Luciferin

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This is a space-filling model of firefly luciferin. Color coding: yellow=sulfur; blue=nitrogen; black=carbon; red=oxygen; white=hydrogen.
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This is a space-filling model of firefly luciferin. Color coding: yellow=sulfur; blue=nitrogen; black=carbon; red=oxygen; white=hydrogen.

Luciferins (from the Latin lucifer, "light-bringing" [1]) are a class of light-emitting biological pigments found in organisms capable of bioluminescence.

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[edit] Types of luciferin

Note that luciferins should not be confused with the enzyme luciferase. Luciferins are a substrate for luciferase.[citation needed] Luciferins are oxidized in the presence of the enzyme luciferase to produce oxyluciferin and energy in the form of light. There are five general types of luciferins.

This structural model of firefly luciferin is reversed (left to right) from the space-filling model shown above
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This structural model of firefly luciferin is reversed (left to right) from the space-filling model shown above

[edit] Firefly luciferin

Firefly luciferin is the luciferin found in fireflies. It is the substrate of luciferase (EC 1.13.12.7)

[edit] Bacterial luciferin

Bacterial luciferin is a type of luciferin found in bacteria, some squid and fish. It consists of a long-chain aldehyde and a reduced riboflavin phosphate.

[edit] Dinoflagellate luciferin

Dinoflagellate luciferin is a chlorophyll derivative and is found in dinoflagellates, which are often responsible for the phenomenon of nighttime ocean phosphorescence. A very similar type of luciferin is found in some types of euphausiid shrimp.

[edit] Vargulin

Vargulin is found in certain deep-sea fish; specifically, ostracods and Poricthys. It is an imidazolopyrazine.

Coelenterazine
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Coelenterazine

[edit] Coelenterazine

Coelenterazine is found in radiolarians, ctenophores, cnidarians, squid, copepods, chaetognaths, fish and shrimp. It is the light-emitting molecule in the protein aequorin.

[edit] External links