Abstract

We evaluate stability of cesium (Cs) and other alkali-metal cation complexes of lichen metabolites in both gas and aqueous phases to discuss why lichens can retain radioactive Cs in the thalli over several years. We focus on oxalic acid, (+)-usnic acid, atranorin, lecanoric acid, and protocetraric acid, which are common metabolite substances in various lichens including, e.g., Flavoparmelia caperata and Parmotrema tinctorum retaining Cs in Fukushima, Japan. By performing quantum chemical calculations, their gas-phase complexation energies and aqueous-solution complexation free energies with alkali-metal cations are computed for their neutral and deprotonated cases. Consequently, all the molecules are found to energetically favor cation complexations and the preference order is Li^+>Na^+>K^+>Rb^+>Cs^+ for all conditions, indicating no specific Cs selectivity but strong binding with all alkali cations. Comparing complexation stabilities among these metabolites, lecanoric and protocetraric acids seen in medullary layer are found to keep higher affinity in their neutral case, while (+)-usnic acid and atranorin in upper cortex exhibit rather strong affinity only in deprotonated cases through forming stable six atoms’ ring containing alkali cation chelated by two oxygens. These results suggest that the medullary layer can catch all alkali cations in a wide pH range around the physiological one, while the upper cortex can effectively block penetration of metal ions when the metal stress grows. Such insights highlight a physiological role of metabolites like blocking of metal-cation migrations into intracellular tissues, and explain long-term retention of alkali cations including Cs in lichens containing enough such metabolites to bind them.

Highlights

  • We focus on oxalic acid, (+)-usnic acid, atranorin, lecanoric acid, and protocetraric acid, which are common metabolite substances in various lichens including, e.g., Flavoparmelia caperata and Parmotrema tinctorum retaining Cs in Fukushima, Japan

  • We computationally examined alkali-metal complexation stabilities of the primary and secondary metabolites in some lichens observed to retain radioisotopes of Cs in Fukushima prefecture in order to understand their bio-retention mechanisms

  • In the neutral case, protocetraric acid and lecanoric acid located in the medullary layer form alkali-metal-cation complexes stronger than the other neutral molecules in aqueous phases, while, in the same phase, the deprotonated usnic acid and atranorin form complexes with alkali-metal cations distinctively stronger than the other deprotonated molecules except for protocetraric acid on heavier alkali cations

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Summary

Methods and computational details

There has been no direct experimental evidence consistent with these results, we stress that the usnic acid has been known to microscopically possess a high complexation ability with metal ions

Discussion
Summary and conclusion
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