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1.
S N A?rapetian 《Biofizika》1975,20(3):462-466
Depolarization current decreases and hyperpolarization current increases the amplitude of tracing hyperpolarization of the neuron action potential. Calcium-defficient solution supresses the tracing depolarization, and turns the rhythmical activity of the neuron into the flashlike one. An increase of outer concentration of potassium ions decreases the tracing depolarization. The latter is suppressed completely when the membrane behaves as a potassium electrode. The suppressing effect of the increase of potassium outer concentration on tracing hyperpolarization decreases with a decrease of calcium ions content in the medium. When an active release of sodium ions from the cell is inhibited with DNP and substitution of sodium ions by lithium ions the tracing hyperpolarization of the action potential is suppressed. The tracing hyperpolarization is also suppressed during the shunting of the electrogenic effect of potassium pump with the outcoming current of chlorine ions. It is suggested that the tracing hyperpolarization of the single action potential is due to the calcium-dependent fraction of electrogenic release of sodium ions from the cell.  相似文献   

2.
In the presence of electrochemical energy, several branched-chain neutral and acidic amino acids were found to accumulate in membrane vesicles of Bacillus stearothermophilus. The membrane vesicles contained a stereo-specific transport system for the acidic amino acids L-glutamate and L-aspartate, which could not translocate their respective amines, L-glutamine and L-asparagine. The transport system was thermostable (Ti = 70 degrees C) and showed highest activities at elevated temperatures (60 to 65 degrees C). The membrane potential or pH gradient could act as the driving force for L-glutamate uptake, which indicated that the transport process of L-glutamate is electrogenic and that protons are involved in the translocation process. The electrogenic character implies that the anionic L-glutamate is cotransported with at least two monovalent cations. To determine the mechanistic stoichiometry of L-glutamate transport and the nature of the cotranslocated cations, the relationship between the components of the proton motive force and the chemical gradient of L-glutamate was investigated at different external pH values in the absence and presence of ionophores. In the presence of either a membrane potential or a pH gradient, the chemical gradient of L-glutamate was equivalent to that specific gradient at different pH values. These results cannot be explained by cotransport of L-glutamate with two protons, assuming thermodynamic equilibrium between the driving force for uptake and the chemical gradient of the substrate. To determine the character of the cotranslocated cations, L-glutamate uptake was monitored with artificial gradients. It was established that either the membrane potential, pH gradient, or chemical gradient of sodium ions could act as the driving force for L-glutamate uptake, which indicated that L-glutamate most likely is cotranslocated in symport with one proton and on sodium ion.  相似文献   

3.
Proton-activated rubidium transport catalyzed by the sodium pump   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Although the sodium pump normally exchanges three sodium for two potassium ions, experiments with inside-out red cell membrane vesicles show that the stoichiometry is reduced when the cytoplasmic sodium concentration is decreased to less than 1 mM. The present study was designed to gain insight into the question whether other monovalent cations, particularly protons, can act as sodium congeners in effecting pump-mediated potassium transport (ATP-dependent rubidium efflux from inside-out vesicles). The results show that at low cytoplasmic sodium concentration, an increase in proton concentration effects a further reduction in sodium:rubidium stoichiometry, to a value less than the minimal expected (1Na+:3Rb+). Furthermore, when vesicles containing 86RbCl are incubated in nominally sodium-free medium. ATP-dependent net rubidium efflux (normal influx) occurs when the pH is reduced from approximately 7.0 to 6.2 or less. This efflux is inhibited by strophanthidin and vanadate. These experiments support the notion that the sodium pump can operate as an ATP-dependent proton-activated rubidium (potassium) pump without obligatory countertransport of sodium ions.  相似文献   

4.
Secondary metabolic-energy-generating systems generate a proton motive force (pmf) or a sodium ion motive force (smf) by a process that involves the action of secondary transporters. The (electro)chemical gradient of the solute(s) is converted into the electrochemical gradient of protons or sodium ions. The most straightforward systems are the excretion systems by which a metabolic end product is excreted out of the cell in symport with protons or sodium ions (energy recycling). Similarly, solutes that were accumulated and stored in the cell under conditions of abundant energy supply may be excreted again in symport with protons when conditions become worse (energy storage). In fermentative bacteria, a proton motive force is generated by fermentation of weak acids, such as malate and citrate. The two components of the pmf, the membrane potential and the pH gradient, are generated in separate steps. The weak acid is taken up by a secondary transporter either in exchange with a fermentation product (precursor/product exchange) or by a uniporter mechanism. In both cases, net negative charge is translocated into the cell, thereby generating a membrane potential. Decarboxylation reactions in the metabolic breakdown of the weak acid consume cytoplasmic protons, thereby generating a pH gradient across the membrane. In this review, several examples of these different types of secondary metabolic energy generation will be discussed.  相似文献   

5.
A metabolic osmotic model of red blood cells is presented which takes into account the main reaction steps of glycolysis and the passive and active fluxes of ions across the cell membrane. Cellular energy metabolism and osmotic behaviour are linked by the ATP consumption for the active transport of cations as well as by the osmotic action of the glycolytic intermediate 2,3-diphosphoglycerate (2,3-DPG). The model is based on a system of differential equations describing the metabolic reactions and transport processes. Further, two algebraic conditions for the osmotic equilibrium and the electroneutrality of the cell are considered. Using realistic system parameters the model allows the calculation of a great number of dependent variables, among them the cell volume, the concentrations of metabolites and ions and the transmembrane potential. Only stationary states are considered.The parameter dependence of important model variables is characterized by control coefficients. The main results are: (a) The volume of erythrocytes is mainly determined by the permeabilities of the leak fluxes of cations, the content of hemoglobin and the activity of the hexokinase-phosphofructokinase system of glycolysis; (b) Changes of volume affect the glycolytic rate mainly by changing the concentration of ATP which is a regulator of glycolysis; (c) A change in the membrane area may affect the other cell properties only if it is connected with variations of the number of active and leak sites of the membrane.  相似文献   

6.
Light-driven potassium ion uptake in Halobacterium halobium is mediated by bacteriorhodopsin. This uptake is charge-balanced by sodium ions and not by proton release. Light-induced shifts in concentrations of divalent cations were found to be negligible. The transient changes in extracellular pH (alkaline overshoot) can be understood by the concomitant processes of ATP synthesis, proton/sodium exchange and potassium uptake. The driving force of potassium ion uptake is the membrane potential, no ATP-dependent potassium transport process is found. Fluorescence measurements indicate a high permeability of the membrane to potassium ions compared to sodium ions. Therefore the potassium ion diffusion potential contributes to the membrane potential (about 30 mV/decade) and thereby influences the ATP level. Sudden enhancement of the diffusion potential by the potassium ionophore monactin leads to the expected transient increase in cellular ATP level. Due to the large size (up to 100-fold) of the potassium ion gradient and its high capacity (intracellular concentration up to 3 M) the potassium ion gradient can well serve the cell as a long term storage form of energy.  相似文献   

7.
1. The effects of teichoic acids on the Mg(2+)-requirement of some membrane-bound enzymes in cell preparations from Bacillus licheniformis A.T.C.C. 9945 were examined. 2. The biosynthesis of the wall polymers poly(glycerol phosphate glucose) and poly(glycerol phosphate) by membrane-bound enzymes is strongly dependent on Mg(2+), showing maximum activity at 10-15mm-Mg(2+). 3. When the membrane is in close contact with the cell wall and membrane teichoic acid, the enzyme systems are insensitive to added Mg(2+). The membrane appears to interact preferentially with the constant concentration of Mg(2+) that is bound to the phosphate groups of teichoic acid in the wall and on the membrane. When the wall is removed by the action of lysozyme the enzymes again become dependent on an external supply of Mg(2+). 4. A membrane preparation that retained its membrane teichoic acid was still dependent on Mg(2+) in solution, but the dependence was damped so that the enzymes exhibited near-maximal activity over a much greater range of concentrations of added Mg(2+); this preparation contained Mg(2+) bound to the membrane teichoic acid. The behaviour of this preparation could be reproduced by binding membrane teichoic acid to membranes in the presence of Mg(2+). Addition of membrane teichoic acid to reaction mixtures also had a damping effect on the Mg(2+) requirement of the enzymes, since the added polymer interacted rapidly with the membrane. 5. Other phosphate polymers behaved in a qualitatively similar way to membrane teichoic acid on addition to reaction mixtures. 6. It is concluded that in whole cells the ordered array of anionic wall and membrane teichoic acids provides a constant reservoir of bound bivalent cations with which the membrane preferentially interacts. The membrane teichoic acid is the component of the system which mediates the interaction of bound cations with the membrane. The anionic polymers in the wall scavenge cations from the medium and maintain a constant environment for the membrane teichoic acid. Thus a function of wall and membrane teichoic acids is to maintain the correct ionic environment for cation-dependent membrane systems.  相似文献   

8.
The electrical potential difference across a plant or animalcell membrane can be caused by at least three different mechanisms,acting alone or in concert. First, a Donnan equilibrium canaccount for a sizable membrane potential without the participationof any active transport process. In a Donnan equilibrium themembrane potential is generated by the diffusion of permeatingions down their concentration gradients. The asymmetric distributionof permeating ions is caused by the presence of charged, nondiffusibleions, e.g., proteins inside the cell. The second mechanism isan electrically neutral ion pump, e.g., the coupled sodium-potassiumpump found in many types of cells. An electrically neutral pumpcan generate a large membrane potential if the membrane hasa high passive permeability to one of the actively transportedions, usually potassium. The third mechanism is an electrogenicion pump, which makes a substantial contribution to the membranepotential in several types of plant and animal cells. An electrogenicpump directly causes a net movement of charge across the cellmembrane. The membrane voltage generated by the pump then causesa passive flow of diffusible ions which partially short circuitsthe potential difference generated by the pump.  相似文献   

9.
Vitrification of mammalian tissues is important in the areas of human assisted reproduction, animal reproduction, and regenerative medicine. Non-permeating cryoprotectants (CPAs), particularly sucrose, are increasingly used in conjunction with permeating CPAs for vitrification of mammalian tissues. Combining non-permeating and permeating CPAs was found to further improve post-thaw viability and functionalities of vitrified mammalian tissues, showing the potential applications of such tissues in various clinical and veterinary settings. With the rising demand for the use of non-permeating CPAs in vitrification of mammalian tissues, there is a strong need for a timely and comprehensive review on the supplemental effects of non-permeating CPAs toward vitrification outcomes of mammalian tissues. In this review, we first discuss the roles of non-permeating CPAs including sugars and high molecular weight polymers in vitrification. We then summarize the supplemental effects of non-permeating CPAs on viability and functionalities of mammalian embryos, and ovarian, testicular, articular cartilage, tracheal, and kidney tissues following vitrification. Lastly, challenges associated with the use of non-permeating CPAs in vitrification of mammalian tissues are briefly discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Although we are used to attribute almost identical extracellular fluid (ECF) sodium concentrations in birds, amphibians, reptiles, and mammals to the composition of the primordial oceans in which, presumably, all life originated, this interpretation is not supported by geological data suggesting that the ocean salinity was never much lower than the present-day values, still four times higher than our plasma sodium.Here presented interpretation is that the similar ECF salt concentrations are dictated by the opposed Donnan effects on the cell membrane. The only way for the cell to reach the osmotic equilibrium is to alter cell volume, until concentration of nondiffusible intracellular ions (mainly charges on intracellular proteins) is equal to the ECF restricted ions (mainly Na+ ions, restricted by pumping out of cells).The achievement of electroneutrality requires that the sum of all anions equals concentration of positive ions in the cell (mainly K+). Negative charges on cytoplasmic proteins are the most stable component among ionized particles and other ions have to adapt to their concentration. Positive and negative soluble intracellular ions are all osmotically active and to achieve balance of osmotic forces on the cell membrane, the sum of their intracellular concentrations must equal the concentration of osmotically active extracellular particles. Since almost half the osmotically active ECF particles are sodium ions, the ECF sodium concentration seems related to concentration of charges on cytoplasmic proteins and concentration of intracellular phosphates.Our ancestors could not leave the salty ocean and move to brackish, or even fresh waters, without adequate regulation of their ECF sodium concentration and osmolality. Concentration of charges on cytoplasmic proteins or of intracellular phosphate buffers could not be altered, since this would compromise cell functioning. The remaining solution was to maintain the lowest ECF Na+ concentration effective in counteracting the average Donnan effect of charges on cytoplasmic proteins. When the optimal ECF sodium concentration had once become the reference point for osmoreceptors (controlling thirst and ADH secretion) and other regulatory mechanisms (secretion of renin/angiotensin/aldosterone, natriuretic factors), it made an important survival advantage that allowed spreading of animal life in fresh water and conquering of earth. The actual common value had to be a compromise that reduces the average osmotic burden on body cells to zero. Individual cells can reduce eventual residual osmotic forces on their membrane through altering cell volume by chloride shift, and by modulating the Na+K+-ATPase function.  相似文献   

11.
Amino acid transport was studied in membrane vesicles of the thermophilic anaerobic bacterium Clostridium fervidus. Neutral, acidic, and basic as well as aromatic amino acids were transported at 40 degrees C upon the imposition of an artificial membrane potential (delta psi) and a chemical gradient of sodium ions (delta microNa+). The presence of sodium ions was essential for the uptake of amino acids, and imposition of a chemical gradient of sodium ions alone was sufficient to drive amino acid uptake, indicating that amino acids are symported with sodium ions instead of with protons. Lithium ions, but no other cations tested, could replace sodium ions in serine transport. The transient character of artificial membrane potentials, especially at higher temperatures, severely limits their applicability for more detailed studies of a specific transport system. To obtain a constant proton motive force, the thermostable and thermoactive primary proton pump cytochrome c oxidase from Bacillus stearothermophilus was incorporated into membrane vesicles of C. fervidus. Serine transport could be driven by a membrane potential generated by the proton pump. Interconversion of the pH gradient into a sodium gradient by the ionophore monensin stimulated serine uptake. The serine carrier had a high affinity for serine (Kt = 10 microM) and a low affinity for sodium ions (apparent Kt = 2.5 mM). The mechanistic Na+-serine stoichiometry was determined to be 1:1 from the steady-state levels of the proton motive force, sodium gradient, and serine uptake. A 1:1 stoichiometry was also found for Na+-glutamate transport, and uptake of glutamate appeared to be an electroneutral process.  相似文献   

12.
谷氨酸是中枢神经系统一种重要的兴奋性神经递质,它与相应受体分子相互作用,通过细胞膜对阳离子通透性的改变或与G蛋白和第二信使系统相偶联,从而引起一系列复杂的信号转导反应。近年有关谷氨酸受体分子及其基因的研究表明:由于多基因家族、选择性剪接、RNA编辑以及异聚体形成等分子机理,使谷氨酸受体分子的结构和功能具有多样性,这种多样性是生物多样性的分子基础,也在微观水平上证明了生物多样性的原理。这方面的深入探索必将为中枢神经系统该受体表达及调控以及相关神经精神疾病发病的分子机理和治疗性药物设计提供新的线索。  相似文献   

13.
Muldrew K 《Cryobiology》2008,57(3):251-256
The phenomenon of slow cooling cryoinjury has remained one of the primary areas of research in cryobiology since the early 1950s when it was first investigated thoroughly. Lovelock demonstrated that cell death from freezing and thawing was mainly due to exposure to hypertonic solutions and the subsequent dilution back to isotonic conditions. He suggested that the cell became permeable to sodium in hypertonic conditions leading to a loading of sodium during the hypertonic exposure, which caused the cell to swell past its elastic limit during resuspension in isotonic media (post-hypertonic lysis). This idea was pursued by Zade-Oppen, Farrant, and others who were able to show that the membrane became leaky to cations in hypertonic media but they could not provide any mechanism that would cause the cell to load up with sodium (other than an exchange of extracellular sodium for intracellular potassium, leaving the cell with the same cation concentration that it started out with). In the absence of such a mechanism, predicting post-hypertonic lysis from osmotic simulations cannot be done.A simplified model is proposed in which the intracellular milieu is composed of both KCl and a proteinaceous component that normally forms many salt bridges between amino acids with fixed charges. When the intracellular salt concentration increases, the proteins are “salted in” to solution (salt bridges are replaced with ionic interactions) thereby decreasing the intracellular cation concentration. Cation channels in the plasma membrane are opened by exposure to a high salt concentration (either inside or outside the membrane) allowing extracellular sodium to take the place of the intracellular potassium that is interacting with anionic groups on the proteins. Dilution of the external medium (which also occurs during melting) causes water to move into the cells, diluting the cytoplasm. The proteins are then “salted out” of solution and release the salt back to free ions in solution. The cell has an excess of intracellular ions and may swell past its elastic limit due to water influx. A simulation engine is developed based on the model and compared to results in the literature for freeze–thaw injury in human red blood cells.  相似文献   

14.
1. The major ionmotive ATPase, in animal cells, is the Na+, K+-ATPase or sodium pump.2. This membrane bound enzyme is responsible for the translocation of Na+ ions and K+ ions across the plasma membrane, an active transport mechanism that requires the expenditure of the metabolic energy stored within the ATP molecule.3. This ubiquitous enzyme controls directly or indirectly many essential cellular functions, such as, cell volume, free calcium concentration and membrane potential.4. It is, therefore, apparent that alterations in its regulation may play key roles in pathological processes.  相似文献   

15.
16.
When Selenomonas ruminantium HD4 was grown in a chemostat, maximal succinate production and the highest molar growth yield values were both observed at a dilution rate of roughly 0.2 h-1. To determine the possible relationship between succinate efflux and high molar growth yields, the generation of a membrane potential by succinate efflux was studied in whole cells and vesicles (inside-out and right-side-out) prepared from S. ruminantium. Washed whole cells took up succinate in the absence of an exogenous energy supply; uptake was completely abolished by brief treatment with dinitrophenol or with nigericin and valinomycin. High levels of sodium ions (with respect to the intracellular sodium concentration in the assay buffer had a stimulatory effect on succinate uptake. When succinate was added to inside-out vesicles, a membrane potential (inside positive) was generated, as indicated by fluorescence quenching of the anionic lipophilic dye Oxonol V. Fluorescence quenching was sensitive to uncoupling by gramicidin D but only partially sensitive to the uncoupler carbonyl cyanide-p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone. In right-side-out vesicles, succinate uptake could be driven by an artificially imposed sodium gradient but not by a potassium diffusion potential; imposition of both a sodium gradient and potassium diffusion potential resulted in improved succinate uptake. The generation of a membrane potential (inside negative) upon succinate efflux was demonstrated directly in right-side-out vesicles when succinate-loaded vesicles were diluted into succinate-free buffer, and the lipophilic cationic probe tetraphenylphosphonium accumulated in the vesicles. Results indicate that an electrogenic succinate-sodium symporter is present in S. ruminantium. Transport of succinate out of the cell via the symporter might be responsible for the high molar growth yields obtained by this organism when it is grown at dilution rates where maximal succinate production occurs.  相似文献   

17.
The active transport of sodium ions in live Acholeplasma laidlawii B cells and in lipid vesicles containing the (Na+-Mg2+)-ATPase from the plasma membrane of this microorganism was studied by 23Na nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopic and 22Na tracer techniques, respectively. In live A. laidlawii B cells, the transport of sodium was an active process in which metabolic energy was harnessed for the extrusion of sodium ions against a concentration gradient. The process was inhibited by low temperatures and by the formation of gel state lipid in the plasma membrane of this organism. In reconstituted proteoliposomes containing the purified (Na+-Mg2+)-ATPase, the hydrolysis of ATP was accompanied by the transport of sodium ions into the lipid vesicles, and the transport process was impaired by reagents known to inhibit ATPase activity. At the normal growth temperature (37 degrees C), this transport process required a maximum of 1 mol of ATP per mol of sodium ion transported. Together, these results provide direct experimental evidence that the (Na+-Mg2+)-ATPase of the Acholeplasma laidlawii B membrane is the cation pump which maintains the low levels of intracellular sodium characteristic of this microorganism.  相似文献   

18.
《Cryobiology》2009,58(3):251-256
The phenomenon of slow cooling cryoinjury has remained one of the primary areas of research in cryobiology since the early 1950s when it was first investigated thoroughly. Lovelock demonstrated that cell death from freezing and thawing was mainly due to exposure to hypertonic solutions and the subsequent dilution back to isotonic conditions. He suggested that the cell became permeable to sodium in hypertonic conditions leading to a loading of sodium during the hypertonic exposure, which caused the cell to swell past its elastic limit during resuspension in isotonic media (post-hypertonic lysis). This idea was pursued by Zade-Oppen, Farrant, and others who were able to show that the membrane became leaky to cations in hypertonic media but they could not provide any mechanism that would cause the cell to load up with sodium (other than an exchange of extracellular sodium for intracellular potassium, leaving the cell with the same cation concentration that it started out with). In the absence of such a mechanism, predicting post-hypertonic lysis from osmotic simulations cannot be done.A simplified model is proposed in which the intracellular milieu is composed of both KCl and a proteinaceous component that normally forms many salt bridges between amino acids with fixed charges. When the intracellular salt concentration increases, the proteins are “salted in” to solution (salt bridges are replaced with ionic interactions) thereby decreasing the intracellular cation concentration. Cation channels in the plasma membrane are opened by exposure to a high salt concentration (either inside or outside the membrane) allowing extracellular sodium to take the place of the intracellular potassium that is interacting with anionic groups on the proteins. Dilution of the external medium (which also occurs during melting) causes water to move into the cells, diluting the cytoplasm. The proteins are then “salted out” of solution and release the salt back to free ions in solution. The cell has an excess of intracellular ions and may swell past its elastic limit due to water influx. A simulation engine is developed based on the model and compared to results in the literature for freeze–thaw injury in human red blood cells.  相似文献   

19.
The very low level of postillumination ATP synthesis in chromatophores was markedly stimulated when permeant anions (thiocyanate or perchlorate) or permeant cations (potassium in the presence of valinomycin) were added to the light stage. Although these compounds stimulated also light-induced proton uptake in chromatophores the pH dependence of both photoreactions was different. Proton uptake peaked at pH 6.5 while the amount of postillumination ATP was maximal when the light stage was carried out around pH 7.7. The increased yield of ATP at the more alkaline pH could not be explained by a slower decay of the high energy state at this pH, since the decay rate was faster at pH 7.7 than at pH 6.5. The proton concentration gradient which is maintained across the chromatophore membrane in the light was also found to increase when the external pH was raised from 6.0 to 8.0. Only a minimal amount of postillumination ATP was formed when this gradient was below 2.1 pH units, but above this value the ATP yield rose steeply as a function of the increasing pH gradient. In light of these results it is suggested that in order to obtain a high yield of postillumination ATP synthesis in chromatophores two conditions are required: the particles have to be loaded with a sufficient number of protons and a light-induced pH gradient above a certain threshold value has to be maintained across their membrane. The low yield of postillumination ATP in chromatophores and the increase obtained by adding permeating ions, is thus explained by similar variations in the extent of the pH gradient, which exceeded the threshold value only in the presence of the permeating ions.  相似文献   

20.
Amino acid transport in membrane vesicles of Bacillus stearothermophilus was studied. A relatively high concentration of sodium ions is needed for uptake of L-alanine (Kt = 1.0 mM) and L-leucine (Kt = 0.4 mM). In contrast, the Na(+)-H(+)-L-glutamate transport system has a high affinity for sodium ions (Kt less than 5.5 microM). Lithium ions, but no other cations tested, can replace sodium ions in neutral amino acid transport. The stimulatory effect of monensin on the steady-state accumulation level of these amino acids and the absence of transport in the presence of nonactin indicate that these amino acids are translocated by a Na+ symport mechanism. This is confirmed by the observation that an artificial delta psi and delta mu Na+/F but not a delta pH can act as a driving force for uptake. The transport system for L-alanine is rather specific. L-Serine, but not L-glycine or other amino acids tested, was found to be a competitive inhibitor of L-alanine uptake. On the other hand, the transport carrier for L-leucine also translocates the amino acids L-isoleucine and L-valine. The initial rates of L-glutamate and L-alanine uptake are strongly dependent on the medium pH. The uptake rates of both amino acids are highest at low external pH (5.5 to 6.0) and decline with increasing pH. The pH allosterically affects the L-glutamate and L-alanine transport systems. The maximal rate of L-glutamate uptake (Vmax) is independent of the external pH between pH 5.5 and 8.5, whereas the affinity constant (Kt) increases with increasing pH. A specific transport system for the basic amino acids L-lysine and L-arginine in the membrane vesicles has also been observed. Transport of these amino acids occurs most likely by a uniport mechanism.  相似文献   

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