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Matthew effect: General design strategy of ultra‐fluorogenic nanoprobes with amplified dark–bright states in aggregates

S. Segawa, Xinwen Ou, Tianruo Shen, Tomohiro Ryu, Yuki Ishii, Herman H. Y. Sung, Ian D. Williams, Ryan T. K. Kwok, Ken Onda, Kiyoshi Miyata, Xuewen He, Xiaogang Liu, Ben Zhong Tang

2024Aggregate30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Fluorescence imaging, a key technique in biological research, frequently utilizes fluorogenic probes for precise imaging in living systems. Tetrazine is an effective emission quencher in fluorogenic probe designs, which can be selectively damaged upon bioorthogonal click reactions, leading to considerable emission enhancement. Despite significant efforts to increase the emission enhancement ratio ( I AC / I BC ) of tetrazine‐functionalized fluorogenic probes, the influence of molecular aggregation on the emission properties has been largely overlooked in these probe designs. In this study, we reveal that an ultrahigh I AC / I BC can be realized in the aggregate system when tetrazine is paired with aggregation‐induced emission (AIE) luminogens. Tetrazine amplifies its quenching efficiency upon aggregation and drastically reduce background emissions. Subsequent click reactions damage tetrazine and trigger significant AIE, leading to considerably enhanced I AC / I BC . We further showcase the capability of these ultra‐fluorogenic systems in selective imaging of multiple organelles in living cells. We term this unique fluorogenicity of AIE luminogen‐quencher complexes with amplified dark‐bright states as “Matthew effect” in aggregate emission, potentially providing a universal approach to attain ultrahigh I AC / I BC in diverse fluorogenic systems.

Topics & Concepts

TetrazineBioorthogonal chemistryAggregation-induced emissionFluorescenceQuenching (fluorescence)ChemistryNanotechnologyFluorophorePhotochemistryClick chemistryCombinatorial chemistryMaterials sciencePhysicsOpticsOrganic chemistryClick Chemistry and ApplicationsAdvanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniquesLuminescence and Fluorescent Materials
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