화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.127, No.11, 3952-3963, 2005
Solvent effects on the vibrational activity and photodynamics of the green fluorescent protein chromophore: A quantum-chemical study
Vibrational activities in the Raman and resonance Raman spectra of the cationic, neutral, and anionic forms of 4'-hydroxybenzylidene-2,3-dimethyl-imidazolinone, a model compound for the green fluorescent protein chromophore, have been obtained from quantum-chemical calculations in vacuo and with the inclusion of solvent effects through the polarizable continuum model. It is found that inclusion of solvent effects improves slightly the agreement with experimental data for the cationic and neutral forms, whose spectra are qualitatively well-described already by calculations in vacuo. In contrast, inclusion of solvent effects is crucial to reproduce correctly the activities of the anionic form. The structural effects of solvation are remarkable both in the ground and in the lowest excited state of the anionic chromophore and influence not only the vibrational activity but also the photodynamics of the lowest excited state. CASPT2//CASSCF photoreaction paths, computed by including solvent effects at the CASSCF level, indicate a facile torsional deformation around both exocyclic CC bonds. Rotation around the exocyclic CC double bond is shown to lead to a favored radiationless decay channel, more efficient than that in gas phase, and which explains the ultrafast fluorescence decay and ground-state recovery observed in solution. Conversely, rotation around the exocyclic CC single bond accounts for the bottleneck observed in the ground-state recovery cycle. It is also speculated that the ultrafast radiationless decay channel would be hampered in protein for unfavorable electrostatic interactions and steric reasons.