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1.
The 18.5-kDa classic myelin basic protein (MBP) is an intrinsically disordered protein arising from the Golli (Genes of Oligodendrocyte Lineage) gene complex and is responsible for compaction of the myelin sheath in the central nervous system. This MBP splice isoform also has a plethora of post-translational modifications including phosphorylation, deimination, methylation, and deamidation, that reduce its overall net charge and alter its protein and lipid associations within oligodendrocytes (OLGs). It was originally thought that MBP was simply a structural component of myelin; however, additional investigations have demonstrated that MBP is multi-functional, having numerous protein-protein interactions with Ca2+-calmodulin, actin, tubulin, and proteins with SH3-domains, and it can tether these proteins to a lipid membrane in vitro. Here, we have examined cytoskeletal interactions of classic 18.5-kDa MBP, in vivo, using early developmental N19-OLGs transfected with fluorescently-tagged MBP, actin, tubulin, and zonula occludens 1 (ZO-1). We show that MBP redistributes to distinct ‘membrane-ruffled’ regions of the plasma membrane where it co-localizes with actin and tubulin, and with the SH3-domain-containing proteins cortactin and ZO-1, when stimulated with PMA, a potent activator of the protein kinase C pathway. Moreover, using phospho-specific antibody staining, we show an increase in phosphorylated Thr98 MBP (human sequence numbering) in membrane-ruffled OLGs. Previously, Thr98 phosphorylation of MBP has been shown to affect its conformation, interactions with other proteins, and tethering of other proteins to the membrane in vitro. Here, MBP and actin were also co-localized in new focal adhesion contacts induced by IGF-1 stimulation in cells grown on laminin-2. This study supports a role for classic MBP isoforms in cytoskeletal and other protein-protein interactions during membrane and cytoskeletal remodeling in OLGs.  相似文献   

2.
Myelin is a specialized membrane enriched in glycosphingolipids and cholesterol that contains a limited spectrum of proteins. We investigated the assembly of myelin components by oligodendrocytes and analyzed the role of lipid-protein interactions in this process. Proteolipid protein (PLP), the major myelin protein, was recovered from cultured oligodendrocytes from a low-density CHAPS-insoluble membrane fraction (CIMF) enriched in myelin lipids. PLP associated with the CIMF after leaving the endoplasmic reticulum but before exiting the Golgi apparatus, suggesting that myelin lipid and protein components assemble in the Golgi complex. The specific association of PLP with myelin lipids in CIMF was supported by the finding that it was efficiently cross-linked to photoactivable cholesterol, but not to phosphatidylcholine, which is underrepresented in both myelin and CIMF. Furthermore, depletion of cholesterol or inhibition of sphingolipid synthesis in oligodendrocytes abolished the association of PLP with CIMF. Thus, PLP may be recruited to myelin rafts, represented by CIMF, via lipid-protein interactions. In contrast to oligodendrocytes, after transfection in BHK cells, PLP is absent from isolated CIMF, suggesting that PLP requires specific lipids for raft association. In mice deficient in the enzyme ceramide galactosyl transferase, which cannot synthesize the main myelin glycosphingolipids, a large fraction of PLP no longer associates with rafts. Formation of a cholesterol- and galactosylceramide-rich membrane domain (myelin rafts) may be critical for the sorting of PLP and assembly of myelin in oligodendrocytes.  相似文献   

3.
Monolayers prepared from myelin conserve all the compositional complexity of the natural membrane when spread at the air-water interface. They show a complex pressure-dependent surface pattern that, on compression, changes from the coexistence of two liquid phases to a viscous fractal phase embedded in a liquid phase. We dissected the role of major myelin protein components, myelin basic protein (MBP), and Folch-Lees proteolipid protein (PLP) as crucial factors determining the structural dynamics of the interface. By analyzing mixtures of a single protein with the myelin lipids we found that MBP and PLP have different surface pressure-dependent behaviors. MBP stabilizes the segregation of two liquid phases at low pressures and becomes excluded from the film under compression, remaining adjacent to the interface. PLP, on the contrary, organizes a fractal-like pattern at all surface pressures when included in a monolayer of the protein-free myelin lipids but it remains mixed in the MBP-induced liquid phase. The resultant surface topography and dynamics is regulated by combined near to equilibrium and out-of-equilibrium effects. PLP appears to act as a surface skeleton for the whole components whereas MBP couples the structuring to surface pressure-dependent extrusion and adsorption processes.  相似文献   

4.
Oligodendrocytes, the myelin-forming cells of the central nervous system, were cultured from newborn rat brain and optic nerve to allow us to analyze whether two transmembranous myelin proteins, myelin-associated glycoprotein (MAG) and proteolipid protein (PLP), were expressed together with myelin basic protein (MBP) in defined medium with low serum and in the absence of neurons. Using double label immunofluorescence, we investigated when and where these three myelin proteins appeared in cells expressing galactocerebroside (GC), a specific marker for the oligodendrocyte membrane. We found that a proportion of oligodendrocytes derived from brain and optic nerve invariably express MBP, MAG, and PLP about a week after the emergence of GC, which occurs around birth. In brain-derived oligodendrocytes, MBP and MAG first emerge between the fifth and the seventh day after birth, followed by PLP 1 to 2 d later. All three proteins were confined to the cell body at that time, although an extensive network of GC positive processes had already developed. Each protein shows a specific cytoplasmic localization: diffuse for MBP, mostly perinuclear for MAG, and particulate for PLP. Interestingly, MAG, which may be involved in glial-axon interactions, is the first myelin protein detected in the processes at approximately 10 d after birth. MBP and PLP are only seen in these locations after 15 d. All GC-positive cells express the three myelin proteins by day 19. Simultaneously, numerous membrane and myelin whorls accumulate along the oligodendrocyte surface. The sequential emergence, cytoplasmic location, and peak of expression of these three myelin proteins in vitro follow a pattern similar to that described in vivo and, therefore, are independent of continuous neuronal influences. Such cultures provide a convenient system to study factors regulating expression of myelin proteins.  相似文献   

5.
The classic myelin basic protein (MBP) splice isoforms range in nominal molecular mass from 14 to 21.5 kDa, and arise from the gene in the oligodendrocyte lineage (Golli) in maturing oligodendrocytes. The 18.5‐kDa isoform that predominates in adult myelin adheres the cytosolic surfaces of oligodendrocyte membranes together, and forms a two‐dimensional molecular sieve restricting protein diffusion into compact myelin. However, this protein has additional roles including cytoskeletal assembly and membrane extension, binding to SH3‐domains, participation in Fyn‐mediated signaling pathways, sequestration of phosphoinositides, and maintenance of calcium homeostasis. Of the diverse post‐translational modifications of this isoform, phosphorylation is the most dynamic, and modulates 18.5‐kDa MBP's protein‐membrane and protein‐protein interactions, indicative of a rich repertoire of functions. In developing and mature myelin, phosphorylation can result in microdomain or even nuclear targeting of the protein, supporting the conclusion that 18.5‐kDa MBP has significant roles beyond membrane adhesion. The full‐length, early‐developmental 21.5‐kDa splice isoform is predominantly karyophilic due to a non‐traditional P‐Y nuclear localization signal, with effects such as promotion of oligodendrocyte proliferation. We discuss in vitro and recent in vivo evidence for multifunctionality of these classic basic proteins of myelin, and argue for a systematic evaluation of the temporal and spatial distributions of these protein isoforms, and their modified variants, during oligodendrocyte differentiation.  相似文献   

6.
Plasma membrane proteolipid (plasmolipin), which was originally isolated from kidney membranes, has also been shown to be present in brain. In this study, we examined the distribution of plasmolipin in brain regions, myelin, and oligodendroglial membranes. Immunoblot analysis of different brain regions revealed that plasmolipin levels were higher in regions rich in white matter. Plasmolipin was also detected in myelin, myelin subfractions, and oligodendroglial membranes. Immunocytochemical analysis of the cerebellum revealed that plasmolipin was localized in the myelinated tracts. Plasmolipin levels in myelin were enriched during five successive cycles of myelin purification, similar to the enrichment of myelin proteolipid apoprotein (PLP) and myelin basic protein (MBP). In contrast, levels of Na+,K(+)-ATPase and a 70-kDa protein were decreased. When myelin or white matter was extracted with chloroform/methanol, it contained, in addition to PLP, a significant amount of plasmolipin. Quantitative immunoblot analysis suggested that plasmolipin constitutes in the range of 2.2-4.8% of total myelin protein. Plasmolipin, purified from kidney membranes, was detected by silver stain on gels at 18 kDa and did not show immunological cross-reactivity with either PLP or MBP. Thus, it is concluded that plasmolipin is present in myelin, possibly as a component of the oligodendroglial plasma membrane, but is structurally and immunologically different from the previously characterized myelin proteolipids.  相似文献   

7.
Myelin basic protein (MBP), particularly the classic 18.5-kDa isoform, is a major structural protein of the myelin sheath of the central nervous system. It is an intrinsically disordered, peripheral membrane protein that shows structural polymorphism in combination with several overlapping interaction sites. Here, double electron-electron resonance (DEER) spectroscopy, in combination with a simplified, semi-quantitative analysis based on Monte Carlo simulations, is used to determine the distance distribution of murine 18.5-kDa MBP, unmodified charge component-C1, on large unilamellar vesicles of a lipid composition mimicking the cytoplasmic leaflet of myelin. Three singly spin-labeled MBP variants and a mixture of singly-labeled MBP variants are used. The MBPs, each bearing only one spin label, exhibit average intermolecular distances that are significantly shorter than the distances expected when assuming a random distribution at the employed lipid-to-protein ratios, indicating self-assembly on the membrane. The distribution of elliptical pervaded areas (hard ellipses) on a two-dimensional surface can serve as a model of the nonspecific self-assembly process. The corresponding pair correlation functions g(r) are determined from Monte Carlo simulations with variation of various parameters such as the ellipses' aspect ratios. Comparing the g(r) values with the DEER-derived distance distributions, the pervaded volume is best characterized by a nearly elliptical projection onto the membrane, with an aspect ratio of approximately 1.5, and with the longer semi-axis of approximately 1.4nm. The approach of using local information from DEER with low-resolution models derived from Monte Carlo simulations can be applied to study the lateral self-assembly properties of other protein complexes on membranes.  相似文献   

8.
Advances in optical microscopy techniques and single-molecule detection have paved the way to exploring new approaches for investigating membrane dynamics and organization, thereby revealing details on the processing of signals, complex association/dissociation, chemical reactions and transport at and around the membrane. These events rely on a tight regulation of lipid-protein and protein-protein interactions in space and time. Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy (FCS) provides exquisite sensitivity in measuring local concentrations, association/dissociation constants, chemical rate constants and, in general, in probing the chemical environment of the species of interest and its interactions with potential partners. Here, we review some applications of FCS to lipid and protein organization in biomimetic membranes with lateral heterogeneities, which share some physico-chemical properties with cellular rafts. What we learn from investigations of lipid-lipid and lipid-protein interactions in simple model membranes can be regarded as an essential basic lecture for studies in more complex cellular membranes.  相似文献   

9.
Advances in optical microscopy techniques and single-molecule detection have paved the way to exploring new approaches for investigating membrane dynamics and organization, thereby revealing details on the processing of signals, complex association/dissociation, chemical reactions and transport at and around the membrane. These events rely on a tight regulation of lipid-protein and protein-protein interactions in space and time. Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy (FCS) provides exquisite sensitivity in measuring local concentrations, association/dissociation constants, chemical rate constants and, in general, in probing the chemical environment of the species of interest and its interactions with potential partners. Here, we review some applications of FCS to lipid and protein organization in biomimetic membranes with lateral heterogeneities, which share some physico-chemical properties with cellular rafts. What we learn from investigations of lipid-lipid and lipid-protein interactions in simple model membranes can be regarded as an essential basic lecture for studies in more complex cellular membranes.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract: We have conditionally immortalized oligodendrocytes isolated from normal and shiverer primary mouse brain cultures through the use of the retroviral vector ZIPSVtsA58. This vector encodes an immortalizing thermolabile simian virus 40 large T antigen (Tag) and allows for clonal selection by conferring neomycin (G418) resistance. We isolated 14 shiverer and 10 normal lines that expressed the early oligodendrocyte marker 2′,3′-cyclic nucleotide 3′-phosphodiesterase mRNA. These cell lines grew continuously at the permissive temperature (34°C) and displayed Tag nuclear immunostaining. On shifting to nonpermissive temperatures (39°C), the cells showed rapid arrested cell growth and loss of Tag staining. One line (N20.1) engineered from normal oligodendrocytes also expressed myelin basic protein (MBP) and proteolipid protein (PLP) mRNAs, genes normally expressed by mature, differentiated oligodendrocytes. No differences in any of the myelin-specific protein mRNA levels were observed in N20.1 cells grown at 39°C for >9 days compared with cells maintained at 34°C. Immunocytochemical staining revealed N20.1 cells to be positive for the oligodendrocyte surface markers—galactocerebroside, A007, and A2B5. However, MBP and PLP polypeptides could not be detected by western blot or immunocytochemical staining at either the permissive or nonpermissive temperature. Cell-free protein synthesis experiments indicated that the MBP mRNAs isolated from N20.1 cells were translatable and directed the synthesis of the 17-, 18.5-, and 21.5-kDa MBP isoforms. Analysis of the PLP/DM20 gene splice products by polymerase chain reaction indicated that the expression of DM20 mRNA predominated over that of PLP mRNA in this cell line. Because the cell line expressed the MBP and PLP genes, it represents a “mature” oligodendrocyte, but the splicing patterns of these genes indicate that it is at an early stage of “maturation’. This cell line has now been passaged >40 times with fidelity of phenotype and genotype.  相似文献   

11.
As an essential structural protein required for tight compaction of the central nervous system myelin sheath, myelin basic protein (MBP) is one of the candidate autoantigens of the human inflammatory demyelinating disease multiple sclerosis, which is characterized by the active degradation of the myelin sheath. In this work, recombinant murine analogues of the natural C1 and C8 charge components (rmC1 and rmC8), two isoforms of the classic 18.5-kDa MBP, were used as model proteins to get insights into the structure and function of the charge isomers. Various biochemical and biophysical methods such as size exclusion chromatography, calorimetry, surface plasmon resonance, small angle X-ray and neutron scattering, Raman and fluorescence spectroscopy, and conventional as well as synchrotron radiation circular dichroism were used to investigate differences between these two isoforms, both from the structural point of view, and regarding interactions with ligands, including calmodulin (CaM), various detergents, nucleotide analogues, and lipids. Overall, our results provide further proof that rmC8 is deficient both in structure and especially in function, when compared to rmC1. While the CaM binding properties of the two forms are very similar, their interactions with membrane mimics are different. CaM can be used to remove MBP from immobilized lipid monolayers made of synthetic lipids--a phenomenon, which may be of relevance for MBP function and its regulation. Furthermore, using fluorescently labelled nucleotides, we observed binding of ATP and GTP, but not AMP, by MBP; the binding of nucleoside triphosphates was inhibited by the presence of CaM. Together, our results provide important further data on the interactions between MBP and its ligands, and on the differences in the structure and function between MBP charge isomers.  相似文献   

12.
The classic isoforms of myelin basic protein (MBP) are essential for the formation and maintenance of myelin in the central nervous system of higher vertebrates. The protein is involved in all facets of the development, compaction, and stabilization of the multilamellar myelin sheath, and also interacts with cytoskeletal and signaling proteins. The predominant 18.5-kDa isoform of MBP is an intrinsically-disordered protein that is a candidate auto-antigen in the human demyelinating disease multiple sclerosis. A highly-conserved central segment within classic MBP consists of a proline-rich region (murine 18.5-kDa sequence –T92-P93-R94-T95-P96-P97-P98-S99–) containing a putative SH3-ligand, adjacent to a region that forms an amphipathic α-helix (P82-I90) upon interaction with membranes, or under membrane-mimetic conditions. The T92 and T95 residues within the proline-rich region can be post-translationally modified through phosphorylation by mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases. Here, we have investigated the structure of the α-helical and proline-rich regions in dilute aqueous buffer, and have evaluated the effects of phosphorylation at T92 and T95 on the stability and dynamics of the α-helical region, by utilizing four 36-residue peptides (S72–S107) with differing phosphorylation status. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy reveals that both the α-helical as well as the proline-rich regions are disordered in aqueous buffer, whereas they are both structured in a lipid environment (cf., Ahmed et al., Biochemistry 51, 7475-9487, 2012). Thermodynamic analysis of trifluoroethanol-titration curves monitored by circular dichroism spectroscopy reveals that phosphorylation, especially at residue T92, impedes formation of the amphipathic α-helix. This conclusion is supported by molecular dynamics simulations, which further illustrate that phosphorylation reduces the folding reversibility of the α-helix upon temperature perturbation and affect the global structure of the peptides through altered electrostatic interactions. The results support the hypothesis that the central conserved segment of MBP constitutes a molecular switch in which the conformation and/or intermolecular interactions are mediated by phosphorylation/dephosphorylation at T92 and T95.  相似文献   

13.
MBP and PLP are major structural protein components of myelin. Both proteins play a functional role in formation of myelin sheath and in maintenance of its compaction. Immune responses to MBP and PLP have been implicated in the pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis (MS), an auto-immune disease of the central nervous system. Recombinant forms of both proteins isolated and purified from bacterial or insect cell systems are commonly used to study the specificity of auto-response in MS. We have prepared recombinant forms of MBP and PLP stably expressed in CHO cells. Several clones with proper cytoplasmic MBP or surface PLP localization were obtained and characterized by flow cytometry and indirect immunostaining. CHO cells expressing the recombinant forms of MBP and PLP can be very useful in studies on the autoimmune mechanism of MS.  相似文献   

14.
Solvent solubilized myelin membranes spread as monomolecular layers at the air-water interface show a heterogeneous pattern at all surface pressures. In order to asses the role of myelin protein and lipid components in the surface structuring we compared the topography, as seen by Brewster angle microscopy (BAM) and epifluorescence microscopy, of monolayers made from mixtures containing all myelin lipids (except gangliosides) and variable proportions of Folch-Lees proteolipid protein (PLP, the major protein component of myelin). The presence of the single PLP, in the absence of the other myelin proteins, can reproduce the surface pattern of the whole myelin extract films in a concentration-dependant manner. Moreover, a threshold mole fraction of PLP is necessary to induce the lipid-protein component reorganization leading to the appearance of a rigid (gray) phase, acting as a surface skeleton, at low surface pressures and of fractal clusters at high surface pressures. The average size of those clusters is also dependent on the PLP content in the monolayer and on the time elapsed from the moment of film spreading, as they apparently result from an irreversible lateral aggregation process. The transverse rearrangement of the monolayer occurring under compression was different in films with the highest and lowest PLP mole fractions tested.  相似文献   

15.
Computer-generated "hydropathic" profiles were constructed for graphic comparison of the amino acid sequences for P2 protein, 18.5 kilodalton (kDa) myelin basic protein (BP), and myelin proteolipid protein (PLP). Profiles were also obtained for cytochrome b5, a membrane protein known to be capable of reversible association with lipid bilayers and of a size comparable to that of the myelin BPs. Analysis of the PLP sequence produced profiles generally compatible with the suggestions that PLP has three transbilayer and two bilayer intercalating segments. Profiles for P2 and 18.5 kDa BP were found to contain hydrophilic segments separated by relatively short hydrophobic regions. Whereas hydropathic indices in hydrophobic regions of P2, 18.5 kDa BP, and PLP fall in the value ranges recently reported for cores of globular proteins and intrabilayer domains of membrane proteins, hydrophobic sections of P2 and 18.5 kDa BP have hydropathic indices similar to those in the hydrophobic core (transprotein) regions of globular proteins. None of them are comparable to the region of cytochrome b5 known to anchor that protein in its membrane or to the segments of PLP sequence proposed as intrabilayer domains. This comparison suggests that neither BP has structural characteristics compatible with insertion into the hydrocarbon core of the myelin lipid bilayer, a conclusion that is consistent with a recently published study that identified the bilayer penetrating proteins of myelin with a hydrophobic probe. The above findings suggest an enhancement for some details of myelin architecture and a cautious approach to interpreting data for BP intercalation into bilayers.  相似文献   

16.
Solvent solubilized myelin membranes spread as monomolecular layers at the air-water interface show a heterogeneous pattern at all surface pressures. In order to asses the role of myelin protein and lipid components in the surface structuring we compared the topography, as seen by Brewster angle microscopy (BAM) and epifluorescence microscopy, of monolayers made from mixtures containing all myelin lipids (except gangliosides) and variable proportions of Folch-Lees proteolipid protein (PLP, the major protein component of myelin). The presence of the single PLP, in the absence of the other myelin proteins, can reproduce the surface pattern of the whole myelin extract films in a concentration-dependant manner. Moreover, a threshold mole fraction of PLP is necessary to induce the lipid-protein component reorganization leading to the appearance of a rigid (gray) phase, acting as a surface skeleton, at low surface pressures and of fractal clusters at high surface pressures. The average size of those clusters is also dependent on the PLP content in the monolayer and on the time elapsed from the moment of film spreading, as they apparently result from an irreversible lateral aggregation process. The transverse rearrangement of the monolayer occurring under compression was different in films with the highest and lowest PLP mole fractions tested.  相似文献   

17.
Expression of myelin protein genes in the developing brain   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The major myelin proteins fall into two classes, the basic proteins and the proteolipid proteins. In mice, five forms of the myelin basic protein (MBP) have been identified with apparent molecular masses of 21.5 kD, 18.5 kD, 17 kD and 14 kD. The 17 kD MBP variant consists of two molecular forms with similar molecular masses but different amino acid sequences. Cell-free translation studies and analyses of MBP cDNAs have shown that each of the MBP variants is encoded by a separate mRNA of approximately 2 000 bp. The five mouse MBP mRNAs appear to be derived by alternative splicing of exons 2, 5, and 6 of the MBP gene. cDNAs encoding four forms of MBP have been isolated from a human fetal spinal cord library. The mRNAs corresponding to these cDNAs are probably derived by alternative splicing of exons 2 and 5 of the human MBP gene. Proteolipid protein (PLP) cDNAs have been isolated from several species and used to establish that the size of the major PLP mRNA is approximately 3 kb. Multiple size classes of the PLP mRNAs exist in mice and rats whereas the 3 kb mRNA is the predominant form in the developing human spinal cord. In normal mice, maximal expression of the PLP gene lags behind that of the MBP gene by several days. Studies on dysmyelinating mutants have determined some of the molecular defects with respect to these two classes of myelin proteins. For example, there is a deletion of a portion of the MBP gene in the shiverer mutant. In the quaking mutant, the expression of both classes of myelin proteins is significantly reduced prior to 3 weeks. However, after 3 weeks, MBP expression approaches normal levels but the newly synthesized protein fails to be incorporated into myelin. In the jimpy mutant, although the expression of both classes of proteins is reduced, PLP expression is most severely affected.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Central nervous system myelin is a dynamic entity arising from membrane processes extended from oligodendrocytes, which form a tightly-wrapped multilamellar structure around neurons. In mature myelin, the predominant splice isoform of classic MBP is 18.5 kDa. In solution, MBP is an extended, intrinsically disordered protein with a large effective protein surface for myriad interactions, and possesses transient and/or induced ordered secondary structure elements for molecular association or recognition. Here, we show by nanopore analysis that the divalent cations copper and zinc induce a compaction of the extended protein in vitro, suggestive of a tertiary conformation that may reflect its arrangement in myelin.  相似文献   

20.
Axonal injury is one of the key features of traumatic brain injury (TBI), yet little is known about the integrity of the myelin sheath. We report that the 21.5 and 18.5-kDa myelin basic protein (MBP) isoforms degrade into N-terminal fragments (of 10 and 8 kDa) in the ipsilateral hippocampus and cortex between 2 h and 3 days after controlled cortical impact (in a rat model of TBI), but exhibit no degradation contralaterally. Using N-terminal microsequencing and mass spectrometry, we identified a novel in vivo MBP cleavage site between Phe114 and Lys115. A MBP C-terminal fragment-specific antibody was then raised and shown to specifically detect MBP fragments in affected brain regions following TBI. In vitro naive brain lysate and purified MBP digestion showed that MBP is sensitive to calpain, producing the characteristic MBP fragments observed in TBI. We hypothesize that TBI-mediated axonal injury causes secondary structural damage to the adjacent myelin membrane, instigating MBP degradation. This could initiate myelin sheath instability and demyelination, which might further promote axonal vulnerability.  相似文献   

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