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Luminescent probes for the bioimaging of small anionic species in vitro and in vivo

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Version 1 2015-08-26, 14:40
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 02:35 authored by TD Ashton, KA Jolliffe, Fred PfefferFred Pfeffer
The ability to spatiotemporally identify the formation of specific anionic species, or track changes in their concentration inside living systems, is of critical importance in deciphering their exact biological roles and effects. The development of probes (also called bioimaging agents and intracellular sensors) to achieve this goal has become a rapidly growing branch of supramolecular chemistry. In this critical review the challenges specific to the task are identified and for a select range of small anions of environmental and biological relevance (fluoride, chloride, iodide, cyanide, pyrophosphate, bicarbonate, hydrosulphide, peroxynitrite, hypochlorite and hypobromite) a comprehensive overview of the currently available in vitro and in vivo probes is provided.

History

Journal

Chemical society reviews

Volume

44

Pagination

4547-4595

Location

Cambridge, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1460-4744

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, Royal Society of Chemistry

Issue

14

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry