Luciferase (EC 1.13.12.7) from the North American firefly, Photinus pyralis, is widely used as a reporter enzyme in cell biology. One of its distinctive properties is a pronounced susceptibility to proteolytic degradation that causes luciferase to have a very short intracellular half-life. To define the structural basis for this behavior and possibly facilitate the design of more stable forms of luciferase, limited proteolysis studies were undertaken using trypsin and chymotrypsin to identify regions of the protein whose accessible and flexible character rendered them especially sensitive to cleavage. Regions of amino acid sequence 206 -220 and 329 -341 were found to be sensitive, and because the region around 206 -220 had high homology with other luciferases, CoA ligases, and peptidyl synthetases, this region was selected for mutagenesis experiments intended to determine which of its amino acids were essential for activity. Surprisingly, many highly conserved residues including Ser 198 , Ser 201 , Thr 202 , and Gly 203 could be mutated with little effect on the luminescent activity of P. pyralis luciferase. One mutation, however, S198T, caused several alterations in enzymatic properties including shifting the pH optimum from 8.1 to 8.7, lowering the K m for Mg-ATP by a factor of 4 and increasing the half-time for light emission decay by a factor of up to 150. While the S198T luciferase was less active than wild type, activity could be restored by the introduction of the additional L194F and N197Y mutations. In addition to indicating the involvement of this region in ATP binding, these results provide a new form of the enzyme that affords a more versatile reporter system. Luciferase (EC 1.13.12.7) from the North American firefly, Photinus pyralis, is widely used as a reporter enzyme in studies of gene expression (1). Firefly luciferase first catalyzes the formation of a bound luciferin-AMP, which then reacts with O 2 to generate oxyluciferin-AMP in an excited state. Breakdown of this intermediate to oxyluciferin, CO 2 , and AMP is accompanied by the emission of a photon. The high quantum yield for this process, nearly a single photon emitted per reacted luciferin molecule (2), reflects not only an efficient catalytic machinery but also a highly favorable environment for radiative decay of an excited state.The kinetics of light emission can be modulated by coenzyme A, but this is not a required substrate (3, 4). Luciferase can also function as a ligase (5) as the AMP group of the enzyme⅐luciferyl-AMP complex can be transferred to ATP to produce diadenosine tetraphosphate.Despite many studies, relatively little was known about the structure of luciferase or the nature of its active site until recently. Cloning and sequencing of luciferase from the firefly (6) and its homologues from several beetles (reviewed in Ref . 7) have shown that these enzymes are related to certain acyltransferases (8, 9). Alignment of these related sequences reveals conserved residues that may be important for enzymatic activity. For exam...