“…Since the seminal work reported by K. B. Sharpless group in 2014 (Dong et al., 2014a, Dong et al., 2014b), sulfur(VI) fluoride exchange (SuFEx) click reaction has grown into a powerful synthetic tool, attracting increasing interest with wide applications in various disciplines such as polymer chemistry (Dong et al., 2014a, Dong et al., 2014b, Yatvin et al., 2015, Oakdale et al., 2016, Brendel et al., 2017, Gao et al., 2017, Wang et al., 2017, Zhang et al., 2019), surface chemistry (Brooks et al., 2016), bioconjugation (Zelli et al., 2016, Li et al., 2016), protein target identification (Jones, 2018a, Jones, 2018b, Mortenson et al., 2018, Wang et al., 2018a, Wang et al., 2018b, Wang et al., 2018c, Wang et al., 2018d, Zhao et al., 2017), and covalent protein inhibition (Alvarez et al., 2017, Chen et al., 2016a, Chen et al., 2016b, Fadeyi et al., 2017, Gehringer and Laufer, 2019, Hett et al., 2015, Liu et al., 2018, Narayanan and Jones, 2015, Shishido et al., 2017). Sulfonyl fluoride moiety as the sulfur(VI)-containing functional group at the heart of SuFEx methodology is imbued with a stability and chemoselectivity profile that is highly desirable for click chemistry applications (Chinthakindi and Arvidsson, 2018, Mukherjee et al., 2018, Chinthakindi et al., 2016, Kwon and Kim, 2019, Smedley et al., 2018, Leng and Qin, 2018, Thomas and Fokin, 2018).…”