Abstract
Real-time investigations of the rearrangement of bonds during chemical transformations require femtosecond temporal resolution, so that the atomic vibrations within the reacting molecules can be observed. Following the development of lasers capable of emitting ultrashort laser flashes on this timescale, chemical reactions involving relatively simple molecules have been monitored in detail, revealing the transient existence of intermediate species as reactants are transformed into products1,2,3. Here we report the direct observation of nuclear motion in a complex biological system, the retinal chromophore of bacteriorhodopsin (bR568)4, as it undergoes the trans–cis photoisomerization that is fundamental to the vision process. By using visible-light pulses of less than 5 femtosecond in duration5,6, we are able to monitor changes in the vibrational spectra of the transition state and thus show that despite photoexcitation of the anti-bonding molecular orbital involved, isomerization does not occur instantly, but involves transient formation of a so-called ‘tumbling state’. Our observations thus agree with growing experimental7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14 and ab initio evidence15,16 for a three-state photoisomerization model8,9,10,17 and firmly discount the initially suggested two-state model18,19,20 for this process.
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Acknowledgements
We thank J. Watson and M. Murao for careful reading of the manuscript. This work was partially supported by the Research for the Future program run by the Japan Society for Promotion of Science (T.K.), the Special Coordination Funds (“Molecular Sensors for Aero-Thermodynamic Research”; H.O.) and Scientific Research (H.O.) of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology.
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Kobayashi, T., Saito, T. & Ohtani, H. Real-time spectroscopy of transition states in bacteriorhodopsin during retinal isomerization. Nature 414, 531–534 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1038/35107042
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/35107042
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