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  5. Inorganic Chemistry Approaches to Activity-Based Sensing: From Metal Sensors to Bioorthogonal Metal Chemistry

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Article
en
2019

Inorganic Chemistry Approaches to Activity-Based Sensing: From Metal Sensors to Bioorthogonal Metal Chemistry

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en
2019
Vol 58 (20)
Vol. 58
DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.9b01221

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Christopher J Chang
Christopher J Chang

University of California, Berkeley

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Diana A. Iovan
Shang Jia
Christopher J Chang

Abstract

The complex network of chemical processes that sustain life motivates the development of new synthetic tools to decipher biological mechanisms of action at a molecular level. In this context, fluorescent and related optical probes have emerged as useful chemical reagents for monitoring small-molecule and metal signals in biological systems, enabling visualization of dynamic cellular events with spatial and temporal resolution. In particular, metals occupy a central role in this field as analytes in their own right, while also being leveraged for their unique biocompatible reactivity with small-molecule substrates. This Viewpoint highlights the use of inorganic chemistry principles to develop activity-based sensing platforms mediated by metal reactivity, spanning indicators for metal detection to metal-based reagents for bioorthogonal tracking, and manipulation of small and large biomolecules, illustrating the privileged roles of metals at the interface of chemistry and biology.

How to cite this publication

Diana A. Iovan, Shang Jia, Christopher J Chang (2019). Inorganic Chemistry Approaches to Activity-Based Sensing: From Metal Sensors to Bioorthogonal Metal Chemistry. , 58(20), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.9b01221.

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Publication Details

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Article

Year

2019

Authors

3

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0

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Language

en

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.9b01221

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