Salicylate Assay

Principle

Salicylic acid forms a colored complex with iron(III) ions in acidic conditions, producing a purple color measurable at ~545nm. This is the Trinder reaction, adapted from clinical toxicology for plant tissue analysis.

The Duke PEP Project protocol has demonstrated this works directly on plant extracts using a simplified mercury-free Trinder reagent.

Specificity note: The reaction detects all phenolic compounds, not just salicylates. Other plant polyphenols (tannins, flavonoids) will produce some signal. This is a known limitation — use results as a relative measure, particularly useful for comparing same-food samples across different sources/conditions.

Reagents

Trinder Reagent (simplified, mercury-free)

  • 0.40g Iron(III) nitrate nonahydrate [Fe(NO₃)₃·9H₂O]
  • 1.2ml concentrated HCl (12M)
  • Distilled water to 100ml

Preparation: dissolve iron nitrate in HCl, dilute to 100ml. Store in amber bottle at room temperature. Shelf life: several months.

Calibration Standard (0.01M sodium salicylate)

  • 0.16g sodium salicylate
  • Distilled water to 100ml

Use to build a standard curve. Dilute to known concentrations for calibration points.

NaOH extraction solution (0.25M)

  • 1g NaOH pellets dissolved in 100ml distilled water

Procedure

  1. Take Tube A from Unified Sample Prep (alkaline extract, pH ~10)
  2. Take 0.5ml of Tube A
  3. Add 7.5ml Trinder reagent
  4. Add distilled water to make 10ml total volume
  5. Mix well
  6. Read absorbance at 545nm (or green setting on colorimeter) within 5 minutes

Calibration

Prepare standard curve from sodium salicylate solutions:

  • 0 mM (blank — distilled water through same protocol)
  • 0.5 mM
  • 1.0 mM
  • 2.0 mM
  • 5.0 mM

Plot absorbance vs concentration. The Duke protocol reports a linear relationship: concentration = absorbance / 0.51 (at 545nm).

Reading Results

  • Purple/violet color = salicylates (and other phenolics) present
  • Deeper color = higher concentration
  • Compare sample absorbance to standard curve for approximate concentration in mg/g of original tissue

Notes

  • Response time is immediate — read within 5 minutes before color fades
  • Duke protocol validated on fresh tarragon (0.5g tissue, 5 min NaOH extraction)
  • Sensitivity: detects salicylate at mid-therapeutic concentrations (~5mg/dL in liquid) — should be adequate for high-salicylate foods like herbs, spices, tomatoes
  • Low-salicylate vegetables may be near or below detection limit — useful for relative comparisons rather than absolute values in those cases

References

  • Duke PEP Project (sites.duke.edu) — plant salicylate protocol
  • Trinder, P. (1954) — original clinical Trinder reaction
  • Sigma-Aldrich MAK534 Salicylate Assay Kit (reference method)
  • Salicylate Colorimetry