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Kirill Kolmakov

Researcher at Max Planck Society

Publications -  19
Citations -  928

Kirill Kolmakov is an academic researcher from Max Planck Society. The author has contributed to research in topics: Rhodamine & Rhodamines. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 19 publications receiving 834 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Polar Red‐Emitting Rhodamine Dyes with Reactive Groups: Synthesis, Photophysical Properties, and Two‐Color STED Nanoscopy Applications

TL;DR: The synthesis, reactivity, and photophysical properties of new rhodamines with intense red fluorescence, two polar residues, and improved hydrolytic stability of the amino-reactive sites (NHS esters or mixed N-succinimidyl carbonates) are reported.
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Masked Rhodamine Dyes of Five Principal Colors Revealed by Photolysis of a 2-Diazo-1-Indanone Caging Group: Synthesis, Photophysics, and Light Microscopy Applications

TL;DR: Caged rhodamine dyes of five basic colors were synthesized and used as "hidden" markers in subdiffractional and conventional light microscopy and the applicability of these novel caged fluorophores in super-resolution optical microscopy is exemplified.
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Masked red-emitting carbopyronine dyes with photosensitive 2-diazo-1-indanone caging group

TL;DR: Good photostability, high contrast, and a large fluorescence quantum yield after uncaging are the most important features of the new compounds for non-invasive imaging in high-resolution optical microscopy.
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Far-Red Emitting Fluorescent Dyes for Optical Nanoscopy: Fluorinated Silicon–Rhodamines (SiRF Dyes) and Phosphorylated Oxazines

TL;DR: The photophysical properties and immunofluorescence imaging performance of these new far-red emitting dyes (photobleaching, optical resolution, and switch-off behavior) are discussed in detail and compared with those of some well-established fluorophores with similar spectral properties.
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Red-emitting rhodamines with hydroxylated, sulfonated, and phosphorylated dye residues and their use in fluorescence nanoscopy

TL;DR: The synthesis of rhodamine-based fluorescent dyes with absorption and emission maxima in the range of 621-637 and 644-660 nm are described and demonstrate their high performance in confocal and stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy.