Identical Hydrogen-Bonding Strength of the Retinal
Schiff Base between Primate Green- and Red-Sensitive Pigments: New
Insight into Color Tuning Mechanism
Three aspects are generally considered
in the color-tuning mechanism
of vision: (I) chromophore distortion, (II) electrostatic interaction
between the protonated Schiff base and counterion, and (III) polarity
around the β-ionone ring and polyene chain. Primate green- and
red-sensitive proteins are highly homologous but display maximum absorption
at 530 and 560 nm, respectively. In the present study, the N–D
stretching frequency of monkey green-sensitive protein was identified
by using C15-D retinal. The hydrogen-bonding strength between
monkey green and red was identical. Together with a previous resonance
Raman study, we conclude that the 30 nm difference originates exclusively
from the polarity around the β-ionone ring and polyene chain.
Three amino acids (Ala, Phe, and Ala in monkey green and Ser, Tyr,
and Thr in monkey red, respectively) may be responsible for color
tuning together with protein-bound water molecules around the β-ionone
ring and polyene chain but not at the Schiff base region.