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1.
Fourteen years after transplantation into the striatum of an individual with Parkinson's disease, grafted nigral neurons were found to have Lewy body-like inclusions that stained positively for alpha-synuclein and ubiquitin and to have reduced immunostaining for dopamine transporter. These pathological changes suggest that Parkinson's disease is an ongoing process that can affect grafted cells in the striatum in a manner similar to host dopamine neurons in the substantia nigra. These findings have implications for cell-based therapies and for understanding the cause of Parkinson's disease.  相似文献   

2.
Mutations in alpha-synuclein, parkin and ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase L1, and defects in 26/20S proteasomes, cause or are associated with the development of familial and sporadic Parkinson's disease (PD). This suggests that failure of the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) to degrade abnormal proteins may underlie nigral degeneration and Lewy body formation that occur in PD. To explore this concept, we studied the effects of lactacystin-mediated inhibition of 26/20S proteasomal function and ubiquitin aldehyde (UbA)-induced impairment of ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase (UCH) activity in fetal rat ventral mesencephalic cultures. We demonstrate that both lactacystin and UbA caused concentration-dependent and preferential degeneration of dopaminergic neurons. Inhibition of 26/20S proteasomal function was accompanied by the accumulation of alpha-synuclein and ubiquitin, and the formation of inclusions that were immunoreactive for these proteins, in the cytoplasm of VM neurons. Inhibition of UCH was associated with a loss of ubiquitin immunoreactivity in the cytoplasm of VM neurons, but there was a marked and localized increase in alpha-synuclein staining which may represent the formation of inclusions bodies in VM neurons. These findings provide direct evidence that impaired protein clearance can induce dopaminergic cell death and the formation of proteinaceous inclusion bodies in VM neurons. This study supports the concept that defects in the UPS may underlie nigral pathology in familial and sporadic forms of PD.  相似文献   

3.
Exposure of PC12 cells to metamphetamine (MA) induces the formation of multilamellar structures (whorls) resembling autophagic granules that subsequently develop as intracellular inclusions. These inclusions stain for a variety of antigens belonging to the ubiquitin proteasome pathway. Since MA-induced intracellular bodies require the presence of dopamine in the present study we analyzed the role of dopamine (DA) receptors in producing neuronal inclusions. Moreover, we investigated potential signaling pathways which could lead to ubiquitination in the presence of MA. Based on recent reports that ubiquitination of β-adrenergic receptors is promoted by β-arrestin which shuttles proteins from the plasma membrane to the ubiquitin proteasome system we investigated whether β-arrestin is involved in MA-induced inclusion formation. Our experiments document that (i) β-arrestin was associated with MA-induced intracellular bodies; (ii) MA induced a rapid and reversible ubiquitination of β-arrestin; (iii) dopamine antagonists reduced both MA-induced β-arrestin ubiquitination and intracellular whorls formation; (iv) the number of MA-induced intracellular bodies was reduced in cells transfected with the β-arrestin dominant negative mutant, βarrV53D and was increased by the persistently ubiquitinated β-arrestin-ubiquitin fusion protein. In conclusion, the present study demonstrates the involvement of β-arrestin in MA-induced intracellular bodies and the participation of dopamine receptors in this process.  相似文献   

4.
Mutations in the alpha-synuclein gene have recently been identified in families with inherited Parkinson's disease and the protein product of this gene is a component of Lewy bodies, indicating that alpha-synuclein is involved in Parkinson's disease pathogenesis. A role for normal alpha-synuclein in synaptic function, apoptosis or plasticity responses has been suggested. We show here that in rat pheochromocytoma PC12 cells synuclein-1, the rat homolog of human alpha-synuclein, is highly and selectively up-regulated at the mRNA and protein levels after 7 days of nerve growth factor treatment. Synuclein-1 expression appears neither sufficient nor necessary for the neuritic sprouting that occurs within 1-2 days of nerve growth factor treatment. Rather, it likely represents a component of a late neuronal maturational response. Synuclein-1 redistributes diffusely within the cell soma and the neuritic processes in nerve growth factor-treated PC12 cells. Cultured neonatal rat sympathetic neurones express high levels of synuclein-1, with a diffuse intracellular distribution, similar to neuronal PC12 cells. These results suggest that levels of synuclein-1 may be regulated by neurotrophic factors in the nervous system and reinforce a role for alpha-synuclein in plasticity-maturational responses. In contrast, there is no correlation between synuclein expression and apoptotic death following trophic deprivation.  相似文献   

5.
Siah-1 facilitates ubiquitination and degradation of synphilin-1   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Parkinson's disease is a common neurodegenerative disorder characterized by loss of dopaminergic neurons and appearance of Lewy bodies, cytoplasmic inclusions that are highly enriched with ubiquitin. Synphilin-1, alpha-synuclein, and Parkin represent the major components of Lewy bodies and are involved in the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease. Synphilin-1 is an alpha-synuclein-binding protein that is ubiquitinated by Parkin. Recently, a mutation in the synphilin-1 gene has been reported in patients with sporadic Parkinson's disease. Although synphilin-1 localizes close to synaptic vesicles, its function remains unknown. To investigate the proteins that interact with synphilin-1, the present study performed a yeast two-hybrid screening and identified a novel interacting protein, Siah-1 ubiquitin ligase. Synphilin-1 and Siah-1 proteins were endogenously expressed in the central nervous system and were found to coimmunoprecipitate each other in rat brain homogenate. Confocal microscopic analysis revealed colocalization of both proteins in cells. Siah-1 was found to interact with the N terminus of synphilin-1 through its substrate-binding domain and to specifically ubiquitinate synphilin-1 via its RING finger domain. Siah-1 facilitated synphilin-1 degradation via the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway more efficiently than Parkin. Siah-1 was found to not facilitate ubiquitination and degradation of wild type or mutant alpha-synuclein. Synphilin-1 inhibited high K+-induced dopamine release from PC12 cells. Siah-1 was found to abrogate the inhibitory effects of synphilin-1 on dopamine release. Such findings suggest that Siah-1 might play a role in regulation of synphilin-1 function.  相似文献   

6.
alpha-Synuclein plays a major role in Parkinson disease. Unraveling the mechanisms of alpha-synuclein aggregation is essential to understand the formation of Lewy bodies and their involvement in dopaminergic cell death. alpha-Synuclein is ubiquitylated in Lewy bodies, but the role of alpha-synuclein ubiquitylation has been mysterious. We now report that the ubiquitin-protein isopeptide ligase seven in absentia homolog (SIAH) directly interacts with and monoubiquitylates alpha-synuclein and promotes its aggregation in vitro and in vivo, which is toxic to cells. Mass spectrometry analysis demonstrates that SIAH monoubiquitylates alpha-synuclein at lysines 12, 21, and 23, which were previously shown to be ubiquitylated in Lewy bodies. SIAH ubiquitylates lysines 10, 34, 43, and 96 as well. Suppression of SIAH expression by short hairpin RNA to SIAH-1 and SIAH-2 abolished alpha-synuclein monoubiquitylation in dopaminergic cells, indicating that endogenous SIAH ubiquitylates alpha-synuclein. Moreover, SIAH co-immunoprecipitated with alpha-synuclein from brain extracts. Inhibition of proteasomal, lysosomal, and autophagic pathways, as well as overexpression of a ubiquitin mutant less prone to deubiquitylation, G76A, increased monoubiquitylation of alpha-synuclein by SIAH. Monoubiquitylation increased the aggregation of alpha-synuclein in vitro. At the electron microscopy level, monoubiquitylated alpha-synuclein promoted the formation of massive amounts of amorphous aggregates. Monoubiquitylation also increased alpha-synuclein aggregation in vivo as observed by increased formation of alpha-synuclein inclusion bodies within dopaminergic cells. These inclusions are toxic to cells, and their formation was prevented when endogenous SIAH expression was suppressed. Our data suggest that monoubiquitylation represents a possible trigger event for alpha-synuclein aggregation and Lewy body formation.  相似文献   

7.
Many models of Parkinson's disease (PD) have succeeded in replicating dopaminergic neuron loss or alpha-synuclein aggregation but not the formation of classical Lewy bodies, the pathological hallmark of PD. Our cybrid model of sporadic PD was created by introducing the mitochondrial genes from PD patients into neuroblastoma cells that lack mitochondrial DNA. Previous studies using cybrids have shown that information encoded by mitochondrial DNA in patients contributes to many pathogenic features of sporadic PD. In this paper, we report the generation of fibrillar and vesicular inclusions in a long-term cybrid cell culture model that replicates the essential antigenic and structural features of Lewy bodies in PD brain without the need for exogenous protein expression or inhibition of mitochondrial or proteasomal function. The inclusions generated by PD cybrid cells stained with eosin, thioflavin S, and antibodies to alpha-synuclein, ubiquitin, parkin, synphilin-1, neurofilament, beta-tubulin, the proteasome, nitrotyrosine, and cytochrome c. Future studies of these cybrids will enable us to better understand how Lewy bodies form and what role they play in the pathogenesis of PD.  相似文献   

8.
The presence of alpha-synuclein Lewy body pathology is used to distinguish Parkinson's disease from parkinsonism, for which a broader spectrum of neuropathologies, including tau-immunopositive neurofibrillary tangles and ubiquitin inclusions, might accompany nigral neuronal loss. These neuropathologies define the endpoint of many neurodegenerative disorders but might be symptomatic rather than causative. Mutations in the gene encoding leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) were recently discovered in late-onset parkinsonism, the phenotype of which can be clinically and pathologically indistinguishable from Parkinson's disease. However, in some kindreds with LRRK2- associated disease, pathologically distinct forms of parkinsonism, including nigral neuronal loss with Lewy body disease or tau-immunopositive neurofibrillary tangles, were discovered. Understanding the molecular function of the LRRK2 protein and its associated pathways might elucidate the switch between Lewy body pathology and neurofibrillary tangles, and holds promise for prospective therapeutics that might slow or halt progression of many forms of parkinsonism.  相似文献   

9.
Lewy bodies are intracellular fibrillar inclusions composed of alpha-synuclein. They constitute the pathological hallmark of Parkinson's disease, dementia with Lewy bodies, and other neurodegenerative diseases. Although the majority of Lewy bodies are stained for ubiquitin by immunohistochemistry, the substrate for this modification is poorly understood. Insoluble, urea-soluble alpha-synuclein was separated from soluble fractions and subjected to two-dimensional gel electrophoresis to further characterize pathogenic alpha-synuclein species from disease brains. By using this approach, we found that in sporadic Lewy body diseases a highly modified, disease-associated 22-24-kDa alpha-synuclein species is ubiquitinated. Conjugation of one, two, and, to a lesser extent, three ubiquitins was detected. This 22-24-kDa alpha-synuclein species represents partly phosphorylated protein. Furthermore, no generalized impairment of the proteolytic activity of the proteasome was detected in brain regions with Lewy body pathology. Because unmodified alpha-synuclein is degraded by the proteasome in a ubiquitin-independent manner, these data suggest that accumulation of modified 22-24-kDa alpha-synuclein is a disease-specific event which may overwhelm the proteolytic system, leading to aberrant ubiquitination. Accordingly, carboxyl-terminal-truncated alpha-synuclein, presumably the result of aberrant proteolysis, is found only in association with alpha-synuclein aggregates.  相似文献   

10.
Some rare inherited forms of Parkinson's disease (PD) are due to mutations in the gene encoding a 140-amino acid presynaptic protein called alpha-synuclein. In PD, and some other related disorders such as dementia with Lewy bodies, alpha-synuclein accumulates in the brain in the form of fibrillar aggregates, which are found inside the neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions known as Lewy bodies. By means of an electron spin resonance (ESR) spin trapping method, we show here that solutions of full-length alpha-synuclein, and a synthetic peptide fragment of alpha-synuclein corresponding to residues 61-95 (the so-called non-Abeta component or NAC), both liberate hydroxyl radicals upon incubation in vitro followed by the addition of Fe(II). We did not observe this property for the related beta- and gamma-synucleins, which are not found in Lewy bodies, and are not linked genetically to any neurodegenerative disorder. There is abundant evidence for the involvement of free radicals and oxidative stress in the pathogenesis of nigral damage in PD. Our new data suggest that the fundamental molecular mechanism underlying this pathological process could be the production of hydrogen peroxide by alpha-synuclein.  相似文献   

11.
Engelender S 《Autophagy》2008,4(3):372-374
alpha-Synuclein is mutated in Parkinson's disease (PD) and is found in cytosolic inclusions, called Lewy bodies, in sporadic forms of the disease. A fraction of alpha-synuclein purified from Lewy bodies is monoubiquitinated, but the role of this monoubiquitination has been obscure. We now review recent data indicating a role of alpha-synuclein monoubiquitination in Lewy body formation and implicating the autophagic pathway in regulating these processes. The E3 ubiquitin-ligase SIAH is present in Lewy bodies and monoubiquitinates alpha-synuclein at the same lysines that are monoubiquitinated in Lewy bodies. Monoubiquitination by SIAH promotes the aggregation of alpha-synuclein into amorphous aggregates and increases the formation of inclusions within dopaminergic cells. Such effect is observed even at low monoubiquitination levels, suggesting that monoubiquitinated alpha-synuclein may work as a seed for aggregation. Accumulation of monoubiquitinated alpha-synuclein and formation of cytosolic inclusions is promoted by autophagy inhibition and to a lesser extent by proteasomal and lysosomal inhibition. Monoubiquitinated alpha-synuclein inclusions are toxic to cells and recruit PD-related proteins, such as synphilin-1 and UCH-L1. Altogether, the new data indicate that monoubiquitination might play an important role in Lewy body formation. Decreasing alpha- synuclein monoubiquitination, by preventing SIAH function or by stimulating autophagy, constitutes a new therapeutic strategy for Parkinson's disease.  相似文献   

12.
The presynaptic alpha-synuclein is a prime suspect for contributing to Lewy pathology and clinical aspects of diseases, including Parkinson's disease, dementia with Lewy bodies, and a Lewy body variant of Alzheimer's disease. Here we examined the pathogenic mechanism of neuronal cell death induced by alpha-synuclein. The exogenous addition of alpha-synuclein caused a marked decrease of cell viability in primary and immortalized neuronal cells. The neuronal cell death appeared to be correlated with the Rab5A-specific endocytosis of alpha-synuclein that subsequently caused the formation of Lewy body-like intracytoplasmic inclusions. This was further supported by the fact that the expression of GTPase-deficient Rab5A resulted in a significant decrease of its cytotoxicity as a result of incomplete endocytosis of alpha-synuclein.  相似文献   

13.
Association between protein inclusions and neurodegenerative diseases, including Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases, and polyglutamine disorders, has been widely documented. Although ubiquitin is conjugated to many of these aggregated proteins, the 26S proteasome does not efficiently degrade them. Mutations in the ubiquitin-protein ligase Parkin are associated with autosomal recessive juvenile Parkinsonism. Although Parkin-positive inclusions are not detected in brains of autosomal recessive juvenile Parkinsonism patients, Parkin is found in Lewy bodies in sporadic disease. This suggests that loss of Parkin ligase activity via mutation, or sequestration to Lewy bodies, is a contributory factor to sporadic disease onset. We now demonstrate that decreased proteasomal activity causes formation of large, noncytotoxic inclusions within the cytoplasm of both neuronal and nonneuronal cells overexpressing Parkin. This is not a general phenomenon as there is an absence of similar inclusions when HHARI, a structural homolog of Parkin, is overexpressed. The inclusions colocalize with ubiquitin and with proteasomes. Furthermore, Parkin inclusions colocalize with gamma-tubulin, acetylated alpha-tubulin, and cause redistribution of vimentin, suggesting aggresome-like properties. Our data imply that lower proteasomal activity, previously observed in brain tissue of Parkinson's disease patients, leads to Parkin accumulation and a concomitant reduction in ligase activity, thereby promoting Lewy body formation.  相似文献   

14.
Parkin accumulation in aggresomes due to proteasome impairment   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
Parkinson's disease (PD) is characterized by loss of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra and by the presence of ubiquitinated cytoplasmic inclusions known as Lewy bodies. Alpha-synuclein and Parkin are two of the proteins associated with inherited forms of PD and are found in Lewy bodies. Whereas numerous reports indicate the tendency of alpha-synuclein to aggregate both in vitro and in vivo, no information is available about similar physical properties for Parkin. Here we show that overexpression of Parkin in the presence of proteasome inhibitors leads to the formation of aggresome-like perinuclear inclusions. These eosinophilic inclusions share many characteristics with Lewy bodies, including a core and halo organization, immunoreactivity to ubiquitin, alpha-synuclein, synphilin-1, Parkin, molecular chaperones, and proteasome subunit as well as staining of some with thioflavin S. We propose that the process of Lewy body formation may be akin to that of aggresome-like structures. The tendency of wild-type Parkin to aggregate and form inclusions may have implications for the pathogenesis of sporadic PD.  相似文献   

15.
Parkinson's disease is characterized by loss of nigral dopaminergic neurons and the presence of cytoplasmic inclusions known as Lewy bodies. alpha-Synuclein and its interacting partner synphilin-1 are among constituent proteins in these aggregates. The presence of ubiquitin and proteasome subunits in these inclusions supports a role for this protein degradation pathway in the processing of proteins involved in this disease. To begin elucidating the kinetics of synphilin-1 in cells, we studied its degradation pathway in HEK293 cells that had been engineered to stably express FLAG-tagged synphilin-1. Pulse-chase experiments revealed that this protein is relatively stable with a half-life of about 16 h. Treatment with proteasome inhibitors resulted in attenuation of degradation and the accumulation of high molecular weight ubiquitinated synphilin-1 in immunoprecipitation/immunoblot experiments. Additionally, proteasome inhibitors stimulated the formation of peri-nuclear inclusions which were immunoreactive for synphilin-1, ubiquitin and alpha-synuclein. Cell viability studies revealed increased susceptibility of synphilin-1 over-expressing cells to proteasomal dysfunction. These observations indicate that synphilin-1 is ubiquitinated and degraded by the proteasome. Accumulation of ubiquitinated synphilin-1 due to impaired clearance results in its aggregation as peri-nuclear inclusions and in poor cell survival.  相似文献   

16.
Mutations in alpha-synuclein gene cause familial form of Parkinson disease, and deposition of wild-type alpha-synuclein as Lewy bodies occurs as a hallmark lesion of sporadic Parkinson disease and dementia with Lewy bodies, implicating alpha-synuclein in the pathogenesis of Parkinson disease and related neurodegenerative diseases. Dopamine neurons in substantia nigra are the major site of neurodegeneration associated with alpha-synuclein deposition in Parkinson disease. Here we establish transgenic Caenorhabditis elegans (TG worms) that overexpresses wild-type or familial Parkinson mutant human alpha-synuclein in dopamine neurons. The TG worms exhibit accumulation of alpha-synuclein in the cell bodies and neurites of dopamine neurons, and EGFP labeling of dendrites is often diminished in TG worms expressing familial Parkinson disease-linked A30P or A53T mutant alpha-synuclein, without overt loss of neuronal cell bodies. Notably, TG worms expressing A30P or A53T mutant alpha-synuclein show failure in modulation of locomotory rate in response to food, which has been attributed to the function of dopamine neurons. This behavioral abnormality was accompanied by a reduction in neuronal dopamine content and was treatable by administration of dopamine. These phenotypes were not seen upon expression of beta-synuclein. The present TG worms exhibit dopamine neuron-specific dysfunction caused by accumulation of alpha-synuclein, which would be relevant to the genetic and compound screenings aiming at the elucidation of pathological cascade and therapeutic strategies for Parkinson disease.  相似文献   

17.
Neuropathological investigations have identified major hallmarks of chronic neurodegenerative disease. These include protein aggregates called Lewy bodies in dementia with Lewy bodies and Parkinson's disease. Mutations in the alpha-synuclein gene have been found in familial disease and this has led to intense focused research in vitro and in transgenic animals to mimic and understand Parkinson's disease. A decade of transgenesis has lead to overexpression of wild type and mutated alpha-synuclein, but without faithful reproduction of human neuropathology and movement disorder. In particular, widespread regional neuronal cell death in the substantia nigra associated with human disease has not been described. The intraneuronal protein aggregates (inclusions) in all of the human chronic neurodegenerative diseases contain ubiquitylated proteins. There could be several reasons for the accumulation of ubiquitylated proteins, including malfunction of the ubiquitin proteasome system (UPS). This hypothesis has been genetically tested in mice by conditional deletion of a proteasomal regulatory ATPase gene. The consequences of gene ablation in the forebrain include extensive neuronal death and the production of Lewy-like bodies containing ubiquitylated proteins as in dementia with Lewy bodies. Gene deletion in catecholaminergic neurons, including in the substantia nigra, recapitulates the neuropathology of Parkinson's disease.  相似文献   

18.
Dorfin localizes to Lewy bodies and ubiquitylates synphilin-1   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by loss of nigra dopaminergic neurons. Lewy bodies (LBs) are a characteristic neuronal inclusion in PD brains. In this study, we report that Dorfin, a RING finger-type ubiquityl ligase for mutant superoxide dismutase-1, was localized with ubiquitin in LBs. Recently, synphilin-1 was identified to associate with alpha-synuclein and to be a major component of LBs. We found that overexpression of synphilin-1 in cultured cells led to the formation of large juxtanuclear inclusions, but showed no cytotoxicity. Dorfin colocalized in these large inclusions with ubiquitin and proteasomal components. In contrast to full-length synphilin-1, overexpression of the central portion of synphilin-1, including ankyrin-like repeats, a coiled-coil domain, and an ATP/GTP-binding domain, predominantly led to the formation of small punctate aggregates scattered throughout the cytoplasm and showed cytotoxic effects. Dorfin and ubiquitin did not localize in these small aggregates. Overexpression of the N or C terminus of synphilin-1 did not lead to the formation of any aggregates. Dorfin physically bound and ubiquitylated synphilin-1 through its central portion, but did not ubiquitylate wild-type or mutant alpha-synuclein. These results suggest that the central domain of synphilin-1 has an important role in the formation of aggregates and cytotoxicity and that Dorfin may be involved in the pathogenic process of PD and LB formation by ubiquitylation of synphilin-1.  相似文献   

19.
Proteasomal dysfunction may underlie certain neuro-degenerative conditions such as Parkinson disease. We have shown that pharmacological inhibition of the proteasome in cultured neuronal cells leads to apoptotic death and formation of cytoplasmic ubiquitinated inclusions. These inclusions stain for alpha-synuclein and assume a fibrillar structure, as assessed by thioflavine S staining, and therefore resemble Lewy bodies. alpha-Synuclein is thought to be a central component of Lewy bodies. Whether alpha-synuclein is required for inclusion formation or apoptotic death has not been formally assessed. The present study examines whether alpha-synuclein deficiency in neurons alters their sensitivity to proteasomal inhibition-induced apoptosis or inclusion formation. Cortical neurons derived from alpha-synuclein-null mice showed a similar sensitivity to death induced by the proteasomal inhibitor lactacystin compared with neurons derived from wild-type mice. Furthermore, the absence of alpha-synuclein did not influence the percentage of lactacystin-treated neurons harboring cytoplasmic ubiquitinated inclusions or alter the solubility of such inclusions. In contrast, however, ubiquitinated inclusions in alpha-synuclein-deficient neurons lacked amyloid-like fibrillization, as determined by thioflavine S staining. This indicates that although alpha-synuclein deficiency does not affect the formation of ubiquitinated inclusions, it does significantly alter their structure. The lack of effect on survival in alpha-synuclein knock-out cultures further suggests that the fibrillar nature of the inclusions does not contribute to neuronal degeneration in this model.  相似文献   

20.
Free radicals, including dopamine (DA)-oxidized metabolites, have long been implicated in pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease (PD). However, the relationships between such oxidative stresses and alpha-synuclein (alpha-S), a major constituent of Lewy bodies, remain unknown. In this study, we established neuronal cells that constitutively express alpha-S and tetracycline-regulated tyrosinase. While tyrosinase overexpression induced apoptosis, co-expression of wild type or A53T mutant human alpha-S with tyrosinase further exacerbated cell death. In this process, the formation of alpha-S oligomers and the reduction in mitochondrial membrane potential were demonstrated. This cellular model may reconstitute the pathological metabolism of alpha-S in the synucleinopathy and provide a useful tool to explore possible pathomechanisms of nigral degeneration in PD.  相似文献   

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