草铵膦
草甘膦
化学
甘氨酸
氨基酸
组合化学
有机化学
生物化学
生物技术
生物
作者
Frank H. Wetzel,Thomas Braun,Titus Schindler,Achim Habekost
出处
期刊:World journal of chemical education
日期:2021-11-29
卷期号:9 (4): 152-162
摘要
N-(Phosphonomethyl)glycine (glyphosate), known by the trade name Roundup®, is a broad-spectrum systemic herbicide used to kill various types of weeds. It was first synthesized in 1970 by John E. Franz, a chemist at the Monsanto agrochemical company. Glyphosate's mode of action is to inhibit a plant enzyme involved in the synthesis of some aromatic amino acids (âshikimate wayâ). The use of Roundup® is currently controversial, as its hazard potential has not been clarified. Glufosinate (2-Amino-4-[hydroxy(methylphosphonoyl)] butanoic acid) was discovered by German and Japanese scientists in a biological process: Species of Streptomyces bacteria produce a tripeptide that consists of two alanine residues and an amino acid that is an analogue of glutamate named phosphinothricin. Phosphinothricin was first synthesized by scientists at Hoechst (now Aventis) in the 1970s as a racemic mixture; this racemic mixture is called glufosinate. This article presents reliable and easily performed spectroscopic and (spectro)electrochemical measurements for identifying glyphosate and glufosinate.
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