Xanthene, cyanine, oxazine and BODIPY: the four pillars of the fluorophore empire for super-resolution bioimaging

Literature Information

Publication Date 2023-09-25
DOI 10.1039/D2CS00905F
Impact Factor 54.564
Authors

Soham Samanta, Kaitao Lai, Feihu Wu, Yingchao Liu, Songtao Cai, Xusan Yang, Junle Qu, Zhigang Yang



Abstract

In the realm of biological research, the invention of super-resolution microscopy (SRM) has enabled the visualization of ultrafine sub-cellular structures and their functions in live cells at the nano-scale level, beyond the diffraction limit, which has opened up a new window for advanced biomedical studies to unravel the complex unknown details of physiological disorders at the sub-cellular level with unprecedented resolution and clarity. However, most of the SRM techniques are highly reliant on the personalized special photophysical features of the fluorophores. In recent times, there has been an unprecedented surge in the development of robust new fluorophore systems with personalized features for various super-resolution imaging techniques. To date, xanthene, cyanine, oxazine and BODIPY cores have been authoritatively utilized as the basic fluorophore units in most of the small-molecule-based organic fluorescent probe designing strategies for SRM owing to their excellent photophysical characteristics and easy synthetic acquiescence. Since the future of next-generation SRM studies will be decided by the availability of advanced fluorescent probes and these four fluorescent building blocks will play an important role in progressive new fluorophore design, there is an urgent need to review the recent advancements in designing fluorophores for different SRM methods based on these fluorescent dye cores. This review article not only includes a comprehensive discussion about the recent developments in designing fluorescent probes for various SRM techniques based on these four important fluorophore building blocks with special emphasis on their effective integration into live cell super-resolution bio-imaging applications but also critically evaluates the background of each of the fluorescent dye cores to highlight their merits and demerits towards developing newer fluorescent probes for SRM.

Source Journal

Chemical Society Reviews

Chemical Society Reviews
CiteScore: 80.8
Self-citation Rate: 1.2%
Articles per Year: 250

Chem Soc Rev publishes review articles covering important topics at the forefront of the chemical sciences. Reviews should be of the very highest quality and international impact. We particularly encourage international and multidisciplinary collaborations among our authors. Our scope covers the breadth of the chemical sciences, including interdisciplinary topics where the article has a basis in chemistry. Topics include: Analytical chemistry Biomaterials chemistry Bioorganic/medicinal chemistry Catalysis Chemical Biology Coordination Chemistry Crystal Engineering Energy Sustainable chemistry Green chemistry Inorganic chemistry Inorganic materials Main group chemistry Nanoscience Organic chemistry Organic materials Organometallics Physical chemistry Supramolecular chemistry Synthetic methodology Theoretical and computational chemistry

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