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1.
An enduring debate in the study of development is the relative contribution of genetic and epigenetic factors in the genesis of an organism, that is, the nature vs. nurture debate. The behavior of the paired claws in the lobster offers promising material for pursuing this debate because of the way they develop. The paired claws and their closer muscles are initially symmetrical; both are slender in appearance and have a mixture of fast and slow fibers in their closer muscles. During a critical period of development, they become determined into a major (crusher) and minor (cutter) claw and during subsequent development acquire their final form and behavior: The crusher becomes a stout, molar-toothed claw capable of closing only slowly because its closer muscle has 100% slow fibers while the cutter becomes a slender, incisor-toothed claw capable of closing rapidly because its closer muscle has 90% fast fibers. Our initial hypothesis was that the more active claw became the crusher and its less active counterpart the cutter. Presumably, nerve activity would influence muscle transformation, which in turn would influence the exoskeleton to which they attach and hence claw morphology. Curtailing nerve activity to the claw prevented crusher development, while reflex activation of a claw promoted its development; both results support the notion that nerve activity directly regulates claw form and function. This is not, however, the case, for when both claws were reflexly exercised neither formed a crusher, signifying rather that bilateral differences in predominantly mechanoreceptive input to the paired claws somehow lateralized the claw ganglion [central nervous system (CNS)] into a crusher and cutter side. The side experiencing the greater activity becomes the crusher side while the contralateral side becomes the cutter and is also inhibited from ever becoming a crusher. This initial lateralization in the CNS is expressed, via as yet unknown pathways, at the periphery in claw morphology, muscle composition, and behavior. The critical period defines a time when the CNS is susceptible to being lateralized into a crusher and cutter side. Such lateralization is dependent upon experience of the environment in the form of mechanoreceptive input. In the absence of such experience, the CNS is not lateralized and paired cutter claws develop. Thus, while the critical period for crusher determination is genetically determined the actual trigger is influenced by experience. © 1992 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

2.
SYNOPSIS. The first pair of thoracic limbs in many crustaceansis elaborated into claws in which the principal muscle is thecloser. Changes in the fiber composition of the closer muscleduring claw development, regeneration and reversal are reviewedhere and the hypothesis is advanced that such changes are nerve-dependent.In adult lobsters, Homarus amencanus, the paired claws and closermuscles are bilaterally asymmetric, consisting of a minor orcutter claw with predominantly fast fibers and a small ventralband of slow and a major or crusher claw with 100% slow fibers.Yet in the larval and early juvenile stages the paired clawsand closer muscles are symmetric consisting of a central bandof fast fibers sandwiched by slow. Differentiation into a cutteror crusher muscle during subsequent juvenile development isby appropriate fiber type transformation. Experimental manipulationof the claws or the environment in early juvenile stages whenthe claws are equipotent revealed that the determination ofclaw and closer muscle asymmetry is dependent on the convergenceof neural input from the paired claws: the point of convergencemost likely being the CNS. Bilaterally symmetrical input resultsin the development of paired cutter claws while bilaterallyasymmetric input gives rise to dimorphic, cutter and crusherclaws. In the northern crayfish, Orconectes rusticus, wherethe paired claws are bilaterally similar, the closer muscletransforms its central band of fast fibers to slow, both duringprimary development and regeneration. Whether these fiber typetransformations are nerve-dependent is unknown. In adult snappingshrimps, Alpheus sp., the paired claws and closer muscles areasymmetric: the minor or pincer claw has a central band of fastfibers flanked by slow while the major or snapper claw has 100%slow fibers. Claw reversal occurs with removal of the snapperresulting in the transformation of the existing pincer to asnapper and the regeneration of a new pincer at the old snappersite. Transformation of the closer muscle from pincer to snappertype is by degeneration of the fast fiber band and hypertrophyof the slow fibers. Claw transformation can be either preventedif the pincer nerve is sectioned at the time of snapper removalor promoted if the snapper nerve is sectioned: both resultsimplicating a neural basis for muscle transformation.  相似文献   

3.
Contractile protein populations were determined, using gel electrophoresis, during development of the claw closer muscles of the lobster Homarus americanus. In the adult the paired claw closer muscles are asymmetric, consisting of a crusher muscle with all slow fibers and a cutter muscle with a majority of fast and a few slow fibers. The electrophoretic banding pattern of these adult fast and slow fibers shows a similarity in the major proteins including myosin, actin, and tropomyosin which are common to both fiber types. Paramyosin is slightly heavier in fast fibers than in slow. However, fast fibers have three proteins and slow fibers have four proteins which are unique to themselves. Several of these unique proteins belong to the regulatory troponin complexes. In juvenile 4th stage lobster, where the paired closer muscles are undifferentiated, the banding pattern reveals the presence of proteins common to both fiber types including myosin, actin, and tropomysin but the conspicuous absence of all unique fast fiber proteins as well as one unique slow fiber protein. By the juvenile 10th stage most of these unique proteins are present except for one unique slow fiber protein. Thus lobster fast and slow fiber differentiation entails coordinate gene activation to add unique contractile proteins.  相似文献   

4.
Calpains are Ca2+-dependent proteinases that mediate protein turnover in crustacean skeletal muscles. We used an antibody directed against lobster muscle-specific calpain (Ha-CalpM) to examine its distribution in differentiating juvenile lobster claw muscles. These muscles are comprised of both fast and slow fibers early in development, but become specialized into predominantly fast or exclusively slow muscles in adults. The transition into adult muscle types requires that myofibrillar proteins specific for fast or slow muscles to be selectively removed and replaced by the appropriate proteins. Using immunohistochemistry, we observed a distinct staining pattern where staining was preferentially localized in the fiber periphery along one side of the fiber. Immunolabeling with an antibody directed against synaptotagmin revealed that the calpain staining was greatest in the cytoplasm adjacent to synaptic terminals. In complementary analyses, we used sequence-specific primers with real-time PCR to quantify the levels of Ha-CalpM in whole juvenile claw muscles. These expression levels were not significantly different between cutter and crusher claws, but were positively correlated with the expression of fast myosin heavy chain. The anatomical localization of Ha-CalpM near motor endplates, coupled with the correlation with fast myofibrillar gene expression, suggests a role for this intracellular proteinase in fiber type switching.  相似文献   

5.
Research on the dimorphic claws of the snapping shrimp Alpheushas revealed moult-associated changes in structure and biochemicalcomposition—including atrophy and biochemical modification—ofclaw muscle fibers during morphological transformation of aclaw from a pincer to a snapper. Electrophysiology, SDS-PAGEgel electrophoresis, and immunocytochemistry were used to analyzechanges in claw closer muscle function and composition duringthe transformation process. Remodification of closer muscleduring claw transformation, involving the complete loss of acentral section of fast-contracting fibers and their replacementthrough enlargement of existing slowly-contracting segmentsof the muscle, may mimic similar muscle modifications duringinitial claw development. Exposure of intact animals to environmentalecdysteroid hormones accelerated the rate of these changes.These processes appear to be a product of a remarkable trophicplasticity of crustacean skeletal muscle first discovered bySkinner.  相似文献   

6.
We have performed surgical transections on nerves in the transforming claws of snapping shrimps. In normal transformation muscle restructuring occurs, involving degeneration of some fibers and biochemical changes in others. Surgical section of the entire second limb nerve root or of its distal, dorsal branch--both of which contain the motor axons to the closer muscle--prevents muscle restructuring, even though transformation of external claw morphology proceeds. Furthermore, nerve lesions must be performed within a specific time period after transformation has been triggered in order for the effects to be observed. We suggest that transformation involves an early sensitization of the targeted muscle and that this process depends upon an intact nervous pathway within the second nerve root.  相似文献   

7.
We compared the neuromuscular junctions on the main closer muscle in the first pair of chelipeds in the snapping shrimp Alpheus heterochelis by serial section electron microscopy. We sought an ultrastructural basis for the different behavioral and physiological functions of these dimorphic claws and for the role of the nervous system in claw transformation. We were unable to detect any statistically significant morphological differences between the junctions. Further, we found the muscle fiber populations and filament arrangements, as well as the electrical properties of the fibers, to be more homogeneous and similar to each other in A. heterochelis than those reported for another species, A. armillatus. We consider our results in light of recent data on the anatomy and electrical properties of the motor neurons within the CNS and conclude that the neural trigger for claw transformation involves factors not revealed by conventional electron microscopy.  相似文献   

8.
Bilateral asymmetry of the paired snapper/pincer claws may be reversed in adult snapping shrimps (Alpheus heterochelis). Removal of the snapper claw triggers transformation of the contralateral pincer claw into a snapper and the regeneration of a new pincer claw at the old snapper site. During this process the pincer closer muscle is remodeled to a snapper-type, and these alterations have been examined with the electron microscope. There is selective death of the central band of fast fibers, accompanied by an accumulation of electron-dense crysttaline bodies in the degenerating fibers. Two principal types of hemocytes (amebocytes and coagulocytes) invade the area and the degenerating muscle fibers. New myotubes also appear in this central site. The myotubes are characterized by a prolific network of presumptive sarcoplasmic reticulum and transverse tubules, nascent myofibrils, and crystalline bodies. The myotubes are innervated by many motor nerve terminals, and they subsequently differentiate into long-sarcomere (8–12 m), slow muscle fibers. Remodeling of the central band, therefore, occurs by degeneration of the fast fibers and their replacement by new slow fibers. Remnants of the degenerating fast fibers act as scaffolding for the myotubes which originate from adjacent satellite cells. The crystalline bodies may represent protein stores from the degeneration of the fast fibers, recycled for use in the genesis of new fibers. The invading hemocytes appear to play several roles, initially phagocytosing the fast muscle fibers, transporting the crystalline bodies into the new myotubes, and acting as stem cells for the new muscle fibers. Apart from the central band of fibers, the remaining pincer-type slow fibers with sarcomere lengths of 5–7 m are transformed via sarcomere lengthening into snapper-type slow fibers with sarcomere lengths of 7–12 m. Thus, during claw transformation in adult snapping shrimps, the pincer closer muscle is remodeled into a snapper closer muscle by selective death of the fast-fiber band, replacement of the fast-fiber band by new slow fibers, and transformation of the existing slow fibers to an even-slower variety. Note. This paper is dedicated to the fond memory of Professor M.S. Laverack whose enjoyment of biological research and gentle encouragement of such endeavours touched all those who knew him.  相似文献   

9.
Whereas many plasticity studies demonstrate the importance of inducible defences among prey, far fewer investigate the potential role of inducible offences among predators. Here we ask if natural differences in a snail's shell hardness can induce developmental changes to a predatory crab's claw size. To do this, we fed Littorina obtusata snails from either thick- or thin-shelled populations to captive European green crabs Carcinus maenas. The crabs' shell-breaking behaviour dominated among those fed thin-shelled snails, whereas crabs fed thick-shelled snails mostly winkled flesh through the shell opening without damaging the shell itself (a.k.a. aperture-probing behaviour). Significantly, the size of crab crusher claws grew in proportion to the frequency of shell-crushing behaviour and, for a same shell-crushing frequency, crabs fed thick-shelled snails grew larger crusher claws than those fed thin-shelled snails after two experimental moults. Diet and behaviour had no effect on the growth of the smaller cutter claws of same individuals, providing good evidence that allometric changes to crusher claws were indeed a result of differential use while feeding. Findings indicate that both predation habits and claw sizes are affected by green crabs' diet, supporting the hypothesis that prey-induced phenotypic plasticity contributes to earlier accounts of shell-claw covariance between this predator and its Littorina prey in the wild.  相似文献   

10.
Performance data for the claws of six sympatric species of Cancer crabs confirmed a puzzling pattern reported previously for two other decapod crustaceans (stone crabs, Menippe mercenaria, and lobsters, Homarus americanus): Although biting forces increased, maximum muscle stresses (force per unit area) declined with increasing claw size. The negative allometry of muscle stress and the stress at a given claw size were fairly consistent within and among Cancer species despite significant differences in adult body size and relative claw size, but were not consistent among decapod genera. Therefore, claw height can be used as a reliable predictor of maximum biting force for the genus Cancer, but must be used with caution as a predictor of maximum biting force in wider evolutionary and biogeographical comparisons of decapods. The decline in maximum muscle stress with increasing claw size in Cancer crabs contrasts with the pattern in several other claw traits. Significantly, three traits that affect maximal biting force increased intraspecifically with increasing claw size: relative claw size, mechanical advantage, and sarcomere length of the closer muscle. Closer apodeme area and angle of pinnation of the closer muscle fibers varied isometrically with claw size. The concordant behavior of these traits suggests selection for higher biting forces in larger crabs. The contrast between the size dependence of muscle stress (negative allometry) and the remaining claw traits (isometry or positive allometry) strongly suggests that an as yet unidentified constraint impairs muscle performance in larger claws. The negative allometry of muscle stress in two distantly related taxa (stone crabs and lobsters) further suggests this constraint may be widespread in decapod crustaceans. The implications of this performance constraint for the evolution of claw size and the "arms-race" between decapod predators and their hard-shelled prey is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Myofibrillar proteins in muscles of the claws and abdomen of lobster, Homarus americanus, and the claws of fiddler crab, Uca pugnax, and land crab, Gecarcinus lateralis, have been analyzed with sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Fibers contained numerous isoforms of structural and regulatory proteins in assemblages correlated with fiber type. One fast (F) and two slow (S1 and S2) fibers were identified. All F fibers possessed two isoforms of paramyosin (P1 and P2), while all slow fibers, with the exception of Uca major claw, contained only the P2 variant. S1 and S2 fibers were distinguished by the distribution of a large isoform of troponin-T (T1; Mr = 55,000); S2 fibers in all three species contained T1 in addition to one or two smaller-molecular-weight variants usually associated with S1 fibers. In order to determine whether the slow fibers differed in histochemical properties, land crab claw closer muscle was cryosectioned and stained for myofibrillar ATPase and NADH diaphorase activities. Most S2 fibers had lower ATPase and higher NADH diaphorase activities than S1 fibers, which indicated that S2 fibers had a lower rate of contraction and were more fatigue-resistant than S1 fibers. It is proposed that the S1 and S2 fibers defined by biochemical and histochemical criteria are identical to the slow-twitch and tonic fibers, respectively characterized physiologically.  相似文献   

12.
In the pristine claws of adult crayfish the muscle fibers of the closer are all of slow type as judged by sarcomere lengths of greater than 6 micron, and a uniform degree of myofibrillar ATPase activity. In regenerating claws of mature and immature crayfish, the muscle has a central band of fast type fibers as characterized by shorter sarcomeres (less than 6 micron) and a higher degree of ATPase activity than the surrounding slow fibers. During primary development, the closer muscle has a fiber composition similar to that of the regenerating muscle except for a smaller proportion of fast fibers. Thus the reappearance of fast fibers during regeneration recapitulates ontogeny while their enhanced proportions may reflect epigenetic influences such as restriction of nerve-mediated muscle activity in the limb bud.  相似文献   

13.
Robert W.  Elner  Alan  Campbell 《Journal of Zoology》1981,193(2):269-286
The dimorphic chelae from both sexes and a wide size range of American lobsters, Homarus americanus , were studied with respect to allometry, mechanical advantage, closer muscle apodeme area and occlusive surface morphology. The maximum forces produced by the crusher and cutter chelae were estimated by an in vitro and a static in vivo technique. Another in vivo technique, involving strain gauges, was used to measure the forces delivered by crusher chelae. The latter technique gave data on force pulse duration and frequency, and in combination with a video-recording system could be useful for future studies of predation behaviour. The maximum forces generated increased with chela height for both crusher and cutter chelae. A maximum force of 256 Newtons (N) was recorded near the middle of the crusher dactyl from a 172-mm carapace length lobster, by the strain gauge technique. Crusher chelae developed larger maximum forces than cutter chelae of the same height. This was attributable more to the crusher chela's higher mechanical advantage than to its developing higher input forces. The mean mechanical advantage for male crusher (0.33) was significantly higher than that for female crusher chelae (0.29). Male and female cutter chelae had the same mean mechanical advantage values (0.16). Values for maximum stress developed during contraction in both the crusher and cutter chela closer muscles decreased with chela size. The morphology of the chelae correlated to the forces produced and predation behaviour.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Comparisons were made of the passive electrical properties of closer muscle fibers in the dimorphic claws of snapping shrimp,Alpheus armillatus. During claw transformation the small fibers of pincer claws grow to become much larger snapper claw fibers. As muscle fibers grow, the relationship of fiber input resistance (R 0) to fiber diameter (d) is predicted by the proportionality,R 0d –3/2. Muscle fiber membrane resistance,R m, is independent of fiber diameter, but membrane capacitance,C m, grows with diameter. This results in a 40 to 50 fold reduction in fiber input impedance as fiber diameter enlarges during transformation. Reductions of muscle fiber impedance are partially compensated by 2–5 fold increases in quantal content at excitatory synapses on snapper muscle fibers. However, changes in quantal content during transformation apparently are independent of fiber diameter per se. Excitatory junction potentials in both pincer and snapper muscle fibers have equal amplitude. Because fiber input impedance decreases precipitously during transformation, and in view of the relatively small compensatory changes in quantal content at excitatory synapses, additional pre- or post-synaptic modifications must supplement increased quantal content to maintain synaptic efficacy in transformed muscle fibers.Abbreviations ejp excitatory junctional potential - epp endplate potential - mepp miniature endplate potential  相似文献   

15.
Lobster claw muscles undergo a process of fiber switching during development, where isomorphic muscles containing a mixture of both fast and slow fibers, become specialized into predominantly fast, or exclusively slow, muscles. Although this process has been described using histochemical methods, we lack an understanding of the shifts in gene expression that take place. In this study, we used several complementary techniques to follow changes in the expression of a number of myofibrillar genes in differentiating juvenile lobster claw muscles. RNA probes complementary to fast and slow myosin heavy chain (MHC) mRNA were used to label sections of 7th stage (approximately 3 months old) juvenile claw muscles from different stages of the molt cycle. Recently molted animals (1-5 days postmolt) had muscles with distinct regions of fast and slow gene expression, whereas muscles from later in the molt cycle (7-37 days postmolt) had regions of fast and slow MHC expression that were co-mingled and indistinct. Real-time PCR was used to quantify several myofibrillar genes in 9th and 10th stages (approximately 6 months old) juvenile claws and showed that these genes were expressed at significantly higher levels in the postmolt claws, as compared with the intermolt and premolt claws. Finally, Western blot analyses of muscle fibers from juvenile lobsters approximately 3 to 30 months in age showed a shift in troponin-I (TnI) isoform expression as the fibers differentiated into the adult phenotypes, with expression of the adult fast fiber TnI pattern lagging behind the adult slow fiber TnI pattern. Collectively, these data show that juvenile and adult fibers differ both qualitatively and quantitative in the expression of myofibrillar proteins and it may take as much as 2 years for juvenile fibers to achieve the adult phenotype.  相似文献   

16.
The closer muscle of large-clawed decapod crustaceans undergoes a proecdysial (premolt) atrophy to facilitate withdrawal of the appendage at ecdysis. This atrophy involves the activation of both calcium-dependent (calpains) and ubiquitin (Ub)/proteasome-dependent proteolytic systems that break down proteins to reduce muscle mass. Moreover, the large slow-twitch (S(1)) fibers undergo a greater atrophy than the small slow-tonic (S(2)) fibers. Both polyUb mRNA and Ub-protein conjugates increase during claw muscle atrophy. In this study in situ hybridization and RT-PCR were used to determine the temporal and spatial expression of polyUb and alpha-actin. A cDNA encoding the complete sequence of lobster muscle alpha-actin was characterized; a probe synthesized from the cDNA provided a positive control for optimizing RT-PCR and in situ hybridization. PolyUb was expressed at low levels in claw closer muscle from anecdysial (intermolt) land crab. By early proecdysis (premolt; stage D(0)), polyUb mRNA levels increased in medial fibers that insert along the midline of the apodeme, with greater expression in S(1) than S(2), while levels remained low in peripheral fibers. By late proecdysis, polyUb mRNA decreased in central fibers, while mRNA increased in peripheral S(1) fibers. In contrast, alpha-actin was expressed in lobster claw muscles at relatively constant levels during the intermolt cycle. These results suggest that Ub/proteasome-dependent proteolysis contributes to enhanced turnover of myofibrillar proteins during claw closer muscle atrophy. Furthermore, atrophy is not synchronous within the muscle; it begins in medial fibers and then progresses peripherally.  相似文献   

17.
Longo, M.V., Goldemberg, A.L. and Díaz, A.O. 2011. The claw closer muscle of Neohelice granulata (Grapsoidea, Varunidae): a morphological and histochemical study. —Acta Zoologica (Stockholm) 92 : 126–133. The claw closer muscle of Neohelice granulata was studied according to histological, histochemical, and morphometrical criteria. Adult male crabs in intermoult stage were collected from Mar Chiquita Lagoon (Buenos Aires, Argentina). Muscle fibers show evident striations and oval‐elongated nuclei with loose chromatin. The loose connective tissue among muscle fibers consists of cells and fibers embedded in an amorphous substance. Muscle histochemistry reveals two slow fiber types: ‘A’ and ‘B’. Prevailing A fibers are larger, and they usually show, with respect to B type, a weaker reaction to whole techniques. Fibers with short (SS), intermediate (IS), and long sarcomeres (LS) appear in the claw closer muscle, being the LS fibers predominant. Concluding, the histochemical and morphometrical characteristics of the claw closer muscle fibers of N. granulata are indicative of slow fibers. The slow A type (low resistant to fatigue) prevails.  相似文献   

18.
Durophagous crabs successfully hunt hard-shelled prey by subjecting them to extremely strong biting forces using their claws. Here I show that, for a given body mass, six species of Cancer crabs (Cancer antennarius, Cancer branneri, Cancer gracilis, Cancer magister, Cancer oregonensis and Cancer productus) were able to exert mean maximum biting forces greater than the forces exerted in any other activity by most other animals. These strong biting forces were in part a result of the high stresses (740-1350 kN m(-2)) generated by the claw closer muscle. Furthermore, the maximum muscle stress increased with increasing mean resting sarcomere length (10-18 microm) for the closer muscle of the claws of these six Cancer species. A more extensive analysis incorporating published data on muscle stresses in other animal groups revealed that stress scales isometrically with the resting sarcomere length among species, as predicted by the sliding filament model of muscle contraction. Therefore, muscle or filament traits other than a very long mean sarcomere length need not be invoked in explaining the high stresses generated by crustacean claws.  相似文献   

19.
Summary The fast axon supplying the closer muscle in crayfish (Procambarus clarkii) normally fires few impulses and generates large excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) that fatigue rapidly with repeated stimulation. When the dactyl of one claw is immobilized in the closed position, impulse production in the fast axon decreases on the immobilized side and increases on the contralateral side. On the immobilized side, EPSPs become larger but more readily depressed with repeated stimulation, while converse changes occur on the contralateral side.In order to establish whether the smaller number of impulses on the immobilized side was responsible for the changes in EPSPs, extra impulses were generated in the fast axon of immobilized claws by implanting electrodes in the claw. Raising the impulse production to equal or exceed that of the contralateral side did not prevent the changes in EPSPs produced by immobilization. Thus, it is probable that changes in the level of synaptic input to central parts of the fast closer excitor neuron are mainly responsible for altered physiological properties of peripheral synapses, rather than the fast axon's impulse traffic per se.  相似文献   

20.
The paired thoracic chelipeds or claws of adult snapping shrimp, Alpheus heterochelis, are bilaterally asymmetric, consisting of an enlarged and elaborate, sound-producing major (snapper) claw and a much smaller minor (pincer) claw. These paired claws vary in the composition of their external sensilla. Both possess long serrulate and simple short setae but the snapper also have plumose setae and long serrulate setae on the plunger. The pincers differ in having short serrulate setae and, in males alone, a prominent fringe of plumoserrate setae. During regeneration of each claw type, these setal structures are gradually added over three molts to reach the pristine condition. The long serrulate and simple short setae appear first, being seen in intermolt limb buds and commonly in both claws. Setae exclusive to each claw, i.e., plumoserrate and short serrulate in the pincer and plumose and long serrulate on the plunger in the snapper, appear sparsely in either the regenerated 1st or 2nd postmolt claw, they proliferate in the subsequent 2nd or 3rd postmolt claw. Transformation of the pincer claw to the snapper type begins in the 1st postmolt stage with the loss of pincer setae and addition of snapper setae and is completed by the 3rd postmolt stage. Since changes in composition of the external sensilla are restricted to postmolt stages, the underlying hypodermis is presumably being remodeled during proecdysis.  相似文献   

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