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Click Reactions: A Paradigm Shift in Food Chemical Residue Testing

Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety 2025 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Fengyu Guo, Wenhua Jin, Wenhua Jin, Yanjin Du, Minlong Wang, Ran Wang, Xiaoguang Yang, Juan Chen, Yongjian Ai, Fazheng Ren, Pengjie Wang, Ping Liu

Summary

This review explores how click chemistry is transforming the detection of chemical residues in food, including pesticides, antibiotics, and emerging contaminants like microplastics. Researchers found that click reactions offer rapid, highly specific, and ultrasensitive detection that outperforms traditional methods such as chromatography. The study highlights future directions including green chemistry integration and multiplexed platforms for high-throughput contaminant screening.

Body Systems

Chemical residues in food pose a global health challenge, which necessitates sensitive and reliable detection methods. Current techniques (e.g., chromatography and immunoassays) remain limited by operational complexity, insufficient sensitivity, and poor adaptability for on-site use. Click chemistry has emerged as a novel solution, offering rapid, specific, and ultrasensitive detection of food chemical residues, such as pesticides, antibiotics, and hormones-contaminants that pose significant health threats through chronic exposure. This review outlines the principles and classifications of click reactions, emphasizing their selectivity, mild reaction conditions, and modular design. Integrating biosensors enhances molecular recognition and signal amplification, enabling on-site screening in complex food matrices. We critically evaluate recent click chemistry-based sensors, detailing their design strategies (e.g., probe functionalization and nanomaterial engineering) and optimization via advanced transduction mechanisms. Key challenges-including matrix interference, reagent stability, and cost-are addressed through molecular imprinting, microfluidic miniaturization, and AI-driven system refinement. Future advancements will focus on integrating green chemistry to reduce environmental impact, developing multiplexed platforms for high-throughput detection, and expanding applications to emerging contaminants such as microplastics and biotoxins. These innovations promise to redefine food safety standards with scalable, next-generation analytical tools.

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