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      Fluorescence Aerosol Flow Tube Spectroscopy to Detect Liquid–Liquid Phase Separation

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          Principles of Fluorescence Spectroscopy

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            The formation, properties and impact of secondary organic aerosol: current and emerging issues

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              Solvatochromic and Fluorogenic Dyes as Environment-Sensitive Probes: Design and Biological Applications.

              Fluorescent environment-sensitive probes are specially designed dyes that change their fluorescence intensity (fluorogenic dyes) or color (e.g., solvatochromic dyes) in response to change in their microenvironment polarity, viscosity, and molecular order. The studies of the past decade, including those of our group, have shown that these molecules become universal tools in fluorescence sensing and imaging. In fact, any biomolecular interaction or change in biomolecular organization results in modification of the local microenvironment, which can be directly monitored by these types of probes. In this Account, the main examples of environment-sensitive probes are summarized according to their design concepts. Solvatochromic dyes constitute a large class of environment-sensitive probes which change their color in response to polarity. Generally, they are push-pull dyes undergoing intramolecular charge transfer. Emission of their highly polarized excited state shifts to the red in more polar solvents. Excited-state intramolecular proton transfer is the second key concept to design efficient solvatochromic dyes, which respond to the microenvironment by changing relative intensity of the two emissive tautomeric forms. Due to their sensitivity to polarity and hydration, solvatochromic dyes have been successfully applied to biological membranes for studying lipid domains (rafts), apoptosis and endocytosis. As fluorescent labels, solvatochromic dyes can detect practically any type of biomolecular interactions, involving proteins, nucleic acids and biomembranes, because the binding event excludes local water molecules from the interaction site. On the other hand, fluorogenic probes usually exploit intramolecular rotation (conformation change) as a design concept, with molecular rotors being main representatives. These probes were particularly efficient for imaging viscosity and lipid order in biomembranes as well as to light up biomolecular targets, such as antibodies, aptamers and receptors. The emerging concepts to achieve fluorogenic response to the microenvironment include ground-state isomerization, aggregation-caused quenching, and aggregation-induced emission. The ground-state isomerization exploits, for instance, polarity-dependent spiro-lactone formation in silica-rhodamines. The aggregation-caused quenching uses disruption of the self-quenched dimers and nanoassemblies of dyes in less polar environments of lipid membranes and biomolecules. The aggregation-induced emission couples target recognition with formation of highly fluorescent dye aggregates. Overall, solvatochromic and fluorogenic probes enable background-free bioimaging in wash-free conditions as well as quantitative analysis when combined with advanced microscopy, such as fluorescence lifetime (FLIM) and ratiometric imaging. Further development of fluorescent environment-sensitive probes should address some remaining problems: (i) improving their optical properties, especially brightness, photostability, and far-red to near-infrared operating range; (ii) minimizing nonspecific interactions of the probes in biological systems; (iii) their adaptation for advanced microscopies, notably for superresolution and in vivo imaging.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                ACS Earth and Space Chemistry
                ACS Earth Space Chem.
                American Chemical Society (ACS)
                2472-3452
                2472-3452
                May 20 2021
                May 06 2021
                May 20 2021
                : 5
                : 5
                : 1223-1232
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Engineering and Applied Sciences & Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, United States
                [2 ]Harvard University Center for the Environment, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, United States
                [3 ]Department of Chemistry, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 1Z1, Canada
                Article
                10.1021/acsearthspacechem.1c00061
                f61c9c18-aadf-4521-95ea-f6dd381bb499
                © 2021
                History

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