Kevin J. Bruemmer received his B.S. in Chemistry and Mathematics from Southern Methodist University in 2014, where he worked with Prof. Alexander Lippert on the development of fluorescence and magnetic resonancep robes for reactive nitrogen and sulfur species. He then moved to UC Berkeley to continue work on studying reactive species with Prof. Chris Chang in 2015, where his work as an NSF graduate fellow focuses on developing and applying activitybased sensing methods to study the physiological roles of formaldehyde. Steven W. M. Crossley received his B.Sc. in Chemistry from the University of British Columbia in 2012. After agap year,h e pursued Ph.D. studies as an NSERC postgraduate scholar at The Scripps Research Institute with Prof. Ryan Shenvi to work on first-row transition-metal hydrofunctionalization of alkenes and total synthesist osupport interrogation of GABAA receptor neurobiology.In2 018, he joined the group of Prof. Chris Chang, where he is developing amino acid specific reaction-based probes for cancer therapeutics discovery.