configuration interaction singles (CIS) methods were employed to calculate the vibrational spectra of the electronic ground state and the first singlet excited pipi* state as well as respective electronic energies, structural parameters, electronic dipole moments and intrinsic force constants. The harmonic frequencies of the S 1 excited state calculated by the CIS method are in satisfactory agreement with the observed band positions. There is a clear correspondence between computed ground- and excited-state vibrations. Major changes upon photoexcitation include the loss of the double bond between the C4a and N5 atoms, reflected in a downshift of related vibrations in the spectral region from 1450 to 1720 cm (-1). Furthermore, the vibrational analysis reveals intra- and intermolecular hydrogen bonding of the riboflavin chromophore.
The photoinduced primary reaction of the biliverdin binding phytochrome Agp1 (Agp1-BV) from Agrobacterium tumefaciens was investigated by sub-picosecond time-resolved Vis pump-IR probe spectroscopy. Three time constants of tau(1)=0.7+/-0.05 ps, tau(2)=3.3+/-0.2 ps and tau(3)=33.3+/-1.5 ps could be isolated from the dynamics of structurally specific marker bands of the BV chromophore. These results together with those of accompanying sub-picosecond Vis pump-Vis probe spectroscopy allow the extension of the reaction scheme for the primary process by a vibrationally excited electronic ground state. The isomerization at the C15=C16 bond occurs within the lifetime of the excited electronic state. A quantum yield of 0.094 for the primary reaction is determined, suggesting that the quantum yield of formation of the P(fr) far-red-absorbing form is already established in the primary photoreaction of the P(r) (red-absorbing) form.
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