articleJournal of the American Chemical SocietyJun 15, 2011Closed access

Reaction-Based Fluorescent Probes for Selective Imaging of Hydrogen Sulfide in Living Cells

Howard Hughes Medical Institute · University of California, Berkeley

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Hydrogen sulfide (H(2)S) is emerging as an important mediator of human physiology and pathology but remains difficult to study, in large part because of the lack of methods for selective monitoring of this small signaling molecule in live biological specimens. We now report a pair of new reaction-based fluorescent probes for selective imaging of H(2)S in living cells that exploit the H(2)S-mediated reduction of azides to fluorescent amines. Sulfidefluor-1 (SF1) and Sulfidefluor-2 (SF2) respond to H(2)S by a turn-on fluorescence signal enhancement and display high selectivity for H(2)S over other biologically relevant reactive sulfur, oxygen, and nitrogen species. In addition, SF1 and SF2 can be used to detect…

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