| Literature DB >> 32733059 |
Jianhong Yang1, Nan Chen2, Jianfeng Zhu2, Jun Cai3, Jianping Deng2, Feifei Pan2, Lianghe Gao2, Zhenfei Jiang2, Fengqin Shen4.
Abstract
Lacquer sap is a water-in-oil natural emulsion with high viscosity. In nature, it exudes from the phloem of lacquer tree to repair its wounds in the presence of O2. So far, it is unclear how rapid and smooth polymerization of urushiol is achieved in such a viscous sap. Here, we find that there is a diffuse interface layer with 2.43 nm of thickness between two phases. The interface layer consists of urushiol, urushiol-laccase complex, urushiol-stellacyanin complex and water-insoluble glycoprotein. Polymerization of urushiol is realized by multicomponent synergistic effect. Radicals are first formed by laccase-catalyzed oxidation of urushiol at the interface layer, then are transferred to the urushiol oil phase via wate-insoluble glycoprotein and initiate the polymerization of urushiol there. Stellacyanin inhibits the formation of certain radicals and controls the concentration of phenoxy radicals at the interface layer. Through the inhibition of radicals by stellacyanin and the electron transfer mediated by water-insoluble glycoprotein, the polymerization of urushiol at the interface layer is inhibited. This ensures that O2 can continuously penetrate into the aqueous phase to oxidize the reduced laccase so that the urushiol polymerization can continue smoothly. This polymerization mechanism provides an idea for developing new chemical reaction systems.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32733059 PMCID: PMC7393129 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-69823-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Characterization of phase structure of lacquer sap. (a) Biological microscope photograph of lacquer sap (× 1,000 times); (b) SAXS curve plotted as I(q) versus q for lacquer sap; (c) SAXS curve plotted as q4I(q) versus q2; (d) TEM-EDS images of the element distribution of the cured lacquer film.
Figure 2Schematic illustration of the phase interface structure of lacquer sap and its drying mechanism by long-range electron transfer via water-insoluble glycoprotein between oil phase and aqueous phase.
The viscosities and drying properties of lacquer sap and some prepared urushiol emulsions.
| Samplea | Additive | Ratio (wt%) | Viscosityb (mPa s) | Temp (oC) | RHc (%) | Drying time (h:min) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TDd | HDe | ||||||
| LS | – | – | 7,635 ± 13 | 30 | 80 | 3:50 | 12:20 |
| LS4 | – | – | 7,069 ± 10 | 30 | 80 | 29:50 | 65:55 |
| Laccase | 0.24% | – | 30 | 80 | 0:25 | 1:45 | |
| UGP | – | – | 874.1 ± 0.9 | 30 | 80 | NC | NCf |
| UGPH | – | – | 2,050 ± 9 | 30 | 80 | NC | NC |
| UGPHL-1 | Laccase | 0.12% | 2,197 ± 11 | 30 | 80 | 4:45 | 13:40 |
| UGPHL-2 | Laccase | 0.24% | 2,244 ± 12 | 30 | 80 | 3:20 | 10:30 |
| Urushiol | – | – | 52.5 ± 1.0 | 30 | 80 | NC | NC |
| UHEL-1 | Laccase | 0.12% | 124.6 ± 0.30 | 30 | 80 | 17:10 | 29:30g |
| UHEL-2 | Laccase | 0.24% | 144.4 ± 0.31 | 30 | 80 | 4:30 | 9:10g |
LS lacquer sap; LS4 lacquer sap has stored for 4 years; UGP urushiol with 0.96 wt% of water-insoluble glycoprotein; UGPH UGP/H2O emulsion; UGPHL-1 and UGPHL-2 UGP/H2O emulsion with 0.12 wt% and 0.24 wt% of laccase, respectively; UHEL-1 and UHEL-2 urushiol/H2O emulsion with 0.12 wt% and 0.24 wt% of laccase, respectively.
aThe content of water in all samples was controlled at 21 wt%.
bResults were expressed as means ± S.D. (n = 5).
cRelative humidity.
dTouch dryness.
eHard dryness.
fDo not cure within 40 days.
gThe time of partial drying of the sample. There was also some uncured urushiol regions on the sample film.
Figure 3Inhibitory effects of stellacyanin on the polymerization of urushiol in the drying process. (a) 1HNMR spectra of THF extract after raw lacquer sap drying for 0 h,1 h and 3 h, respectively; (b) 1H NMR spectrum of THF extract after urushiol/H2O emulsion with active laccase (0.24 wt%) drying for 0 h, 1 h, 3 h and 5 h; the intensity of the peaks 1–5 rapidly increased compared with those in lacquer sap; (c) 1H NMR spectrum of THF extract after urushiol/H2O emulsion with active laccase (0.24 wt%) and stellacyanin (0.024 wt%) drying for 0 h, 1 h, 3 h and 5 h. This 1H NMR spectrum was similar to that of raw lacquer sap.
Figure 4ESR spectra of samples in the drying process. ESR spectra of urushiol/H2O emulsion with laccase (0.24 wt%) (a, 5 min; b, 1 h) and their integrograms (c); ESR spectra of urushiol/H2O emulsion with laccase (0.24 wt%) and stellacyanin (0.024 wt%) (d, 5 min; e, 1 h) and their integrograms (f); ESR spectra of raw lacquer sap (g, 5 min; h, 1 h) and their integrograms (i).