The bacterium Legionella pneumophila is the responsible agent for Legionnaires' disease and has recently been shown to harbor a gene encoding a kinase that confers resistance to the aminoglycoside antibiotic spectinomycin (Suter, T. M., Viswanathan, V. K., and Cianciotto, N. P. (1997) Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 41, 1385-1388). We report the overproduction, purification, and characterization of this spectinomycin kinase from an expressing system in Escherichia coli. The purified protein shows stringent substrate specificity for spectinomycin with K m ؍ 21.5 M and k cat ؍ 24.2 s ؊1 and does not bind other aminoglycosides including kanamycin, amikacin, neomycin, butirosin, streptomycin, or apramycin. Purification of spectinomycin phosphate followed by characterization by mass spectrometry and 1 H, 13 C, and 31 P NMR established the site of phosphorylation to be at the hydroxyl group at position 9. Thus this enzyme is designated APH(9)-Ia (where APH is aminoglycoside kinase). The enzyme was inactivated by the electrophilic ATP analogue 5-[p-(fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl]adenosine, consistent with a nucleophilic residue such as Lys lining the nucleotide binding pocket. Sitedirected mutagenesis of Lys-52 and Asp-212 to Ala confirmed that these residues were important for catalysis, with Lys-52 playing a potential role in ATP binding and Asp-212 in phosphoryl transfer. Thio and solvent isotope effect experiments in the presence of either Mg 2؉ or Mn 2؉ were consistent with a kinetic mechanism in which phosphate transfer does not contribute significantly to the rate-limiting step. These results establish that APH(9)-Ia is a highly specific antibiotic resistance kinase and provides the requisite mechanistic information for future structural studies.