Computational Screening of one- and two-photon spectrally tuned channelrhodopsin mutants

Kristian Sneskov,a Jógvan Magnus Haugaard Olsen,*b Tobias Schwabe,c Christof Hättig,d Ove Christiansena and Jacob Kongstedb
a The Lunkbeck Foundation Center for Theoretical Chemistry and Center for Oxygen Microscopy and Imaging, Department of Chemistry, University of Aarhus, Langelandsgade 140, 8000 Aarhus C, Denmark
d Department of Physics, Chemistry and Pharmacy, University of Southern Denmark, Campusvej 55, 5230 Odense M, Denmark, E-mail: jmo@sdu.dk, Fax: +45 66158780, Tel: +45 65502570
d Center for Bioinformatics and Institute of Physical Chemistry, University of Hamburg, Bundesstraße 43, 20146 Hamburg, Germany
d Lehrstuhl für Theoretische Chemie, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, D-44780 Bochum, Germany

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phy., 15, 7567-7576 (2013).
Received 4th December 2012, Accepted 26th March 2013

Optogenetics is by now a well-established field within neuroscience where neuro-response is controlled at the molecular level using the photochemical properties of channelrhodopsin (ChR). In this study the recently published X-ray structure of retinal inside the ChR binding pocket serves as the basis for conducting high-level polarizable embedding quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) mutation studies with the aim of providing insight into the tuning mechanisms of this remarkable protein. The levels of theory applied are the recently developed PERI-CC2 and PE-DFT approaches. Their computational efficiency makes it possible to rapidly carry out a large number of spectral calculations. This is exploited to construct in silico mutated ChR variants which are characterized in terms of the location of the relevant excitation energy and the magnitude of the two-photon absorption cross section. In turn, this allows us to pinpoint the amino acids that have the largest electrostatic effect on the studied excited state properties. We show that a single/double site mutation strategy in ChR does not perturb the electronic properties of retinal to a degree that satisfies the experimental demand for a significant red-shift. With respect to non-linear absorption we conjecture that the recently synthesized ChETA variant possesses an even larger two-photon cross section than the C1C2 variant and it is thus an ideal candidate for further studies on the two-photon activation of ChR.


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