Luciferin
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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.
[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.
[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
- University of California at Santa Barbara article showing major luciferin types