Cis isomers of carotenoids play important roles in light harvesting and photoprotection in photosynthetic bacteria, such as the reaction center in purple bacteria and the photosynthetic apparatus in cyanobacteria. Carotenoids containing carbonyl groups are involved in efficient energy transfer to chlorophyll in light-harvesting complexes, and their intramolecular charge-transfer (ICT) excited states are known to be important for this process. Previous studies, using ultrafast laser spectroscopy, have focused on the central-cis isomer of carbonyl-containing carotenoids, revealing that the ICT excited state is stabilized in polar environments. However, the relationship between the cis isomer structure and the ICT excited state has remained unresolved. In this study, we performed steady-state absorption and femtosecond time-resolved absorption spectroscopy on nine geometric isomers (7-cis, 9-cis, 13-cis, 15-cis, 13'-cis, 9,13'-cis, 9,13-cis, 13,13'-cis, and all-trans) of β-apo-8'-carotenal, whose structures are well-defined, and discovered correlations between the decay rate constant of the S1 excited state and the S0-S1 energy gap, as well as between the position of the cis-bend and the degree of stabilization of the ICT excited state. Our results demonstrate that the ICT excited state is stabilized in polar environments in cis isomers of carbonyl-containing carotenoids and suggest that the position of the cis-bend plays an important role in the stabilization of the excited state.
Keywords: ICT excited state; carotenoid; cis isomer; energy-gap law; photoisomerization; ultrafast spectroscopy.