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Self-Healing Dyes—Keeping the Promise?

Michael Isselstein, Lei Zhang, Viktorija Glembockyte, Oliver Brix, Gonzalo Cosa, Philip Tinnefeld, Thorben Cordes

2020The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters64 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Self-healing dyes have emerged as a new promising class of fluorescent labels. They consist of two units, a fluorescent dye and a photostabilizer. The latter heals whenever the fluorescent dye is in danger of taking a reaction pathway toward photobleaching. We describe the underlying concepts and summarize the developmental history and state-of-the-art, including latest applications in high-resolution microscopy, live-cell, and single-molecule imaging. We further discuss remaining limitations, which are (i) lower photostabilization of most self-healing dyes when compared to solution additives, (ii) limited mechanistic understanding on the influence of the biochemical environment and molecular oxygen on self-healing, and (iii) the lack of cheap and facile bioconjugation strategies. Finally, we provide ideas on how to further advance self-healing dyes, show new data on redox blinking caused by double-stranded DNA, and highlight forthcoming work on intramolecular photostabilization of fluorescent proteins.

Topics & Concepts

PhotobleachingBioconjugationFluorescenceNanotechnologyChemistrySelf-healingBiophysicsMaterials scienceBiologyPathologyMedicinePhysicsQuantum mechanicsAlternative medicineAdvanced Fluorescence Microscopy TechniquesClick Chemistry and ApplicationsRNA Interference and Gene Delivery
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