E.A. Bonini, M.L.L. Ferrarese, R. Marchiosi, P.C. Zonetti, O. Ferrarese-Filho, “A simple chromatographic assay to discriminate between glyphosate-resistant and susceptible soybean (Glycine max) cultivars,” European Journal of Agronomy, 2009, 31:3, 1730176, DOI: 10.1016/e.eja.2009.03.006.
ABSTRACT:
In glyphosate-susceptible soybean (Glycine max L. Merrill), the herbicide glyphosate [(N-phosphonomethyl)glycine] inhibits the enzyme 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate (EPSP) synthase, causing a massive accumulation of the metabolite shikimate. This phenomenon does not occur in glyphosate-resistant soybean due the presence of a gene encoding glyphosate-insensitive EPSP synthase. This study proposes a simple and reliable assay as an alternative tool for differentiating glyphosate-resistant from susceptible soybean cultivars. The assay is based on a single extraction of leaf or root tissue. Shikimate is quantified by reversed-phase high–performance liquid chromatography at 220 nm and isocratic elution with phosphoric acid. After glyphosate treatment, tissues of glyphosate-susceptible plants were found to massively accumulate shikimate, whereas the tissues of glyphosate-resistant plants did not accumulate the metabolite. FULL TEXT