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1.
Growth hormone (GH) secretagogues (GHS) are synthetic peptidyl and non-peptidyl molecules which possess strong, dose-dependent and reproducible GH releasing effects as well as significant prolactin (PRL) and adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) releasing effects. The neuroendocrine activities of GHS are mediated by specific receptors mainly present at the pituitary and hypothalamic level but also elsewhere in the central nervous system. GHS release GH via actions at the pituitary and (mainly) the hypothalamic level, probably acting on GH releasing hormone (GHRH) secreting neurons and/or as functional somatostatin antagonists. GHS release more GH than GHRH and the coadministration of these peptides has a synergistic effect but these effects need the integrity of the hypothalamo-pituitary unit. The GH releasing effect of GHS is generally gender-independent and undergoes marked age-related variations reflecting age-related changes in the neural control of anterior pituitary function. The PRL releasing activity of GHS probably comes from direct pituitary action, which indeed is slight and independent of both age and gender. The acute stimulatory effect of GHS on ACTH/cortisol secretion is similar to that of corticotropin releasing hormone (CRH) and arginine vasopressin (AVP). In physiological conditions, the ACTH releasing activity of GHS is mediated by central mechanisms, at least partially, independent of both CRH and AVP but probably involving GABAergic mechanisms. The ACTH releasing activity of GHS is gender-independent and undergoes peculiar age-related variations showing a trend towards increase in ageing. GHS possess specific receptors also at the peripheral levels in endocrine and non-endocrine human tissues. Cardiac receptors are specific for peptidyl GHS and probably mediate GH-independent cardiotropic activities both in animals and in humans.  相似文献   

2.
R Dular  F LaBella 《Life sciences》1977,21(10):1527-1534
Synthetic TRH, crude hypothalamic extract and partially purified prolactin releasing factor stimulated prolactin and growth hormone release from isolated secretory granules. Somatostatin and partially purified prolactin release-inhibiting factor inhibited release of both hormones. Calcium promoted hormone release from granules; its releasing action was potentiated by TRH and ionophore A23187 but reduced by somatostatin.  相似文献   

3.
Growth hormone (GH) secretion and serum insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) decline with aging. This study addresses the role played by the hypothalamic regulators in the aging GH decline and investigates the mechanisms through which growth hormone secretagogues (GHS) activate GH secretion in the aging rats. Two groups of male Wistar rats were studied: young-adult (3 mo) and old (24 mo). Hypothalamic growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) mRNA and immunoreactive (IR) GHRH dramatically decreased (P < 0.01 and P < 0.001) in the old rats, as did median eminence IR-GHRH. Decreases of hypothalamic IR-somatostatin (SS; P < 0.001) and SS mRNA (P < 0.01), and median eminence IR-SS were found in old rats as were GHS receptor and IGF-I mRNA (P < 0.01 and P < 0.05). Hypothalamic IGF-I receptor mRNA and protein were unmodified. Both young and old pituitary cells, cultured alone or cocultured with fetal hypothalamic cells, responded to ghrelin. Only in the presence of fetal hypothalamic cells did ghrelin elevate the age-related decrease of GH secretion to within normal adult range. In old rats, growth hormone-releasing peptide-6 returned the levels of GH and IGF-I secretion and liver IGF-I mRNA, and partially restored the lower pituitary IR-GH and GH mRNA levels to those of young untreated rats. These results suggest that the aging GH decline may result from decreased GHRH function rather than from increased SS action. The reduction of hypothalamic GHS-R gene expression might impair the action of ghrelin on GH release. The role of IGF-I is not altered. The aging GH/IGF-I axis decline could be rejuvenated by GHS treatment.  相似文献   

4.
Growth hormone (GH) secretion is vividly pulsatile in all mammalian species studied. In a simplified model, self-renewable GH pulsatility can be reproduced by assuming individual, reversible, time-delayed, and threshold-sensitive hypothalamic outflow of GH-releasing hormone (GHRH) and GH release-inhibiting hormone (somatostatin; SRIF). However, this basic concept fails to explicate an array of new experimental observations. Accordingly, here we formulate and implement a novel fourfold ensemble construct, wherein 1) systemic GH pulses stimulate long-latency, concentration-dependent secretion of periventricular-nuclear SRIF, thereby initially quenching and then releasing multiphasic GH volleys (recurrent every 3-3.5 h); 2) SRIF delivered to the anterior pituitary gland competitively antagonizes exocytotic release, but not synthesis, of GH during intervolley intervals; 3) arcuate-nucleus GHRH pulses drive the synthesis and accumulation of GH in saturable somatotrope stores; and 4) a purely intrahypothalamic mechanism sustains high-frequency GH pulses (intervals of 30-60 min) within a volley, assuming short-latency reciprocal coupling between GHRH and SRIF neurons (stimulatory direction) and SRIF and GHRH neurons (inhibitory direction). This two-oscillator formulation explicates (but does not prove) 1) the GHRH-sensitizing action of prior SRIF exposure; 2) a three-site (intrahypothalamic, hypothalamo-pituitary, and somatotrope GH store dependent) mechanism driving rebound-like GH secretion after SRIF withdrawal in the male; 3) an obligatory role for pituitary GH stores in representing rebound GH release in the female; 4) greater irregularity of SRIF than GH release profiles; and 5) a basis for the paradoxical GH-inhibiting action of centrally delivered GHRH.  相似文献   

5.
Growth hormone (GH) releasing hexapeptide (GHRP)-6 and other peptidergic and non-peptidergic compounds collectively designated GH secretagogues (GHS) are potent releasers of GH in man. Their clinical future may be envisioned in three areas: therapy of GH-deficient (GHD) states, diagnosis of GHD, and non-endocrinological actions. As therapeutic agents and compared with GH itself, GHS have the disadvantage of lower potency but have a more physiological and safer profile of GH secretion. GHS administration could be indicated for states in which medium GH doses have been shown to be effective. As a diagnostic tool, the combined administration of GH releasing hormone plus GHRP-6, both at saturating doses, is currently the most powerful releaser of GH, devoid of side effects and convenient for the patient; it may also be an alternative to the insulin tolerance test for the diagnosis of GHD in adult patients. Their potential action at cardiovascular level is highly promising. Although the clinical future of GH releasing substances is appealing, probably the most relevant contribution has yet to be discovered. Once the endogenous ligand of the GHS receptor is identified, we will have an insight into the real hypothalamic control of GH secretion in man. With this knowledge it is likely that some diagnostic and therapeutic actions that are commonly undertaken will significantly change.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The populations of cells which produce immunoreactive growth hormone (GH) and thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) in the rat pituitary gland do not occur in fixed percentages but vary greatly under different physiological and experimental conditions. These variations can be directly correlated to the levels of stimulation and/or inhibition of the specific secretory activity. In both types of cell, sustained stimulation with trophic hormones or blockage of the feedback mechanisms induces remarkable growth in the specific cell population. Conversely, the interruption or inhibition of the stimulus thwarted the hormonal secretion and caused a massive degeneration of redundant cells. The stimulation of both GH and TSH cells is accompanied by an enhanced secretory activity as judged by their higher concentrations in serum and hypertrophy of the cytoplasmic organelles involved in synthesis and intracellular processing of the hormones. By contrast, interruption of the stimulus is followed by a variable degree of disruption of the cytoplasmic organization, including a sizable degeneration of cells. In stimulated rats, the concentrations of both GH and TSH decreased significantly in pituitary tissue due to mobilization of the hormonal stores contained in secretory granules. On the other hand, the withdrawal of stimuli blocked the hormonal release; this is reflected by the accumulation of both hormones and secretory granules in pituitary tissue. The strict correlation between the size of the GH and TSH populations with stimulation and inhibition of hormonal secretory activity reported in this investigation further supports the critical role played by the cell renewal process in endocrine secretion.  相似文献   

7.
The dimorphic pattern of growth hormone (GH) secretion and somatic growth in male and female mammals is attributable to the gonadal steroids. Whether these hormones mediate their effects solely on hypothalamic neurons, on somatotropes or on both to evoke the gender-specific GH secretory patterns has not been fully elucidated. The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of 17beta-estradiol, testosterone and its metabolites on release of GH, GH-releasing hormone (GHRH) and somatostatin (SRIF) from bovine anterior pituitary cells and hypothalamic slices in an in vitro perifusion system. Physiological concentrations of testosterone and estradiol perifused directly to anterior pituitary cells did not affect GH releases; whereas, dihydrotestosterone and 5alpha-androstane-3alpha, 17beta-diol increased GH. Perifusion of testosterone at a pulsatile rate, and its metabolites and estradiol at a constant rate to hypothalamic slices in series with anterior pituitary cells increased GH release. The androgenic hormones increased GHRH and SRIF release from hypothalamus; whereas, estradiol increased GHRH but decreased SRIF release. Our data show that estradiol and the androgens generated distinctly different patterns of GHRH and SRIF release, which in turn established gender-specific GH patterns.  相似文献   

8.
Pituitary somatotropes and melanotropes have enabled us to investigate the molecular basis and functional dynamics underlying secretory plasticity, an ability of endocrine cells to adapt their activity to the changing physiologic requirements, which generates discrete cell subpopulations within each cell hormonal type. Porcine somatotropes comprise two morphologically distinct subpopulations of low- (LD) and high-density (HD) cells, separable by Percoll gradient, that respond differently to hypothalamic regulators. In LD somatotropes, somatostatin (SRIF) inhibits growth hormone (GH)-releasing hormone (GHRH)-induced GH secretion. Conversely, SRIF alone stimulates GH release from HD somatotropes. These disparate SRIF actions entail a molecular signaling heterogeneity, in that SRIF increases cAMP levels in HD but not in LD cells as a requisite to stimulate GH release. GHRH-stimulated GH release also involves differential signaling in LD and HD cells: although it acts primarily through the cAMP/extracellular Ca2+ route in both somatotrope subsets, full response of LD somatotropes also requires the inositol phosphate/intracellular Ca2+ pathway. Amphibian melanotropes, which regulate skin adaptation to background color by secreting POMC-derived alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (alphaMSH), also comprise two subpopulations with divergent secretory phenotypes. LD melanotropes show high biosynthetic and secretory activities and high responsiveness to multiple hypothalamic factors. Conversely, HD melanotropes constitute a hormone-storage subset poorly responsive to regulatory inputs. Interestingly, in black-adapted animals most melanotropes acquire the highly-secretory LD phenotype, whereas white-background adaptation, which requires less alphaMSH, converts melanotropes to the storage HD phenotype. These same interconversions can be reproduced in vitro using appropriate hypothalamic factors, thus revealing the pivotal role of the hypothalamus in regulating the functional dynamics of the secretory plasticity. Furthermore, this regulation likely involves a precise control of the secretory pathway, as suggested by the differential distribution in LD and HD melanotropes of key components of the intracellular transport, processing, and storage of secretory proteins. Hence, molecular signaling heterogeneity and unique secretory pathway components seem to relevantly contribute to the control of secretory plasticity, thereby enabling endocrine cells to finely adjust their dynamic response to the specific hormonal requirements.  相似文献   

9.
To investigate, in real time, the transport and secretion of pituitary hormone, we have developed an experimental pituitary cell line, GH3 cell, which has secretory granules of growth hormone (GH) linked to enhanced yellow fluorescein protein (EYFP). This stable GH3 cell secretes secretory granules of GH linked to EYFP on stimulation by Ca2+ influx or Ca2 release from storage. This GH3 cell will be useful for the real-time visualization of the intracellular transport and secretion of GH.  相似文献   

10.
Growth hormone (GH) is secreted in the anterior pituitary gland by the somatotroph cells. Secretion is regulated by growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH) and somatostatin. Morever, GH secretagogues (GHS) can exert a considerable effect on GH secretion. In order to determine the effects of chronic treatment with the GHS Ipamorelin on the composition of the somatotroph cell population and on somatotroph GH content, an in vitro analysis was performed of the percentage of somatotroph cells (% of total), the ratio of different GH cell types (strongly/weakly-staining) and individual GH content, in pituitary cell cultures obtained from young female rats receiving Ipamorelin over 21 days (Ipamorelin group) and the effects were compared with those of GHRH (GHRH group) or saline (saline group). The ultrastructure of somatotroph cells did not change, but the volume density of secretion granules was increased (P<0.05) by previous in vivo Ipamorelin or GHRH treatment. In 3-day basal pituitary cell monolayer cultures, the percentage of somatotroph cells showed no modifications between groups, nor was there any change in the ratio of strongly/weakly immunostaining GH cells. In the Ipamorelin group alone, in vitro treatment with Ipamorelin (10(-8) M), or GHRP 6 (10(-8) M), or GHRH (10(-8) M) for 4 hours, increased the percentage of somatotroph cells, without modifying the ratio of strongly/weakly immunostained GH cells. Basal intracellular GH content in somatotroph cells over 4 hours was lower in the Ipamorelin group and the GHRH group than in the saline group. Only in the Ipamorelin group did Ipamorelin (10(-8) M), GHRP 6 (10(-8) M) and GHRH (10(-8) M) prompt increased intracellular GH content. These data suggest that, at least in the young female rat, the GHS Ipamorelin is able to exert a dynamic control effect on the somatotroph population and on GH hormone content.  相似文献   

11.
The glycoprotein hormones lutropin (LH) and follitropin (FSH) are both synthesized by gonadotrophs in the anterior pituitary but are stored in separate secretory granules prior to secretion. Despite having highly homologous beta-subunits and alpha-subunits with the identical amino acid sequence, the Asn-linked oligosaccharides on LH terminate with SO4-GalNAc while those on FSH terminate with sialic acid-Gal. In addition to LH and FSH, gonadotrophs secrete uncombined (free) alpha-subunit which bears the same sulfated oligosaccharides as LH. We have examined the synthesis and secretion of LH and free alpha-subunit in primary cultures of bovine pituitary cells in order to determine if the sulfated oligosaccharides have any impact on sorting. Our results show that newly synthesized free alpha-subunit is secreted exclusively via the constitutive pathway with a t1/2 of 1.8 h and is never found in dense-core secretory granules. In contrast, LH dimer is secreted by both the constitutive and the regulated pathways. Constitutive secretion and arrival in a dense secretory granule both occur with t1/2 values of 1-1.5 h for newly synthesized LH. Sulfation occurs immediately prior to arrival of LH in the secretory granule and is followed by a period of 1-1.5 h before the LH-containing granules become sensitive to release by gonadotropin releasing hormone. As a result the t1/2 for LH secretion in the presence of gonadotropin releasing hormone is 3.5 h. Sulfation of the free alpha-subunit oligosaccharides is not, therefore, sufficient to direct the alpha-subunit to secretory granules, and the information required for directing LH to granules must reside either in the beta-subunit or the alpha beta-complex.  相似文献   

12.
Divalent cations inhibited in vitro release of growth hormone (GH) and prolactin (PRL) from bovine adenohypophysial secretory granules. Zinc, nickel, and cadmium were most potent, exerting 50% inhibition of protein release near 0.1 mM; relative potency was Ni2+ greater than or equal to Zn2+ greater than Cd2+ much greater than Mn2+ greater than Co2+ greater than Cu2+ much greater than Mg2+ greater than Ca2+. The pH optimum for inhibition, 8.0, was lower than that for stimulation of release by thiols. EDTA augmented release and reversed metal inhibition. Both immunoassay and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis results indicated that metals inhibited both PRL and GH release in a dose-related fashion, and that PRL was more sensitive to all cations tested. With zinc present, known stimulators of release (reduced glutathione, ATP, and bicarbonate) restored GH release, but only ATP restored PRL release. Bicarbonate potently stimulated GH release, but only affected PRL when Mg2+ and ATP were present. We suggest that divalent cations influence GH and PRL release in a reversible fashion and at multiple sites. Some loci may be common to both lactotrope and somatotrope granules; however, the different sensitivities to metals and differential reversal by stimulators of release indicate that metal-protein interactions may also be specific for either granule, or for the hormones themselves.  相似文献   

13.
Morphine and the endogenous opioid peptides (EOP) exert similar effects on the neuroendocrine system. When adminstered acutely, they stimulate growth hormone (GH), prolactin (PRL), and adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) release, and inhibit release of luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle stimulating hormone (FSH),and thyrotropin (TSH). Recent studies indicate that the EOP probably have a physiological role in regulating pituitary hormone secretion. Thus injection of naloxone (opiate antagonist) alone in rats resulted in a rapid fall in serum concentrations of GH and PRL, and a rise in serum LH and FSH, suggesting that the EOP help maintain basal secretion of these hormones. Prior administration of naloxone or naltrexon inhibited stress-induced PRL release, and elevated serum LH in castrated male rats to greater than normal castrate levels. Studies on the mechanisms of action of the EOP and morphine on hormone secretion indicate that they have no direct effect on the pituitary, but act via the hypothalamus. There is no evidence that the EOP or morphine alter the action of the hypothalamic hypophysiotropic hormones on pituitary hormone secretion; they probably act via hypothalamic neurotransmitters to influence release of the hypothalamic hormones into the pituitary portal vessels. Preliminary observations indicate that they may increase serotonin and decrease dopamine metabolism in the hypothalamus, which could account for practically all of their effects on pituitary hormone secretion.  相似文献   

14.
Secretory granules containing prolactin (PRL) and growth hormone (GH) as essentially the only proteins were isolated by centrifugation. PRL and GH varied reciprocally in the granule preparations with the seasons. During winter PRL content was lowest (20%) and GH highest (80%); during summer the converse obtained: PRL, 70% and GH,, 30%. Both hormones were in almost equal proportion during the spring. The amount of either hormone released from granules and pituitary slices was directly related to its relative content in the gland. The pattern of PRL release from secretory granules and pituitary tissue in vitro was similar to that reported for blood levels in ruminants: low during winter and high during summer. It is concluded that seasonal factors affect primarily the synthesis and/or storage of PRL and GH, and there exists a direct relationship between intracellular stores and release.  相似文献   

15.
C M Moriarty 《Life sciences》1978,23(3):185-194
It is now accepted by most investigators that the initial action of most peptide hormones involves an interaction with a specific receptor on (or in) the plasma membrane of the target cell. A cascade of intracellular events results and culminates in the physiological response characteristic of the interaction of the particular hormone with its target cell. The regulation of hormone release from the adenohypophysis by the hypothalamic releasing hormones is presumed to occur via a similar process. The nature of the interaction at the cell surface as well as the details and sequence of the subsequent intracellular events are largely unknown. We do know, however, that two of the key factors regulating the intracellular secretory machinery in most cells are 1) the adenylate cyclase — cyclic AMP — protein kinase system and 2) the divalent cation, calcium. Since there have been several recent reviews (1–3) which have covered the role of the cyclic nucleotides in pituitary hormone secretion, this discussion will be restricted to a consideration of the regulatory role played by calcium.As was the case with tissues, the early work regarding calcium and the adenohypophysis followed the pattern of determining the ability of secretagogues to release pituitary hormones subsequent to various manipulations designed to remove what was often implicity considered to be extracellular calcium.  相似文献   

16.
Inhibitory effects of cysteamine on neuroendocrine function   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The action of cysteamine on anterior pituitary hormone secretion was studied in vivo using conscious, freely moving male rats and in vitro using anterior pituitary cells in monolayer culture. Administration of 500 micrograms cysteamine into the lateral cerebral ventricles of normal rats caused the complete inhibition of pulsatile GH secretion for a minimum of 6 h. This treatment also significantly decreased plasma concentrations of LH for at least 6 h in orchiectomized rat, TSH in short-term (0.5 month) thyroidectomized rats, and PRL in long-term (6 months) thyroidectomized rats. The in vivo stimulation of GH, LH, TSH and PRL with their respective releasing hormones 60 min after administration of cysteamine was not different from the response observed in rats pretreated with saline except for PRL where cysteamine pretreatment significantly inhibited the expected PRL increase. In vitro, 1 mM cysteamine decreased basal and TRH stimulated PRL release while not affecting basal or stimulated GH, LH, TSH and ACTH secretion. These data demonstrate the dramatic and wide-ranging effects of cysteamine on anterior pituitary hormone secretion. This action appears to be mediated through hypothalamic pathways for GH, LH and TSH and through a pituitary pathway for PRL.  相似文献   

17.
We have shown in the companion paper that somatotrophs dispersed from streptozotocin diabetic rats exhibit altered sensitivity to the natural hypothalamic controlling hormones, growth hormone releasing factor and somatostatin. We have further studied the effects on growth hormone release from dispersed adenohypophysial cells of normal and streptozotocin diabetic rats of stimulation by compounds that increase cyclic 3',5'-adenosine monophosphate formation or inhibit its breakdown and of a phorbol ester. The cells of the diabetic rats had no change in sensitivity in response to either cholera toxin or forskolin. A phosphodiesterase inhibitor caused an equal GH release from cells of both diabetic and normal animals after 60 min of incubation. There was no change in sensitivity of the cells of diabetic animals or in the maximal response of these cells to the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate when compared with normal cells. A low calcium medium that blocked growth hormone releasing factor stimulated growth hormone release from normal rat cells also blocked it from the cells of the diabetic rats. These results suggest that the defect in response of the somatotrophs of diabetic animals is specific and only occurs with the hypothalamic hormones and not with other secretagogues.  相似文献   

18.
DBcAMP significantly increased the release of GH but not of LH, FSH, TSH, or PRL, except in the presence of hypothalamic extract when it augmented the release of LH, FSH, and GH, reversed the inhibition of PRL, but did not further influence TSH release. Theophylline increased release of GH and PRL while inducing increased tissue content of cAMP without consistently increasing the release of TSH, LH, or FSH. Hypothalamic extractor K+-stimulated hormone rel-ase was consistently and significantly potentiated by theophylline. Neither hypothalamic extract, increased [K+], or synthetic TRH and LRH were able to raise tissue content of cAMP while producing their expected effects on hormone release. Cholera enterotoxin produced a highly significant increase in tissue content of the cyclic nucleotide but increased the release of GH only, and not that of LH, FSH, TSH, or PRL. DBcAMP was able to lower the threshold concentration of K+ required to stimulate release of GH, LH, and FSH and also to augment K+-stimulated release to the higher levels induced by the hypothalamic releasing hormones. It did not augment K+-induced release of TSH.  相似文献   

19.
Cells were dispersed from bovine anterior pituitary glands, by digestion with collagenase, and cultured. After 4 days the cell monolayers were incubated with fresh medium containing synthetic hypophysiotropic peptides for 2, 6, or 20 h, and hormone released into the medium was estimated by radioimmunoassay. After 2 h, thyroid releasing hormone (TRH) stimulated the release of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) up to eightfold, and of prolactin (PRL) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) about twofold at a minimal effective concentration of 1 ng/ml; enhanced growth hormone (GH) release was not apparent until 20 h, and release of luteinizing hormone (LH) and adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) was unaffected. Luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LH-RH) enhanced release of LH maximally (three- to fourfold) during a 2 h incubation and was effective at 0.1 ng/ml; FSH release was significantly enhanced by about 50% above control level. Growth hormone release inhibiting hormone (GH-RIH)(somatostatin) showed significant effects only in the 20 h incubation; GH release was inhibited by 50% and release of PRL was slightly, but significantly, enhanced. Pituitary cell monolayers apparently permit maximal expression of releasing activities inherent in the hypothalamic hormones.  相似文献   

20.
Role of calcium (Ca2+) in the effects of thyroliberin (TRH) and somatostatin (SRIF) on the release of growth hormone (GH), prolactin (PRL) and thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) from the rat adenohypophyseal cells in primary monolayer cultures has been studied. Decrease of extracellular Ca2+ diminished the stimulatory effects of TRH on TSH and PRL release. Ca2+ is also an important factor in the mechanism of SRIF action. Data obtained in the experiments with high Ca2+ levels in the medium indicate that some antagonistic interrelationship exists between Ca2+ and SRIF. These results suggest that the participation of cAMP alone is not sufficient for stimulus-secretion coupling. Another messenger, namely Ca2+, is necessary for the effects of hypothalamic hormones. On the other hand, the contribution of Ca2+ to the secretory process in mammotrophs, somatotrophs and thyrotrophs is not equal. PRL and TSH secretion is more dependent on the presence of extracellular Ca2+ than the release of GH.  相似文献   

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