“…These xenon–host ensembles, termed biosensors, currently come in two major classes: supramolecular compounds such as conjugates of cryptophanes, cyclodextrins, pillar[5]arenes, cucurbiturils, and metal‐organic frameworks and larger compartmental carriers including viral capsids, gas vesicles, and liposomes . The ever‐expanding array of xenon biosensors has been applied to the selective detection of a variety of binding events involving metal ions, receptors on cell surfaces, transmembrane proteins, enzymes, biothiols, and reporting on microenvironments indicative of tumors, such as abnormal pH, specific ionic milieus or oxidation …”