We have previously mapped the agonist-induced phosphorylation of the rat lutropin/choriogonadotropin receptor (rLHR) to a locus of four serines (Ser(635), Ser(639), Ser(649), and Ser(652)) located in the C-terminal tail. The removal or mutation of this locus delays the time course of agonist-induced uncoupling of the rLHR from its effector system without affecting the overall magnitude of uncoupling, and it retards the endocytosis of the agonist-receptor complex. We have now prepared and analyzed four new rLHR mutants in which each of these serines were individually mutated to alanines, The data presented show that each mutation reduces agonist-promoted rLHR phosphorylation by 20-40%. Mutation of Ser(635) or Ser(639) delayed the time course of agonist-induced uncoupling to about the same extent as the simultaneous mutation of all four serines. Mutation of Ser(635) or Ser(639) also retarded agonist-induced internalization, but the magnitude of this decrease was less than that induced by the simultaneous mutation of all four serines, Mutation of Ser(649) had no effect on agonist-induced uncoupling but retarded agonist-induced internalization to the same extent as the simultaneous mutation of all four serines. R Mutation of Ser(652) has little or no effect on either of these two parameters. Co-transfection studies with dominant-negative arrestins and dominant-negative dynamin reveal that, despite differences in their rates of internalization, rLHR-wild-type, rLHR-S639A, and rLHR-S649A are internalized by an arrestin- and dynamin-dependent pathway. These data show that the structural requirements needed for the agonist-induced uncoupling and internalization of the rLHR are distinct.