Hydrogen peroxide (H O ) mediates the biology of wound healing, apoptosis, inflammation, etc. H O has been fluorometrically imaged with protein- or small-molecule-based probes. However, only protein-based probes have afforded temporal insights within seconds. Small-molecule-based electrophilic probes for H O require many minutes for a sufficient response in biological systems. Here, we report a fluorogenic probe that selectively undergoes a [2,3]-sigmatropic rearrangement (seleno-Mislow-Evans rearrangement) with H O , followed by acetal hydrolysis, to produce a green fluorescent molecule in seconds. Unlike other electrophilic probes, the current probe acts as a nucleophile. The fast kinetics enabled real-time imaging of H O produced in endothelial cells in 8 seconds (much earlier than previously shown) and H O in a zebrafish wound healing model. This work may provide a platform for endogenous H O detection in real time with chemical probes.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/anie.202007104 | DOI Listing |
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