luciferins
Luciferins are a group of small organic molecules that act as substrates for bioluminescence. In organisms that produce light, luciferin is oxidized by a luciferase enzyme, often in the presence of cofactors, and the energy released is emitted as photons. The term covers many chemically distinct compounds; different taxa use different luciferins.
In insects such as fireflies and some beetles, the substrate is D-luciferin. The luciferase-catalyzed reaction requires
In marine and some other organisms, coelenterazine is a common luciferin. It emits blue light when oxidized
Bioluminescence depends on the interaction of luciferin with luciferase and, in many systems, requires oxygen and,
Applications include the use of luciferins in biotechnology and research as reporters for gene expression, cell