Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.123, No.41, 10024-10029, 2001
Steric barrier to bathorhodopsin decay in 5-demethyl and mesityl analogues of rhodopsin
Absorbance difference spectra were recorded from 20 ns to 1 mus after 20 T photoexcitation of artificial visual pigments derived either from 5-demethylretinal or from a mesityl analogue of retinal. Both pigments produced an early photointermediate similar to bovine bathorhodopsin (Batho). In both cases the Batho analogue decayed to a lumirhodopsin (Lumi) analogue via a blue-shifted intermediate, BSI, which formed an equilibrium with the Batho analogue. The stability of 5-demethyl Batho, even though the C8-hydrogen of the polyene chain cannot interact with a ring C5-methyl group to provide a barrier to Batho decay, raises the possibility that the 5-demethylretinal ring binds oppositely from normal to form a pigment with a 6-s-trans ring-chain conformation. If 6-s-trans binding occurred, the ring Cl-methyls could replace the C5-methyl in its interaction with the chain C8-hydrogen to preserve the steric barrier to Batho decay, consistent with the kinetic results. The possibility of 6-s-trans binding for 5-demethylretinal also could account for the unexpected blue shift of 5-demethyl visual pigments and could explain why 5-demethyl artificial pigments regenerate so slowly. Although the mesityl analogue BSI's absorption spectrum was blue-shifted relative to its pigment spectrum, the blue shift was much smaller than for rhodopsin's or 5-demethylisorhodopsin's BSI. This suggests that increased C6-C7 torsion may be responsible for some of BSI's blue shift, which is not the case for mesityl analogue BSI either because of reduced spectral sensitivity to C6-C7 torsion or because the symmetry of the mesityl retinal analogue precludes having 6-s-cis and 6-s-trans conformers. The similarity of the mesityl analogue BSI and native BSI pi (max) values supports the idea that BSI has a 6-s angle near 90 degrees, a condition which could disconnect the chain (and BSI's spectrum) from the double bond specifics of the ring.