TY - JOUR
T1 - Shedding new light on retinal protein photochemistry
AU - Wand, Amir
AU - Gdor, Itay
AU - Zhu, Jingyi
AU - Sheves, Mordechai
AU - Ruhman, Sanford
PY - 2013/4
Y1 - 2013/4
N2 - The ultrafast spectroscopic investigation of novel retinal proteins challenges existing notions concerning the course of primary events in these natural photoreceptors. We review two illustrations here. The first demonstrates that changes in the initial retinal configuration can alter the duration of photochemistry by nearly an order of magnitude in Anabaena sensory rhodopsin, making it as rapid as the ballistic photoisomerization in visual pigments. This prompted a reinvestigation of the much studied bacteriorhodopsin, leading to a similar trend as well, contrary to earlier reports. The second involves the study of xanthorhodopsin, an archaeal proton pump that includes an attached light-harvesting carotenoid. Pump-probe experiments demonstrate the efficient transfer of energy from carotenoid to retinal, providing a first glimpse at a cooperative multichromophore function, which is probably characteristic of many other proteins as well. Finally, we discuss measures required to advance our knowledge from kinetics to mode-specific dynamics concerning this expanding family of biological photoreceptors.
AB - The ultrafast spectroscopic investigation of novel retinal proteins challenges existing notions concerning the course of primary events in these natural photoreceptors. We review two illustrations here. The first demonstrates that changes in the initial retinal configuration can alter the duration of photochemistry by nearly an order of magnitude in Anabaena sensory rhodopsin, making it as rapid as the ballistic photoisomerization in visual pigments. This prompted a reinvestigation of the much studied bacteriorhodopsin, leading to a similar trend as well, contrary to earlier reports. The second involves the study of xanthorhodopsin, an archaeal proton pump that includes an attached light-harvesting carotenoid. Pump-probe experiments demonstrate the efficient transfer of energy from carotenoid to retinal, providing a first glimpse at a cooperative multichromophore function, which is probably characteristic of many other proteins as well. Finally, we discuss measures required to advance our knowledge from kinetics to mode-specific dynamics concerning this expanding family of biological photoreceptors.
KW - Anabaena sensory rhodopsin
KW - Bacteriorhodopsin
KW - Light-harvesting carotenoids
KW - Ultrafast spectroscopy
KW - Xanthorhodopsin
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84875992956&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1146/annurev-physchem-040412-110148
DO - 10.1146/annurev-physchem-040412-110148
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C2 - 23331307
AN - SCOPUS:84875992956
SN - 0066-426X
VL - 64
SP - 437
EP - 458
JO - Annual Review of Physical Chemistry
JF - Annual Review of Physical Chemistry
ER -