bathorhodopsin
Bathorhodopsin is an ultra-short-lived photoproduct formed in vertebrate visual pigments such as rhodopsin and in related photoreceptors when light is absorbed. It arises immediately after photon absorption as the 11-cis retinal chromophore bound to the opsin isomerizes to all-trans retinal. In this intermediate, the chromophore adopts a different conformation and sits in a modified protein environment, giving bathorhodopsin a distinct absorption properties compared with the dark-state pigment.
The formation of bathorhodopsin occurs on very fast timescales, typically ranging from hundreds of femtoseconds to
Physically, bathorhodopsin represents a crucial step in the photoisomerization process that converts light energy into a