3.8 Article

Induction effects on the absorption maxima of photoreceptor proteins

Journal

BIOPHYSICS AND PHYSICOBIOLOGY
Volume 20, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BIOPHYSICAL SOC JAPAN
DOI: 10.2142/biophysico.bppb-v20.s007

Keywords

photoreceptor proteins; QM/MM; embedding scheme; rhodopsin; cyanbacteriochrome

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Multiscale simulations have been used to calculate excitation energies in complex systems, with the chromophore treated quantum mechanically and the protein and environment described classically. Electrostatic embedding and polarizable embedding were compared for their effect on excitation energies in two different proteins. Results showed that polarizable embedding produces absorption maxima closer to experimental values and recovers a significant portion of the quantum mechanical improvement in excitation energies. A detailed analysis revealed that aromatic residues have the largest influence on excitation energy.
Multiscale simulations have been established as a powerful tool to calculate and predict excitation energies in complex systems such as photoreceptor proteins. In these simulations the chromophore is typically treated using quantum mechanical (QM) methods while the protein and surrounding environment are described by a classical molecular mechanics (MM) force field. The electrostatic interactions between these regions are often treated using electrostatic embedding where the point charges in the MM region polarize the QM region. A more sophisticated treatment accounts also for the polarization of the MM region. In this work, the effect of such a polarizable embedding on excitation energies was benchmarked and compared to electrostatic embedding. This was done for two different proteins, the lipid membrane-embedded jumping spider rhodopsin and the soluble cyanobacteriochrome Slr1393g3. It was found that the polarizable embedding scheme produces absorption maxima closer to experimental values. The polarizable embedding scheme was also benchmarked against expanded QM regions and found to be in qualitative agreement. Treating individual residues as polarizable recovered between 50% and 71% of the QM improvement in the excitation energies, depending on the system. A detailed analysis of each amino acid residue in the chromophore binding pocket revealed that aromatic residues result in the largest change in excitation energy compared to the electrostatic embedding. Furthermore, the computational efficiency of polarizable embedding allowed it to go beyond the binding pocket and describe a larger portion of the environment, further improving the results.

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