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1.
Actin stress fibers (SFs) enable cells to sense and respond to mechanical stimuli and affect adhesion, motility and apoptosis. We and others have demonstrated that cultured human aortic endothelial cells (HAECs) are internally stressed so that SFs are pre-extended beyond their unloaded lengths. The present study explores factors affecting SF pre-extension. In HAECs cultured overnight the baseline pre-extension was 1.10 and independent of the amount of cell shortening. Decreasing contractility with 30 mM BDM or 10 microM blebbistatin decreased pre-extension to 1.05 whereas increasing contractility with 2 nM calyculin A increased pre-extension to 1.26. Knockdown of alpha-actinin-1 with an interfering RNA increased pre-extension to 1.28. None of these affected the wavelength of the buckled SFs. Pre-extension was the same in unperturbed cells as in those in which the actin cytoskeleton was disrupted by both chemical and mechanical means and then allowed to reassemble. Finally, disrupting MTs or IFs did not affect pre-extension but increased the wavelength. Taken together, these results suggest that pre-extension of SFs is determined primarily by intrinsic factors, i.e. the level of actin-myosin interaction. This intrinsic control of pre-extension is sufficiently robust that pre-extension is the same even after the actin cytoskeleton has been disrupted and reorganized. Unlike pre-extension, the morphology of the compressed SFs is partially determined by MTs and IFs which appear to support the SFs along their lengths.  相似文献   

2.
For a quantitative analysis of intracellular mechanotransduction, it is crucial to know the mechanical properties of actin stress fibers in situ. Here we measured tensile properties of cultured aortic smooth muscle cells (SMCs) in a quasi-in situ tensile test in relaxed and activated states to estimate stiffness of their single stress fibers (SFs). An SMC cultured on substrates was held using a pair of micropipettes and detached from the substrate while maintaining its in situ cell shape and cytoskeletal integrity. Stretching up to ~15% followed by unloading was repeated three times to stabilize their tension–strain curves in the untreated (relaxed) and 10 μM-serotonin-treated (activated) condition. Cell stiffness defined as the average slope of the loading limb of the stable loops was ~25 and ~40 nN/% in relaxed and activated states, respectively. It decreased to ~10 nN/% following SF disruption with cytochalasin D in both states. The number of SFs in each cell measured with confocal microscopy decreased significantly upon serotonin activation from 21.5±3.8 (mean±SD, n=80) to 17.5±3.9 (n=77). The dynamics of focal adhesions (FAs) were observed in adherent cells using surface reflective interference contrast microscopy. FAs aligned and elongated along the cell major axis following activation and then merged with each other, suggesting that the decrease in SFs was caused by their fusion. Average stiffness of single SFs estimated by the average decrease in whole-cell stiffness following SF disruption divided by the average number of SFs in each cell was ~0.7 and ~1.6 nN/% in the relaxed and activated states, respectively. Stiffening of single SFs following SF activation was remarkably higher than stiffening at the whole-cell level. Results indicate that SFs stiffen not only due to activation of the actomyosin interaction, but also due to their fusion, a finding which would not be obtained from analysis of isolated SFs.  相似文献   

3.
The ability of a cell to distribute contractile stresses across the extracellular matrix in a spatially heterogeneous fashion underlies many cellular behaviors, including motility and tissue assembly. Here we investigate the biophysical basis of this phenomenon by using femtosecond laser nanosurgery to measure the viscoelastic recoil and cell-shape contributions of contractile stress fibers (SFs) located in specific compartments of living cells. Upon photodisruption and recoil, myosin light chain kinase-dependent SFs located along the cell periphery display much lower effective elasticities and higher plateau retraction distances than Rho-associated kinase-dependent SFs located in the cell center, with severing of peripheral fibers uniquely triggering a dramatic contraction of the entire cell within minutes of fiber irradiation. Image correlation spectroscopy reveals that when one population of SFs is pharmacologically dissipated, actin density flows toward the other population. Furthermore, dissipation of peripheral fibers reduces the elasticity and increases the plateau retraction distance of central fibers, and severing central fibers under these conditions triggers cellular contraction. Together, these findings show that SFs regulated by different myosin activators exhibit different mechanical properties and cell shape contributions. They also suggest that some fibers can absorb components and assume mechanical roles of other fibers to stabilize cell shape.  相似文献   

4.
Fluorescence cytochemistry using en face preparations of rat vascular endothelial cells (ECs) revealed the localization of actin, fibronectin (FN) and fibronectin receptor (FNR) along not only central stress fibers (SFs) but also the cell margins. Electron microscopy showed very close proximity between the topographical distribution of intracellular microfilament bundles and that of subendothelial FN in the EC margins. Therefore, these basal and marginal actin cables may be comparable to the well-established central SFs present in ECs. Formation of the central SFs was induced in ECs or mesothelial cells in response to tension, by which their cellular integrity seems to be effectively maintained. However, even when central SF formation was inhibited by cytochalasin D, the ECs with marginal SFs showed high resistance to mechanical tension, whereas mesenteric mesothelial cells having no such fibers easily lost their integrity. Thus, together with central SFs, the marginal SFs characteristic of rat vascular ECs may play an essential role in strengthening cell-matrix adhesion.  相似文献   

5.
Stress fibers (SFs), a contractile bundle of actin filaments, play a critical role in mechanotransduction in adherent cells; yet, the mechanical properties of SFs are poorly understood. Here, we measured tensile properties of single SFs by in vitro manipulation with cantilevers. SFs were isolated from cultured vascular smooth muscle cells with a combination of low ionic-strength extraction and detergent extraction and were stretched until breaking. The breaking force and the Young's modulus (assuming that SFs were isotropic) were, on average, 377 nN and 1.45 MPa, which were approximately 600-fold greater and three orders of magnitude lower, respectively, than those of actin filaments reported previously. Strain-induced stiffening was observed in the force-strain curve. We also found that the extracted SFs shortened to approximately 80% of the original length in an ATP-independent manner after they were dislodged from the substrate, suggesting that SFs had preexisting strain in the cytoplasm. The force required for stretching the single SFs from the zero-stress length back to the original length was approximately 10 nN, which was comparable with the traction force level applied by adherent cells at single adhesion sites to maintain cell integrity. These results suggest that SFs can bear intracellular stresses that may affect overall cell mechanical properties and will impact interpretation of intracellular stress distribution and force-transmission mechanism in adherent cells.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The objective of this study was to develop a finite-element (FE) modeling methodology for studying the etiology of a stress fracture (SF). Several variants of three-dimensional FE models of a rat hindlimb, which differed in length or stiffness of tissues, enabling the analyses of mechanical strains and stress in the tibia, were created. We compared the occurrence of SFs in an animal model to validate locations of peak strains/stresses in the FE models. Four Sprague-Dawley male rats, age ~7 wk, were subjected to mechanical cyclic loads of 1.2 Hz and ~6 N, which were delivered to their hindlimb for 30 min, 3 times/wk, up to 12 wk, by using a specially designed apparatus. The results showed that 1) FE modeling predicted the maximal strains/stresses (~220,0 με and ~29 MPa, respectively) between the mid- and proximal thirds of the tibia; 2) in a longer shin, greater and more inhomogeneous tensile strains/stresses were evident, at the same location; 3) anatomical variants in shin length influenced the strain/stress distributions to a greater extent with respect to changes in mechanical properties of tissues; and 4) bone stiffness was more dominant than muscle stiffness in affecting the strain/stress distributions. In the animal study, 35,000 loading cycles were associated with the formation of a SF. The location of the identified SF in the rat limb verified the FE model. We find the suggested model a valuable tool in studying various aspects of SFs.  相似文献   

8.
Force generated in contractile actin filament bundles (stress fibers-SFs) is transmitted to the extracellular matrix (ECM) via linker proteins and transmembrane integrins at focal adhesions (FAs). Though it has long been known that actin is rapidly exchanged in FAs, the connection between SFs and FAs has not been studied in detail. We introduced fiduciary marks on SFs by expressing GFP-palladin or GFP-alpha-actinin-1, which are both FA and dense body proteins, and by pattern bleaching of GFP-actin. Following fiduciary marks on SFs over time by time-lapse fluorescence microscopy, we detected assembly of SFs at FAs in stationary cells resulting in movement of SFs away from FAs with a velocity of 0.2-0.4 microm/min. Visualization of FAs in GFP-palladin/DsRed-paxillin double transfected cells showed that SF elongation was not accompanied by a change in FA length. SF elongation at FAs depended on actin polymerization and force as demonstrated by inhibitors of actin polymerization (cytochalasin D, jasplakinolide) and inhibitors of myosin-dependent contraction (blebbistatin, Y-27632), respectively. Our finding of SF assembly at FAs has important implications for SF formation, force transmission, and tension distribution within the actin cytoskeletal network of stationary cells.  相似文献   

9.
Membrane-cytoskeleton interaction regulates transmembrane currents through stretch-activated channels (SACs); however, the mechanisms involved have not been tested in living cells. We combined atomic force microscopy, confocal immunofluorescence, and patch-clamp analysis to show that stress fibers (SFs) in C2C12 myoblasts behave as cables that, tensed by myosin II motor, activate SACs by modifying the topography and the viscoelastic (Young's modulus and hysteresis) and electrical passive (membrane capacitance, C(m)) properties of the cell surface. Stimulation with sphingosine 1-phosphate to elicit SF formation, the inhibition of Rho-dependent SF formation by Y-27632 and of myosin II-driven SF contraction by blebbistatin, showed that not SF polymerization alone but the generation of tensional forces by SF contraction were involved in the stiffness response of the cell surface. Notably, this event was associated with a significant reduction in the amplitude of the cytoskeleton-mediated corrugations in the cell surface topography, suggesting a contribution of SF contraction to plasma membrane stretching. Moreover, C(m), used as an index of cell surface area, showed a linear inverse relationship with cell stiffness, indicating participation of the actin cytoskeleton in plasma membrane remodeling and the ability of SF formation to cause internalization of plasma membrane patches to reduce C(m) and increase membrane tension. SF contraction also increased hysteresis. Together, these data provide the first experimental evidence for a crucial role of SF contraction in SAC activation. The related changes in cell viscosity may prevent SAC from abnormal activation.  相似文献   

10.
Intracellular stress transmission through subcellular structural components has been proposed to affect activation of localized mechano-sensing sites such as focal adhesions in adherent cells. Previous studies reported that physiological extracellular forces produced heterogeneous spatial distributions of cytoplasmic strain. However, mechanical signaling pathway involved in intracellular force transmission through basal actin stress fibers (SFs), a mechano-responsive cytoskeletal structure, remains elusive. In the present study, we investigated force balance within the basal SFs of cultured smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells by (i) removing the cell membrane and cytoplasmic constituents except for materials physically attaching to the substrate (i.e., SF-focal adhesion complexities) or (ii) dislodging either mechanically or chemically the cell processes of the cells expressing fluorescent proteins-labeled actin and focal adhesions in order, to examine stress-release-induced deformation of the basal SFs. The result showed that a removal of mechanical restrictions for SFs resulted in a decrease in the length of the remaining SFs, which means SFs bear tension. In addition, a release of the preexisting tension in a single SF was transmitted to another SF physically linked to the former, but not transmitted to the other ones physically independent of the former, suggesting that the prestress is balanced in tensed SF networks. These results support a hypothesis regarding cell structural architecture that physiological extracellular forces can produce in the basal SF network a directional intracellular stress or strain distribution. Therefore, consideration of the coexistence of the directional stretching strain along the axial direction of SFs and the heterogeneous strain in the other cytoplasmic region will be essential for understanding intracellular stress transmission in the adherent cells.  相似文献   

11.
The distribution of contractile forces generated in cytoskeletal stress fibers (SFs) contributes to cellular dynamic functions such as migration and mechanotransduction. Here we describe a novel (to our knowledge) method for measuring local tensions in SFs based on the following procedure: 1), known forces of different magnitudes are applied to an SF in the direction perpendicular to its longitudinal axis; 2), force balance equations are used to calculate the resulting tensions in the SF from changes in the SF angle; and 3), the relationship between tension and applied force thus established is extrapolated to an applied force of zero to determine the preexisting tension in the SF. In this study, we measured tensions in SFs by attaching magnetic particles to them and applying known forces with an electromagnetic needle. Fluorescence microscopy was used to capture images of SFs fluorescently labeled with myosin II antibodies, and analysis of these images allowed the tension in the SFs to be measured. The average tension measured in this study was comparable to previous reports, which indicates that this method may become a powerful tool for elucidating the mechanisms by which cytoskeletal tensions affect cellular functions.  相似文献   

12.
Actin stress fibers (SFs) of cells cultured on cyclically stretched substrate tend to reorient in the direction in which a normal strain of substrate becomes zero. However, little is known about the mechanism of this reorientation. Here we investigated the effects of cyclic stretch waveform on SF reorientation in osteoblastic cells. Cells adhering to silicone membranes were subjected to cyclic uniaxial stretch, having one of the following waveforms with an amplitude of 8% for 24 h: triangular, trapezoid, bottom hold, or peak hold. SF reorientation of these cells was then analyzed. No preferential orientation was observed for the triangular and the peak-hold waveforms, whereas SFs aligned mostly in the direction with zero normal strain (~55°) with other waveforms, especially the trapezoid waveform, which had a hold time both at loaded and unloaded states. Viscoelastic properties of SFs were estimated in a quasi-in situ stress relaxation test using intact and SF-disrupted cells that maintained their shape on the substrate. The dynamics of tension F(SFs) acting on SFs during cyclic stretching were simulated using these properties. The simulation demonstrated that F(SFs) decreased gradually during cyclic stretching and exhibited a compressive value (F(SFs) < 0). The magnitude and duration time of the compressive forces were relatively larger in the group with a trapezoid waveform. The frequency of SF orientation had a significant negative correlation with the applied compressive forces integrated with time in a strain cycle, and the integrated value was largest with the trapezoid waveform. These results may indicate that the applied compressive forces on SFs have a significant effect on the stretch-induced reorientation of SFs, and that SFs realigned to avoid their compression. Stress relaxation of SFs might be facilitated during the holding period in the trapezoid waveform, and depolymerization and reorientation of SFs were significantly accelerated by their viscoelastic compression.  相似文献   

13.
A massive accumulation of inflammatory cells in synovial tissues is a major pathological feature of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Neutrophiles dominate synovial fluid while rheumatoid synovium is infiltrated with mononuclear cells. Mechanisms regulating influx of particular subpopulations of leukocytes into articular cavity and synovium compartment are not completely defined. An increasing amount of data supports a crucial role of a C-C chemokine RANTES in the RA pathogenesis. Our objective is to evaluate chemotactic activity for neutrophils (NCA), lymphocytes (LCA), and monocytes (MoCA) in SFs obtained from patients with RA and osteoarthritis (OA). We also aimed to characterise the relation between chemotactic activity, RANTES, and percentage distribution of leukocytes in SF. SFs from 11 patients with RA and 6 with OA were included in the study. Modified microchamber Boyden method was employed to assess chemotactic activity. Cytological and biochemical analysis of SF was performed. RANTES was measured with ELISA. Rheumatoid SFs were rich in cells with predominance of neutrophiles while osteoarthritic fluids were lymphocytic. RA SFs were also characterised by increased lactoferrin level. Both NCA and LCA were higher in SF from patients with RA (62 +/- 12 and 24 +/- 6 cells/HPF, resp) as compared to patients with OA (23 +/- 6; P < .05 and 6 +/- 2 cells/HPF; P < 0.05). The chemoattractive effect of RA SF was more pronounced on neutrophiles than on lymphocytes. RA SF expressed high RANTES levels (145+/- 36 pg/mL), while OA SF was characterised by only trace amount of this chemokine (2 +/- 1 pg/mL). We found positive correlation of RANTES with chemotactic activity for mononuclear cells (LCA + MoCA; R = 0.61; P < .05). Surprisingly, RANTES correlated also positively with neutrophiles number (R = 0.77; P < 0.001). Rheumatoid SF possesses strong chemotactic potency for leukocytes. RANTES is overexpressed in RA SF and is a potential mediator influencing intensity and composition of cellular infiltration in joints affected with inflammatory arthritis.  相似文献   

14.
Cells modulate themselves in response to the surrounding environment like substrate elasticity, exhibiting structural reorganization driven by the contractility of cytoskeleton. The cytoskeleton is the scaffolding structure of eukaryotic cells, playing a central role in many mechanical and biological functions. It is composed of a network of actins, actin cross-linking proteins (ACPs), and molecular motors. The motors generate contractile forces by sliding couples of actin filaments in a polar fashion, and the contractile response of the cytoskeleton network is known to be modulated also by external stimuli, such as substrate stiffness. This implies an important role of actomyosin contractility in the cell mechano-sensing. However, how cells sense matrix stiffness via the contractility remains an open question. Here, we present a 3-D Brownian dynamics computational model of a cross-linked actin network including the dynamics of molecular motors and ACPs. The mechano-sensing properties of this active network are investigated by evaluating contraction and stress in response to different substrate stiffness. Results demonstrate two mechanisms that act to limit internal stress: (i) In stiff substrates, motors walk until they exert their maximum force, leading to a plateau stress that is independent of substrate stiffness, whereas (ii) in soft substrates, motors walk until they become blocked by other motors or ACPs, leading to submaximal stress levels. Therefore, this study provides new insights into the role of molecular motors in the contraction and rigidity sensing of cells.  相似文献   

15.
We measured the time course and heterogeneity of responses to contractile and relaxing agonists in individual human airway smooth muscle (HASM) cells in culture. To this end, we developed a microrheometer based on magnetic twisting cytometry adapted with a novel optical detection system. Ferromagnetic beads (4.5 microm) coated with Arg-Gly-Asp peptide were bound to integrins on the cell surface. The beads were twisted in a sinusoidally varying magnetic field at 0.75 Hz. Oscillatory bead displacements were recorded using a phase-synchronized video camera. The storage modulus (cell stiffness; G'), loss modulus (friction; G"), and hysteresivity (eta; ratio of G" to G') could be determined with a time resolution of 1.3 s. Within 5 s after addition of histamine (100 microM), G' increased by 2.2-fold, G" increased by 3.0-fold, and eta increased transiently from 0.27 to 0.34. By 20 s, eta decreased to 0.25, whereas G' and G" remained above baseline. Comparable results were obtained with bradykinin (1 microM). These changes in G', G", and eta measured in cells were similar to but smaller than those reported for intact muscle strips. When we ablated baseline tone by adding the relaxing agonist dibutyryl cAMP (1 mM), G' decreased within 5 min by 3.3-fold. With relaxing and contracting agonists, G' could be manipulated through a contractile range of 7.3-fold. Cell populations exhibited a log-normal distribution of baseline stiffness (geometric SD = 2.8) and a heterogeneous response to both contractile and relaxing agonists, partly attributable to variability of baseline tone between cells. The total contractile range of the cells (from maximally relaxed to maximally stimulated), however, was independent of baseline stiffness. We conclude that HASM cells in culture exhibit a clear, although heterogeneous, response to contractile and relaxing agonists and express the essential mechanical features characteristic of the contractile response observed at the tissue level.  相似文献   

16.
A much-debated question in object recognition is whether expertise for faces and expertise for non-face objects utilize common perceptual information. We investigated this issue by assessing the diagnostic information required for different types of expertise. Specifically, we asked whether face categorization and expert car categorization at the subordinate level relies on the same spatial frequency (SF) scales. Fifteen car experts and fifteen novices performed a category verification task with spatially filtered images of faces, cars, and airplanes. Images were categorized based on their basic (e.g. “car”) and subordinate level (e.g. “Japanese car”) identity. The effect of expertise was not evident when objects were categorized at the basic level. However, when the car experts categorized faces and cars at the subordinate level, the two types of expertise required different kinds of SF information. Subordinate categorization of faces relied on low SFs more than on high SFs, whereas subordinate expert car categorization relied on high SFs more than on low SFs. These findings suggest that expertise in the recognition of objects and faces do not utilize the same type of information. Rather, different types of expertise require different types of diagnostic visual information.  相似文献   

17.
Activation of airway smooth muscle (ASM) cells plays a central role in the pathophysiology of asthma. Because ASM is an important therapeutic target in asthma, it is beneficial to develop bioengineered ASM models available for assessing physiological and biophysical properties of ASM cells. In the physiological condition in vivo, ASM cells are surrounded by extracellular matrix (ECM) and exposed to mechanical stresses such as cyclic stretch. We utilized a 3-D culture model of human ASM cells embedded in type-I collagen gel. We further examined the effects of cyclic mechanical stretch, which mimics tidal breathing, on cell orientation and expression of contractile proteins of ASM cells within the 3-D gel. ASM cells in type-I collagen exhibited a tissue-like structure with actin stress fiber formation and intracellular Ca2+ mobilization in response to methacholine. Uniaxial cyclic stretching enhanced alignment of nuclei and actin stress fibers of ASM cells. Moreover, expression of mRNAs for contractile proteins such as α-smooth muscle actin, calponin, myosin heavy chain 11, and transgelin of stretched ASM cells was significantly higher than that under the static condition. Our findings suggest that mechanical force and interaction with ECM affects development of the ASM tissue-like construct and differentiation to the contractile phenotype in a 3-D culture model.  相似文献   

18.
Nagayama K  Yahiro Y  Matsumoto T 《FEBS letters》2011,585(24):3992-3997
Actin stress fibers (SFs) running across the top surface of the nucleus in vascular smooth muscle cells were dissected using laser nano-dissection technique to release its pretension, and the dynamic behavior of SFs, nucleus, and intranuclear DNA were investigated. SFs shortened across the top surface of the nuclei after their dissection. The nuclei moved in the direction of SF retraction, and showed marked local deformation, indicating that SFs firmly connected to the nuclear surface. Intranuclear DNA located near and around the dissected SFs disappeared and their distribution changed markedly. These findings suggest that SFs stabilize the position of intranuclear chromatin through mechanical connection with the nucleus. The tension of SFs may be transmitted mechanically to the nucleus inducing conformational changes of intranuclear chromatin.  相似文献   

19.

Stress fibers (SFs) in cells transmit external forces to cell nuclei, altering the DNA structure, gene expression, and cell activity. To determine whether SFs are involved in mechanosignal transduction upon intraluminal pressure, this study investigated the SF direction in smooth muscle cells (SMCs) in aortic tissue and strain in the SF direction. Aortic tissues were fixed under physiological pressure of 120 mmHg. First, we observed fluorescently labeled SFs using two-photon microscopy. It was revealed that SFs in the same smooth muscle layers were aligned in almost the same direction, and the absolute value of the alignment angle from the circumferential direction was 16.8° ± 5.2° (n = 96, mean ± SD). Second, we quantified the strain field in the aortic tissue in reference to photo-bleached markers. It was found in the radial-circumferential plane that the largest strain direction was − 21.3° ± 11.1°, and the zero normal strain direction was 28.1° ± 10.2°. Thus, the SFs in aortic SMCs were not in line with neither the largest strain direction nor the zero strain direction, although their orientation was relatively close to the zero strain direction. These results suggest that SFs in aortic SMCs undergo stretch, but not maximal and transmit the force to nuclei under intraluminal pressure.

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20.
Actin stress fibers (SFs) generate intercellular tension and play important roles in cellular mechanotransduction processes and the regulation of various cellular functions. We recently found, in vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs) cultured on a substrate, that the apical SFs running across the top surface of the nucleus have a mechanical connection with the cell nucleus and that their internal tension is transmitted directly to the nucleus. However, the effects of the connecting conditions and binding forces between SFs and the nucleus on force transmission processes are unclear at this stage. Here, we estimated the mechanical connection between apical SFs and the nucleus in SMCs, taking into account differences in the contractility of individual SFs, using experimental and numerical approaches. First, we classified apical SFs in SMCs according to their morphological characteristics: one subset appeared pressed onto the apical surface of the nucleus (pressed SFs), and the other appeared to be smoothly attached to the nuclear surface (attached SFs). We then dissected these SFs by laser irradiation to release the pretension, observed the dynamic behavior of the dissected SFs and the nucleus, and estimated the pretension of the SFs and the connection strength between the SFs and the nucleus by using a simple viscoelastic model. We found that pressed SFs generated greater contractile force and were more firmly connected to the nuclear surface than were attached SFs. We also observed line-like concentration of the nuclear membrane protein nesprin 1 and perinuclear DNA that was significantly located along the pressed SFs. These results indicate that the internal tension of pressed SFs is transmitted to the nucleus more efficiently than that of attached SFs, and that pressed SFs have significant roles in the regulation of the nuclear morphology and rearrangement of intranuclear DNA.  相似文献   

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