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1.
Porphyromonas gingivalis , a Gram-negative anaerobe, is known to be involved in the pathogenesis of periodontitis. P. gingivalis fimbriae, which are proteinaceous appendages extending from the cell surface, may contribute to the adherence of the organism to the host cell surface. We previously suggested that arginine-specific protease produced by P. gingivalis enhanced the adherence of purified fimbriae to fibroblasts or matrix proteins. In this study, we have revealed the mechanism of the enhanced binding of fimbriae by the protease in more detail. Arg-specific protease and fimbriae were obtained from P. gingivalis 381 cells and purified. We then analysed the interaction of fimbriae and immobilized fibronectins (intact or partially degraded fibronectin by the purified protease) by using the real-time biomolecular interaction analysis (BIAcore) system with an optical biosensor based on the principles of surface plasmon resonance. BIAcore profiles demonstrated an enhanced interaction between fimbriae and protease-degraded fibronectin. We also showed specific binding of fimbriae to the degraded fibronectin by means of BIAcore analysis. The binding of biotinylated fimbriae to immobilized fibronectin was examined by enzyme-linked biotin–avidin assay. The purified protease enhanced the fimbrial binding to the immobilized fibronectin. The enhancement was inhibited by the addition of l -Arg, or oligopeptides containing the Arg residue at the C-terminus in the fimbrial binding reaction, suggesting that the P. gingivalis fimbriae may potentially have an ability to bind tightly to the Arg residue at C-terminus. Taken together, these studies indicate that P. gingivalis arginine-specific protease can expose a cryptitope in the matrix protein molecules, i.e. the C-terminal Arg residue of the host matrix proteins, so that the organism can adhere to the surface layer in the oral cavity through fimbriae–Arg interaction (a novel host–parasite relationship).  相似文献   

2.
Adhesion to extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins plays a crucial role in invasive fungal diseases. ECM proteins bind to the surface of Paracoccidioides brasiliensis yeast cells in distinct qualitative patterns. Extracts from Pb18 strain, before (18a) and after animal inoculation (18b), exhibited differential adhesion to ECM components. Pb18b extract had a higher capacity for binding to ECM components than Pb18a. Laminin was the most adherent component for both samples, followed by type I collagen, fibronectin, and type IV collagen for Pb18b. A remarkable difference was seen in the interaction of the two extracts with fibronectin and their fragments. Pb18b extract interacted significantly with the 120-kDa fragment. Ligand affinity binding assays showed that type I collagen recognized two components (47 and 80kDa) and gp43 bound both fibronectin and laminin. The peptide 1 (NLGRDAKRHL) from gp43, with several positively charged amino acids, contributed most to the adhesion of P. brasiliensis to Vero cells. Synthetic peptides derived from peptide YIGRS of laminin or from RGD of both laminin and fibronectin showed the greatest inhibition of adhesion of gp43 to Vero cells. In conclusion, this work provided new molecular details on the interaction between P. brasiliensis and ECM components.  相似文献   

3.
Porphyromonas gingivalis is a predominant periodontal pathogen, whose fimbriae are considered to be a major virulence factor, especially for bacterial adherence and invasion of host cells. In the present study, we investigated the influence of fimbriae on the interactions between alphavbeta3- and alpha5beta1-integrins and their ligand extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins (vitronectin and fibronectin), using human alphavbeta3- and alpha5beta1-integrin-overexpressing CHO cell lines (CHOalphavbeta3 and CHOalpha5beta1, respectively). P. gingivalis was found to have significantly greater binding to CHOalphavbeta3 and CHOalpha5beta1 than to control cells, whereas a fimbria-deficient mutant showed negligible binding to any of the tested cell lines. CHOalphavbeta3 and CHOalpha5beta1 cells attached to the polystyrene culture dishes in the presence of their ligand ECM proteins, while fimbriae markedly inhibited those attachments in a dose-dependent manner, with the highest dose of fimbriae achieving complete inhibition. In addition, the binding of vitronectin and fibronectin to CHOalphavbeta3 and CHOalpha5beta1 was inhibited by P. gingivalis cells. These results suggest that P. gingivalis fimbriae compete with ECM proteins for alphavbeta3- and alpha5beta1-integrins, and inhibit integrin/ECM protein-related cellular functions.  相似文献   

4.
Tissue-binding specificity of the type-3 fimbriae of pathogenic enteric bacteria was determined using frozen sections of human kidney. A wild-type Klebsiella sp. strain and the recombinant strain Escherichia coli HB101(pFK12), both expressing type-3 fimbriae, as well as the purified type-3 fimbriae effectively bound to sites at or adjacent to tubular basement membranes, Bowman's capsule, arterial walls, and the interstitial connective tissue. Bacterial adherence to kidney was decreased after collagenase treatment of the tissue sections. Recombinant strains expressing type-3 fimbriae specifically adhered to type V collagen immobilized on glass slides, whereas other collagens, fibronectin or laminin did not support bacterial adherence. In accordance with these findings, specific binding of purified type-3 fimbriae to immobilized type V collagen was demonstrated. Specific adhesion to type V collagen was also seen with the recombinant strain HB101(pFK52/pDC17), which expresses the mrkD gene of the type-3 fimbrial gene cluster in association with the pap-encoded fimbrial filament of E. coli, showing that the observed binding was mediated by the minor lectin (MrkD) protein of the type-3 fimbrial filament. The interaction is highly dependent on the conformation of type V collagen molecules since type V collagen in solution did not react with the fimbriae. Specific binding to type V collagen was also exhibited by type-3 fimbriate strains of Yersinia and Salmonella, showing that the ability to use type V collagen as tissue target is widespread among enteric bacteria.  相似文献   

5.
Curli are fimbrial structures expressed by Escherichia coli that specifically interact with matrix proteins such as fibronectin and laminin. Similar structures are also expressed by Salmonella enteritidis and have been denoted thin aggregative fimbriae. Bacteria expressing curli and thin aggregative fimbriae were found to bind radiolabelled plasminogen as well as the tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA). By contrast, E. coli carrying a gene locus with an insertionally inactivated chromosomal curlin subunit were unable to bind the two human proteins. The purified subunit polypeptides of curli and thin aggregative fimbriae bound plasminogen and t-PA with high affinity (1 × 108 to 2 × 108 M-1). The binding of plasminogen and t-PA to curli-expressing E. coli was only partially inhibited by fibronectin and laminin. Plasminogen absorbed from human plasma by curli-expressing E. coli was readily converted to plasmin by t-PA; both plasmin and t-PA were functionally active when bound to the bacteria. A simultaneous binding of fibrinolytic proteins and matrix proteins to fimbriae of E. coli and S. enteritidis could provide these pathogens with both adhesive and invasive properties.  相似文献   

6.
Self-assembling proteins that form crystalline surface layers on many microorganisms can be involved in bacterial-host adhesion via specific interactions with components of the extracellular matrix. Here, we describe the interaction of the Lactobacillus brevis ATCC 8287 surface-layer protein SlpA with fibronectin, laminin, fibrinogen and collagen using surface plasmon resonance. SlpA was found to interact with high affinity to fibronectin and laminin, with a respective binding constant of 89.8 and 26.7 nM. The interaction of SlpA with collagen and fibrinogen was found to be of much lower affinity, with respective binding constants of 31.8 and 26.1 microM. The serine protease inhibitor benzamidine greatly reduced the affinity of SlpA for fibronectin, whereas the affinity for laminin remained unaffected. No protease activity of the purified SlpA protein could be detected. These data suggest that L. brevis may interact with host cells directly through high affinity interactions with laminin and fibronectin predominantly, involving distinct regions of the SlpA protein.  相似文献   

7.
Candida albicans yeasts adhered avidly to extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins, type IV collagen, laminin, and fibronectin immobilized on plastic. Type IV collagen showed an increase of adherence of 400% above control values; laminin, 300%; and fibronectin, 150%. In addition, all three (in quantities of 0.02-200 micrograms/well of a culture tray) bound yeasts in a dose-response fashion. Adherence was inhibited when the proteins were preincubated with specific antibody, except with type IV collagen. Soluble laminin or fibronectin inhibited yeast adherence to the same proteins by 36 and 94%, respectively. Soluble fibronectin bound to the yeast surface and in so doing inhibited subsequent yeast adherence to fibronectin by 66%. By comparison, Candida albicans yeasts adhered in smaller numbers to glycosaminoglycans (GAGs). Keratan sulfate, hyaluronic acid, chondroitin sulfate, Type B, and heparin actually decreased yeast adherence compared to control from 10% to 25%.  相似文献   

8.
Interactions of bovine follicular fluid glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) with extracellular matrix (ECM) components fibronectin and laminin and with low-density lipoproteins (LDL) were examined using affinity chromatography. Glycosaminoglycans from small (diameter less than 5 mm) and large (diameter 11-20 mm) follicles were isolated from follicular fluid. The dermatan sulphate or heparan sulphate from small or large follicles was applied to Fn-, Lm- or LDL-Sepharose columns. Portions of each fraction of the bound or unbound GAG were then subjected to gel filtration h.p.l.c. for quantification. The binding interaction between dermatan sulphate and fibronectin was significantly greater than between heparan sulphate and fibronectin (P less than 0.05); the binding interaction between GAGs from small follicles and fibronectin was significantly greater than between GAGs from large follicles (P less than 0.05). The binding interaction between GAGs from small follicles and laminin was significantly greater than for GAGs from large follicles (P less than 0.05). Dermatan sulphate from small follicles bound to fibronectin (42%), laminin (36%) and LDL (14%) and that from large follicles bound to fibronectin (14%), laminin (23%) and LDL (14%). Heparan sulphate from small follicles bound to fibronectin (17%), laminin (15%) and that from large follicles bound to fibronectin (13%), laminin (10%) and LDL (6%). These results suggest that dermatan sulphate, but not heparan sulphate, from follicles at different stages of development exhibit a varied ability to interact with components of the ECM. Both substances bound to LDL comparably in small amounts.  相似文献   

9.
Streptococcus suis serotype 2 binding to extracellular matrix proteins   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Streptococcus suis serotype 2 is a major swine and human pathogen that causes septicemia and meningitis. The ability of S. suis serotype 2 to bind to different extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins was evaluated by ELISA. All 23 strains tested bound to plasma and cellular fibronectin and collagen types I, III, and V, some to fibrin, vitronectin, and laminin, and none to the other ECM proteins tested. An unencapsulated isogenic mutant bound to ECM proteins better than its parental encapsulated strain, suggesting that the polysaccharide capsule interfered with binding. Cross-inhibition was observed between soluble plasma fibronectin and collagens in the ECM adherence assay, indicating that binding domains for both proteins exist on the same or nearby bacterial surface molecules. On the other hand, pre-incubation with plasma fibronectin increased binding to collagen IV, suggesting that S. suis might use fibronectin as a bridging molecule. The results of heat treatment and proteolytic digestion suggest that adhesins for these ECM proteins are proteinaceous in nature.  相似文献   

10.
Regulation by the extracellular matrix (ECM) of migration, motility, and adhesion of olfactory neurons and their precursors was studied in vitro. Neuronal cells of the embryonic olfactory epithelium (OE), which undergo extensive migration in the central nervous system during normal development, were shown to be highly migratory in culture as well. Migration of OE neuronal cells was strongly dependent on substratum- bound ECM molecules, being specifically stimulated and guided by laminin (or the laminin-related molecule merosin) in preference to fibronectin, type I collagen, or type IV collagen. Motility of OE neuronal cells, examined by time-lapse video microscopy, was high on laminin-containing substrata, but negligible on fibronectin substrata. Quantitative assays of adhesion of OE neuronal cells to substrata treated with different ECM molecules demonstrated no correlation, either positive or negative, between the migratory preferences of cells and the strength of cell-substratum adhesion. Moreover, measurements of cell adhesion to substrata containing combinations of ECM proteins revealed that laminin and merosin are anti-adhesive for OE neuronal cells, i.e., cause these cells to adhere poorly to substrata that would otherwise be strongly adhesive. The evidence suggests that the anti- adhesive effect of laminin is not the result of interactions between laminin and other ECM molecules, but rather an effect of laminin on cells, which alters the way in which cells adhere. Consistent with this view, laminin was found to interfere strongly with the formation of focal contacts by OE neuronal cells.  相似文献   

11.
The surface of Aeromonas salmonicida is covered by a tetragonal paracrystalline array (A-layer) composed of a single protein (A-protein, Mr = 50,778). This array is a virulence factor. Cells containing A-layer and isolated A-layer sheets specifically bound laminin and fibronectin with high affinity. Binding by cells was inactivated by selective removal of A-layer at pH 2.2, and neither isogenic A-layer-deficient A. salmonicida mutants nor tetragonal paracrystalline array producing Aeromonas hydrophila and Aeromonas sobria strains bound either matrix protein. Laminin binding was by a single class of high affinity interactions (cell Kd = 1.52 nM), whereas fibronectin bound via two classes of interactions, one being similar to that of laminin (cell Class 2 interaction Kd = 6.6 nM). This interaction with both proteins was partly hydrophobic. The Class 1 fibronectin interaction was of lower affinity (cell Kd = 218 nM) and distinct. Purified A-protein inhibited binding of both matrix proteins to A-layer, and trypsin cleavage localized the matrix-protein binding region to the N-terminal major trypsin-resistant structural domain of A-protein. Monoclonal antibody inhibition studies showed that A-protein was folded such that Fabs of only one of two antibodies with epitopes mapping C-terminal to this trypsin-resistant peptide was capable of blocking binding.  相似文献   

12.
Agrin is a major brain heparan sulfate proteoglycan which is expressed in nearly all basal laminae and in early axonal pathways of the developing central nervous system. To further understand agrin's function during nervous system development, we have examined agrin's ability to interact with several heparin-binding extracellular matrix proteins. Our data show that agrin binds FGF-2 and thrombospondin by a heparan sulfate-dependent mechanism, merosin and laminin by both heparan sulfate-dependent and -independent mechanisms, and tenascin solely via agrin's protein core. Furthermore, agrin's heparan sulfate side chains encode a specificity in interactions with heparin-binding molecules since fibronectin and the cell adhesion molecule L1 do not bind agrin. Surface plasmon resonance studies (BIAcore) reveal a high affinity for agrin's interaction with FGF-2 and merosin (2.5 and 1.8 nM, respectively). Demonstrating a biological significance for these interactions, FGF-2, laminin, and tenascin copurify with immunopurified agrin and immunohistochemistry reveals a partial codistribution of agrin and its ECM ligands in the chick developing visual system. These studies and our previous studies, showing that merosin and NCAM also colocalize with agrin, provide evidence that agrin plays a crucial role in the function of the extracellular matrix and suggest a role for agrin in axon pathway development.  相似文献   

13.
H Munakata  K Takagaki  M Majima  M Endo 《Glycobiology》1999,9(10):1023-1027
The interactions of glycosaminoglycans with collagens and other glycoproteins in extracellular matrix play important roles in cell adhesion and extracellular matrix assembly. In order to clarify the chemical bases for these interactions, glycosaminoglycan solutions were injected onto sensor surfaces on which collagens, fibronectin, laminin, and vitronectin were immobilized. Heparin bound to type V collagen, type IX collagen, fibronectin, laminin, and vitronectin; and chondroitin sulfate E bound to type II, type V, and type VII collagen. Heparin showed a higher affinity for type IX collagen than for type V collagen. On the other hand, chondroitin sulfate E showed the highest affinity for type V collagen. The binding of chondroitin sulfate E to type V collagen showed higher affinity than that of heparin to type V collagen. These data suggest that a novel characteristic sequence included in chondroitin sulfate E is involved in binding to type V collagen.  相似文献   

14.
Fibulin is a recently described extracellular matrix (ECM) and plasma glycoprotein (Argraves, W. S., Tran, H., Burgess, W. H., and Dickerson, K. (1990) J. Cell Biol. 111, 3155-3164). In this report, ligand affinity chromatography and solid-phase binding analyses were performed to determine which ECM protein(s) interact with fibulin. Fibulin-Sepharose bound two polypeptides of 240 and 100 kDa from the culture medium of metabolically radiolabeled fibroblasts. These two proteins were identified as fibronectin (FN) and fibulin, respectively, based on their electrophoretic behavior and reactivity with monoclonal antibodies. Consistent with the findings of affinity chromatography, fibulin bound to surfaces coated with FN (either plasma or cellular form) or fibulin but not with other ECM proteins, such as laminin, merosin, and types I and IV collagen. The binding of fibulin to solid-phase FN was estimated to have a Kd of 139 nM, whereas the Kd for self-interaction was 322 nM. Evaluation of proteolytic fragments from all regions of FN allowed a fibulin-binding site to be localized within a 23-kDa heparin-binding fragment containing type III repeats 13-14. Heparin did not compete for the interaction between fibulin and FN, suggesting that the binding sites for fibulin and heparin are distinct.  相似文献   

15.
We have used a quantitative cell attachment assay to compare the interactions of cranial and trunk neural crest cells with the extracellular matrix (ECM) molecules fibronectin, laminin and collagen types I and IV. Antibodies to the beta 1 subunit of integrin inhibited attachment under all conditions tested, suggesting that integrins mediate neural crest cell interactions with these ECM molecules. The HNK-1 antibody against a surface carbohydrate epitope under certain conditions inhibited both cranial and trunk neural crest cell attachment to laminin, but not to fibronectin. An antiserum to alpha 1 intergrin inhibited attachment of trunk, but not cranial, neural crest cells to laminin and collagen type I, though interactions with fibronectin or collagen type IV were unaffected. The surface properties of trunk and cranial neural crest cells differed in several ways. First, trunk neural crest cells attached to collagen types I and IV, but cranial neural crest cells did not. Second, their divalent cation requirements for attachment to ECM molecules differed. For fibronectin substrata, trunk neural crest cells required divalent cations for attachment, whereas cranial neural crest cells bound in the absence of divalent cations. However, cranial neural crest cells lost this cation-independent attachment after a few days of culture. For laminin substrata, trunk cells used two integrins, one divalent cation-dependent and the other divalent cation-independent (Lallier, T. E. and Bronner-Fraser, M. (1991) Development 113, 1069-1081). In contrast, cranial neural crest cells attached to laminin using a single, divalent cation-dependent receptor system. Immunoprecipitations and immunoblots of surface labelled neural crest cells with HNK-1, alpha 1 integrin and beta 1 integrin antibodies suggest that cranial and trunk neural crest cells possess biochemically distinct integrins. Our results demonstrate that cranial and trunk cells differ in their mechanisms of adhesion to selected ECM components, suggesting that they are non-overlapping populations of cells with regard to their adhesive properties.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract Mouse monoclonal antibody (mAb) Pgf-II specific for a 72-kDa major cell-surface protein (72K-CSP) derived from Porphyromonas gingivalis OMZ 409 was prepared. Immunoblotting analysis revealed that mAb Pgf-II reacted with 72K-CSP but not with 41-kDa fimbrial subunit protein (41K-fimbrilin) derived from P. gingivalis 381. Electron microscopic observation revealed that P. gingivalis OMZ 409 possessed peritrichous, thin fimbriae on their surface. Immunogold electron microscopy also demonstrated that mAb Pgf-II bound to the 72K-CSP examined with the gold particles arranged along the fibril array originating from the cell surface of the bacteria. These findings suggested that P. gingivalis 72K-CSP was identifiable as another fimbriae (termed Pg-II fimbriae) different from the fimbriae (termed Pg-I fimbriae) composed of a 41K-fimbrilin. Using multipin peptide synthesis technology, 102 sequential overlapping peptides covering the entire 514 amino-acid stretch of Pg-II fimbriae were synthesised. Seven immunodominant regions within Pg-II fimbrial protein molecule, which definitely reacted with the serum of patients with periodontal diseases, were detected.  相似文献   

17.
Thrombospondin is a major glycoprotein of the platelet alpha-granule and is secreted during platelet activation. Several protease-resistant domains of thrombospondin mediate its interactions with components of the extracellular matrix including fibronectin, collagen, heparin, laminin, and fibrinogen. Thrombospondin, as well as fibronectin, is composed of several discretely located biologically active domains. We have characterized the thrombospondin binding domains of plasma fibronectin and determined the binding affinities of the purified domains; fibronectin has at least two binding sites for thrombospondin. Thrombospondin bound specifically to the 29-kDa amino-terminal heparin binding domain of fibronectin as well as to the 31-kDa non-heparin binding domain located within the larger 40-kDa carboxy-terminal fibronectin domain generated by chymotrypsin proteolysis. Platelet thrombospondin interacted with plasma fibronectin in a specific and saturable manner in blot binding as well as solid-phase binding assays. These interactions were independent of divalent cations. Thrombospondin bound to the 29-kDa fibronectin heparin binding domain with a Kd of 1.35 x 10(-9) M. The Kd for the 31-kDa domain of fibronectin was 2.28 x 10(-8) M. The 40-kDa carboxy-terminal fragment bound with a Kd of 1.65 x 10(-8) M. Heparin, which binds to both proteins, inhibited thrombospondin binding to the amino-terminal domain of fibronectin by more than 70%. The heparin effect was less pronounced with the non-heparin binding carboxy-terminal domain of fibronectin. By contrast, the binding affinity of the thrombospondin 150-kDa domain, which itself lacked heparin binding, was not affected by the presence of heparin. Based on these data, we conclude that thrombospondin binds with different affinities to two distinct domains in the fibronectin molecule.  相似文献   

18.
Real-time interactions of collagen I, fibronectin, laminin, hyaluronic acid and chondroitin sulfate with immobilized Escherichia coli O157:H7 cells were studied with a surface plasmon resonance biosensor. Results showed that collagen I and laminin bound to the E.coli surface but fibronectin had very low binding while hyaluronic acid and chondroitin sulfate had no detectable interaction. Calcium ion inhibited laminin binding but enhanced collagen I binding. This research provides a model system to study the interactions of bacterial cells with extracellular matrix components. © Rapid Science Ltd. 1998  相似文献   

19.
Vaccinia virus intracellular mature virus (IMV) binds to glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) on cells via three virion proteins, H3L, A27L, and D8L. In this study, we demonstrated that binding of IMV to BSC40 cells was competitively inhibited by soluble laminin but not by fibronectin or collagen V, suggesting that this cell surface extracellular matrix (ECM) protein may play a role in vaccinia virus entry. Moreover, IMV infection of GAG(-) sog9 cells was also inhibited by laminin, demonstrating that virion binding to laminin does not involve a prior interaction with GAGs. Furthermore, comparative envelope protein analyses of wild-type vaccinia virus strain Western Reserve, which binds to laminin, and of a mutant virus, IA27L, which does not, showed that the A26L open reading frame (ORF), encoding an envelope protein, was mutated in IA27L, resulting in A26L being absent from the IMV. Expression of the wild-type A26L ORF in IA27L resulted in laminin binding activity. Moreover, recombinant A26L protein bound to laminin in vitro with a high affinity, providing direct evidence that A26L is the laminin binding protein on IMV. In summary, these results reveal a novel role for the vaccinia viral envelope protein A26L in binding to the ECM protein laminin, an association that is proposed to facilitate IMV entry.  相似文献   

20.
The ookinete is a motile form of the malaria parasite that travels from the midgut lumen of the mosquito, invades the epithelial cells and settles beneath the basal lamina. The events surrounding cessation of ookinete motility and its transformation into an oocyst are poorly understood, but interaction between components of the basal lamina and the parasite surface has been implicated. Here we report that interactions occur between basal lamina constituents and ookinete proteins and that these interactions inhibit motility and are likely to be involved in transformation to an oocyst. Plasmodium berghei ookinetes bound weakly to microtitre plate wells coated with fibronectin and much more strongly to wells coated with laminin and collagen IV. A 1:1 mixture of collagen and laminin significantly enhanced binding. Binding increased with time of incubation up to 10 h and different components showed different binding profiles with time. Two parasite molecules were shown to act as ligands for basal lamina components. Western blots demonstrated that the surface molecule Pbs21 bound strongly to laminin but not to collagen IV whereas a 215 kDa molecule (possibly PbCTRP) bound to both laminin and collagen IV. Furthermore up to 90% inhibition of binding of ookinetes to collagen IV/laminin combination occurred if parasites were pre-incubated with anti-Pbs21 monoclonal antibody 13.1. Some transformation of ookinetes to oocysts occurred in wells coated with laminin or laminin/collagen IV combinations but collagen IV alone did not trigger transformation. No binding or transformation occurred in uncoated wells. Our data support the suggestion that ookinete proteins Pbs21 and a 215 kDa protein may have multiple roles including interactions with midgut basal lamina components that cause binding, inhibit motility and trigger transformation.  相似文献   

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