Folia Pharmacologica Japonica
Online ISSN : 1347-8397
Print ISSN : 0015-5691
ISSN-L : 0015-5691
Reviews: A Paradigm Shift in Research on Essential Trace Metals
Development and applications of Fe(II)-selective fluorescent probes
Tasuku Hirayama
Author information
JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

2019 Volume 154 Issue 6 Pages 322-326

Details
Abstract

Iron is the most abundant transition metal in our body and plays various pivotal roles in our lives including oxygen transport, energy production, and metabolic reactions. At the same time, an excess amount of iron may cause cellular damages through undesired oxidative reactions due to the high redox activity of Fe ion. We have developed the several fluorescent probes which can detect Fe(II) ion selectively with fluorescence enhancement to understand both the physiological and pathological contributions of Fe ion in living systems. These fluorescent probes worked in an aqueous buffer, living cells, and histochemical-stained samples (Chem Sci. 2013;4:1250, Chem Sci. 2017;8:4858, Free Radic Res. 2014;48:990, Sci Rep. 2017;7:10621). We established a color series of Fe(II)-selective fluorescent probes from blue to deep-red, which were applied to organelle-targeted fluorescent probes for mitochondria, lysosome, and endoplasmic reticulum. Herein, I would like to focus on fluorescence imaging study about the alteration of labile Fe(II) level in each organelle during ferroptosis, iron-dependent cell death, by using the various organelle-targeted fluorescent probes of Fe(II).

Content from these authors
© 2019 by The Japanese Pharmacological Society
Previous article Next article
feedback
Top