Publication | Closed Access
Combinatorial Discovery of Fluorescent Pharmacophores by Multicomponent Reactions in Droplet Arrays
129
Citations
12
References
2011
Year
Combinatorial ChemistryCombinatorial DiscoveryDrug TargetMolecular BiologyChemical BiologyMedicinal ChemistryBioanalysisDruglike ScaffoldBioimagingMolecular ImagingBiophysicsMolecular DiversitySmall Molecule LibraryMulticomponent ReactionsNovel Imaging MethodBiochemistryDiversity-oriented SynthesisFluorescence ImagingDroplet ArraysPharmacologySingle-molecule DetectionFluorescence MicroscopySuch ProbesBiomedical DiagnosticsNatural SciencesChemical ProbeMedicineSmall MoleculesDrug DiscoveryDrug Analysis
Fluorescence imaging in clinical diagnostics and biomedical research relies to a great extent on the use of small organic fluorescent probes. Because of the difficulty of combining fluorescent and molecular-recognition properties, the development of such probes has been severely restricted to a number of well-known fluorescent scaffolds. Here we demonstrate that autofluorescing druglike molecules are a valuable source of bioimaging probes. Combinatorial synthesis and screening of chemical libraries in droplet microarrays allowed the identification of new types of fluorophores. Their concise and clean assembly by a multicomponent reaction presents a unique potential for the one-step synthesis of thousands of structurally diverse fluorescent molecules. Because they are based upon a druglike scaffold, these fluorophores retain their molecular recognition potential and can be used to design specific imaging probes.
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