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Luciferase

Luciferase

June 2006 Molecule of the Month
  by David S. Goodsell
  Previous Features

Do you remember the first time that you saw a firefly? If you live anywhere between the Rocky Mountains and the east coast of the US, you have probably chased fireflies since you were a child. If you live in other parts of the world, like me, you may have had the pleasure of discovering fireflies during a summer vacation. They are one of the delightful wonders of warm summer evenings.

Glow Little Glowworm, Glow

The cool yellowish light of fireflies is created by the enzyme luciferase, shown here from PDB entry 2d1s. The creation of light is not an easy process. It requires a lot of energy—a single photon of green light requires about the same energy as the breaking of eight ATP molecules. So, luciferase uses a very energetic process to create light. It has a cofactor, termed a luciferin, that forms a highly strained complex with oxygen, using an ATP molecule to help set everything up. When this oxygenated luciferin breaks, forming carbon dioxide in the process, it leaves behind a highly excited form that then emits the light.

Lighting the Way

Since the light-emitting reaction of luciferase is self-contained, needing only oxygen and ATP, clever researchers have used it as a tool in scientific research. It can be used inside cells as a sensor that reports the amount of ATP—if it is glowing, there must be ATP around. Luciferase has also been attached to other proteins to watch where they are in living organisms. The light is often too dim to follow in individual cells, but it has been used to label large collections of cancer cells. By watching for glowing cells, researchers follow a cancer as it grows and metastasizes, and test new anticancer therapies to see if they stop its growth.

Next: Glow in the Dark