4.6 Article

Computational investigation of substituent effects on the fluorescence wavelengths of oxyluciferin analogs

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.jphotochem.2022.114018

Keywords

Bioluminescence; Fluorescence; Substitution; Time-dependent density functional theory; Energy decomposition analysis

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health, USA [R01GM135392]
  2. Office of the Vice President of Research [5-100]
  3. College of Art and Sciences at the Univer-sity of Oklahoma (OU)
  4. Russian Ministry of Science and Education

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This study used ALMO analysis to investigate the effects of substituents on the fluorescence wavelength of oxyluciferin analogs. The results revealed that the involvement of electron-donating groups can raise the HOMO energy level of the analogs, leading to a red-shift in the fluorescence wavelength. On the other hand, the involvement of electron-withdrawing groups can lower the LUMO energy level of the analogs, also resulting in a red-shift in the fluorescence wavelength.
Oxyluciferin, which is the light emitter for firefly bioluminescence, has been subjected to extensive chemical modifications to tune its emission wavelength and quantum yield. However, the exact mechanisms for various electron-donating and withdrawing groups to perturb the photophysical properties of oxyluciferin analogs are still not fully understood. To elucidate the substituent effects on the fluorescence wavelength of oxyluciferin analogs, we applied the absolutely localized molecular orbitals (ALMO)-based frontier orbital analysis to assess various types of interactions (i.e. permanent electrostatics/exchange repulsion, polarization, occupied-occupied orbital mixing, virtual-virtual orbital mixing, and charge-transfer) between the oxyluciferin and substituent orbitals. We suggested two distinct mechanisms that can lead to red-shifted oxyluciferin emission wavelength, a design objective that can help increase the tissue penetration of bioluminescence emission. Within the first mechanism, an electron-donating group (such as an amino or dimethylamino group) can contribute its highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) to an out-of-phase combination with oxyluciferin's HOMO, thus raising the HOMO energy of the substituted analog and narrowing its HOMO-LUMO gap. Alternatively, an electron withdrawing group (such as a nitro or cyano group) can participate in an in-phase virtual-virtual orbital mixing of fragment LUMOs, thus lowering the LUMO energy of the substituted analog. Such an ALMO-based frontier orbital analysis is expected to lead to intuitive principles for designing analogs of not only the oxyluciferin molecule, but also many other functional dyes.

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