
(Abstract) Gail A. Bresnahan,* Frank A. Manthey, Kirk A. Howatt, and Monisha Chakraborty Department of Plant Sciences and Department of Cereal and Food Sciences North Dakota State University Fargo, North Dakota 58105
J. Agric. Food Chem.
Glyphosate is a nonselective herbicide used as a harvest aid in a
variety of crops. Glyphosate is absorbed into the foliage and
translocated to metabolically active regions in the plant where it
interferes with the shikimic acid pathway. Experiments were conducted to
determine the accumulation and distribution of shikimic acid in wheat
treated with glyphosate at soft and hard dough stages of kernel
development and to determine the fate of shikimic acid during milling
and bread making. Elevated levels of shikimic acid were detected
throughout the wheat plant. Shikimic acid concentrations peaked 3-7 days
after treatment and then declined until harvest. Shikimic acid content
was 3-fold greater in flour and 2-fold greater in the bread derived from
treated wheat than nontreated wheat. Similarly, elevated levels of
shikimic acid were found in the crumbs and crust of bread made with
flour from glyphosate treated wheat. Glyphosate applied preharvest
resulted in shikimic acid accumulation in hard red spring wheat and
subsequent end-use products.
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