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1.
Catalase HPII from Escherichia coli, a homotetramer of subunits with 753 residues, is the largest known catalase. The structure of native HPII has been refined at 1.9 A resolution using X-ray synchrotron data collected from crystals flash-cooled with liquid nitrogen. The crystallographic agreement factors R and R(free) are respectively 16.6% and 21.0%. The asymmetric unit of the crystal contains a whole molecule that shows accurate 222-point group symmetry. The structure of the central part of the HPII subunit gives a root mean square deviation of 1.5 A for 477 equivalencies with beef liver catalase. Most of the additional 276 residues of HPII are located in either an extended N-terminal arm or in a C-terminal domain organized with a flavodoxin-like topology. A small number of mostly hydrophilic interactions stabilize the relative orientation between the C-terminal domain and the core of the enzyme. The heme component of HPII is a cis-hydroxychlorin gamma-spirolactone in an orientation that is flipped 180 degrees with respect to the orientation of the heme found in beef liver catalase. The proximal ligand of the heme is Tyr415 which is joined by a covalent bond between its Cbeta atom and the Ndelta atom of His392. Over 2,700 well-defined solvent molecules have been identified filling a complex network of cavities and channels formed inside the molecule. Two channels lead close to the distal side heme pocket of each subunit suggesting separate inlet and exhaust functions. The longest channel, that begins in an adjacent subunit, is over 50 A in length, and the second channel is about 30 A in length. A third channel reaching the heme proximal side may provide access for the substrate needed to catalyze the heme modification and His-Tyr bond formation. HPII does not bind NADPH and the equivalent region to the NADPH binding pocket of bovine catalase, partially occluded in HPII by residues 585-590, corresponds to the entrance to the second channel. The heme distal pocket contains two solvent molecules, and the one closer to the iron atom appears to exhibit high mobility or low occupancy compatible with weak coordination.  相似文献   

2.
Catalase CatF of Pseudomonas syringae has been identified phylogenetically as a clade 1 catalase, closely related to plant catalases, a group from which no structure has been determined. The structure of CatF has been refined at 1.8 A resolution by using X-ray synchrotron data collected from a crystal flash-cooled with liquid nitrogen. The crystallographic agreement factors R and R(free) are, respectively, 18.3% and 24.0%. The asymmetric unit of the crystal contains a whole molecule that shows accurate 222-point group symmetry. The crystallized enzyme is a homotetramer of subunits with 484 residues, some 26 residues shorter than predicted from the DNA sequence. Mass spectrometry analysis confirmed the absence of 26 N-terminal residues, possibly removed by a periplasmic transport system. The core structure of the CatF subunit was closely related to seven other catalases with root-mean-square deviations (RMSDs) of 368 core Calpha atoms of 0.99-1.30 A. The heme component of CatF is heme b in the same orientation that is found in Escherichia coli hydroperoxidase II, an orientation that is flipped 180 degrees with respect the orientation of the heme in bovine liver catalase. NADPH is not found in the structure of CatF because key residues required for nucleotide binding are missing; 2129 water molecules were refined into the model. Water occupancy in the main or perpendicular channel of CatF varied among the four subunits from two to five in the region between the heme and the conserved Asp150. A comparison of the water occupancy in this region with the same region in other catalases reveals significant differences among the catalases.  相似文献   

3.
A recently discovered form of spinach catalase that contains both a novel heme and protoheme as prosthetic groups has been characterized using immunological and spectroscopic techniques. The enzyme appears to be a dimer of identical Mr 60,000 monomers. Extraction of the non-covalently bound prosthetic groups, followed by thin-layer chromatography of the extract, suggested that the novel heme contains four carboxylic acid side-chain groups. The resonance Raman spectrum of the resting enzyme indicates that the protoheme prosthetic group is five-coordinate and high-spin. The enzyme was shown to bind formate, azide and cyanide. Cyanide and azide binding to catalase are biphasic, suggesting the existence of two different binding sites for cyanide and azide in the enzyme. Results obtained from EPR and resonance Raman spectroscopies also support the hypothesis that two different ligand-binding sites are present in the enzyme. Western blots suggest that the Mr 60,000 peptide of the novel heme-containing catalase is similar or identical to that of a previously characterized, exclusively protoheme-containing, tetrameric catalase.  相似文献   

4.
The active center of catalase   总被引:24,自引:0,他引:24  
The refined structure of beef liver catalase (I. Fita, A. M. Silva, M. R. N. Murthy & M. G. Rossmann, unpublished results) is here examined with regard to possible catalytic mechanisms. The distal side of the deeply buried heme pocket is connected with the surface of the molecule by one (or possibly two) channel. The electron density representing the heme group, in each of the two crystallographically independent subunits, is consistent with degradation of the porphyrin rings. The heme group appears to be buckled, reflecting the high content of bile pigment in liver catalase. The spatial organization on the proximal side (where the fifth ligand of the iron is located) shows an elaborate network of interactions. The distal side contains the substrate pocket. The limited space in this region severely constrains possible substrate positions and orientations. The N delta atom of the essential His74 residue hydrogen bonds with O gamma of Ser113, which in turn hydrogen bonds to a water molecule associated with the propionic carbonylic group of pyrrole III. These interactions are also visible in the refined structure of Penicillium vitale catalase (B. K. Vainshtein, W. R. Melik-Adamyan, V. V. Barynin, A. A. Vagin, A. I. Grebenko, V. V. Borisov, K. S. Bartels, I. Fita, & M. G. Rossmann, unpublished results). Model building suggests a pathway for a catalase mechanism (compound I formation, as well as catalatic and peroxidatic reactions). There are some similarities in compound I formation of catalase and cytochrome c peroxidase.  相似文献   

5.
Carbon monoxide, formate, and acetate interact with horseradish peroxidase (HRP) by binding to subsites within the active site. These ligands also bind to catalases, but their interactions are different in the two types of enzymes. Formate (notionally the "hydrated" form of carbon monoxide) is oxidized to carbon dioxide by compound I in catalase, while no such reaction is reported to occur in HRP, and the CO complex of ferrocatalase can only be obtained indirectly. Here we describe high-resolution crystal structures for HRP in its complexes with carbon monoxide and with formate, and compare these with the previously determined HRP-acetate structure [Berglund, G. I., et al. (2002) Nature 417, 463-468]. A multicrystal X-ray data collection strategy preserved the correct oxidation state of the iron during the experiments. Absorption spectra of the crystals and electron paramagnetic resonance data for the acetate and formate complexes in solution correlate electronic states with the structural results. Formate in ferric HRP and CO in ferrous HRP bind directly to the heme iron with iron-ligand distances of 2.3 and 1.8 A, respectively. CO does not bind to the ferric iron in the crystal. Acetate bound to ferric HRP stacks parallel with the heme plane with its carboxylate group 3.6 A from the heme iron, and without an intervening solvent molecule between the iron and acetate. The positions of the oxygen atoms in the bound ligands outline a potential access route for hydrogen peroxide to the iron. We propose that interactions in this channel ensure deprotonation of the proximal oxygen before binding to the heme iron.  相似文献   

6.
The heme-containing catalase HPII of Escherichia coli consists of a homotetramer in which each subunit contains a core region with the highly conserved catalase tertiary structure, to which are appended N- and C-terminal extensions making it the largest known catalase. HPII does not bind NADPH, a cofactor often found in catalases. In HPII, residues 585-590 of the C-terminal extension protrude into the pocket corresponding to the NADPH binding site in the bovine liver catalase. Despite this difference, residues that define the NADPH pocket in the bovine enzyme appear to be well preserved in HPII. Only two residues that interact ionically with NADPH in the bovine enzyme (Asp212 and His304) differ in HPII (Glu270 and Glu362), but their mutation to the bovine sequence did not promote nucleotide binding. The active-site heme groups are deeply buried inside the molecular structure requiring the movement of substrate and products through long channels. One potential channel is about 30 A in length, approaches the heme active site laterally, and is structurally related to the branched channel associated with the NADPH binding pocket in catalases that bind the dinucleotide. In HPII, the upper branch of this channel is interrupted by the presence of Arg260 ionically bound to Glu270. When Arg260 is replaced by alanine, there is a threefold increase in the catalytic activity of the enzyme. Inhibitors of HPII, including azide, cyanide, various sulfhydryl reagents, and alkylhydroxylamine derivatives, are effective at lower concentration on the Ala260 mutant enzyme compared to the wild-type enzyme. The crystal structure of the Ala260 mutant variant of HPII, determined at 2.3 A resolution, revealed a number of local structural changes resulting in the opening of a second branch in the lateral channel, which appears to be used by inhibitors for access to the active site, either as an inlet channel for substrate or an exhaust channel for reaction products.  相似文献   

7.
Formate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.2) prepared from peas (Pisum sativum) was a two-subunit enzyme. The enzyme accelerated the formation of an NAD+-cyanide compound having an adsorption band at 330 nm. The enzyme was able to bind one NAD+ molecule per each subunit but only 1 mole of NAD+-cyanide compound was formed per two subunits. The complex of NAD+, cyanide, and the enzyme was very stable and had no catalytic activity. Azide inhibited the formate dehydrogenase reaction in two different ways. By incubation of the enzyme with azide in the presence of NAD+, half of its catalytic activity was lost. The remaining activity was also inhibited by azide but this inhibition was removed competively by formate. Contrary to the case of cyanide the inhibition by azide could be removed by dialysis and no spectral species due to the addition compound of NAD+ and azide could be observed. The data from double recipricol plots of the initial velocity and the formate concentration led to a conclusion that formate dehydrogenase has two sites with about equal catalytic activity. The Km for formate was different for the two catalytic sites (1.67 and 6.25 mM) but the difference was not noticeable in the case of the Km for NAD+.  相似文献   

8.
R D Hershberg  B Chance 《Biochemistry》1975,14(17):3885-3891
The binding of formate ion, a substrate for the peroxidatic reaction of catalase, has been investigated by magnetic resonance techniques. Comparative studies of formate binding to ferric myoglobin have also been performed. The nuclear magnetic relaxation (NMR) rate of formate and water protons is enhanced by the presence of ferric horse liver catalase. The enhancement is not changed significantly by the addition of cyanide, indicating that water and formate are still bound in the presence of cyanide. Formate proton to heme iron distances determined by magnetic resonance techniques indicate that formate does not directly bind to the heme iron of catalase or myoglobin but to the globin, and NMR relaxation occurs as a result of outersphere mechanisms. Evidence that water forms an innersphere complex with the iron atom of the catalase heme is presented. In similar experiments with ferric myoglobin, the addition of cyanide caused a large decrease in the enhancement of the proton relaxation rate of both formate and water, indicating the displacement of water and formate from the heme and the vicinity of the heme, respectively. Broad, high-spin, ferric ion electron paramagnetic resonance absorptions of catalase and myoglobin at room temperature obtained in the presence and absence of formate show that formate does not alter appreciably the heme environment of catalase or myoglobin or the spin state of the heme iron. Studies on the binding of formate to catalase as monitored by changes in the heme absorption spectrum in the visible region show one-to-one stoichiometry with heme concentration. However, the small changes observed in the visible region of the optical spectrum on addition of formate ion are attributed to a secondary effect of formate on the heme environment, rather than direct binding of formate to the heme moiety.  相似文献   

9.
The optical absorption and circular dichroic spectra of human erythrocyte catalase (EC 1.11.1.6) and its cyanide, azide, and fluoride derivatives over the wavelength range of 210 to 700 nm are reported. Treatment with acid or alkaline solutions causes spectral changes which may be due to dissociation of the enzyme into subunits and removal of the heme group from the protein. The fractions of the protein structure present as alpha helix, beta pleated sheet, and unordered structure have been estimated from the CD spectrum in the far-ultraviolet region. The CD spectra also indicate that the protein conformation does not change appreciably after cyanide binding. The epr spectroscopy of the native enzyme and its cyanide complex are reported. The spectral results are compared with catalase obtained from other mammalian and bacterial sources.  相似文献   

10.
The Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase from Haemophilus ducreyi is characterized by the unique ability to bind heme at its dimer interface. Here we report the high-resolution crystal structures of this protein in the heme-loaded (holo) and heme-free (apo) forms. Heme is asymmetrically bound between the two enzyme subunits, where heme iron is coordinated by two histidine residues, His64 and His 124, provided by the two subunits. Moreover, the binding of heme to the protein is ensured by stabilizing contacts between the prosthetic group and a limited number of other residues, most of which are not present in other bacterial enzyme variants. We show that the introduction of only three mutations at the dimer interface of the enzyme from Haemophilus parainfluenzae, a closely related bacterial species, is sufficient to induce heme-binding ability by this enzyme variant. Heme binding does not alter protein activity. Moreover, the binding of the prosthetic group does not induce any significant structural perturbation at the subunit level and requires only limited local structural rearrangements that widen the cleft at the dimer interface and cause a limited shift in the relative orientation between the subunits. The presence of a preformed heme-binding pocket and the significant solvent exposure of the cofactor to the solvent are compatible with the suggested protective role of the enzyme against heme toxicity or with its involvement in heme trafficking in the periplasmic space.  相似文献   

11.
Heme catalases are homotetrameric enzymes with a highly conserved complex quaternary structure, and their functional role is still not well understood. Proteus mirabilis catalase (PMC), a heme enzyme belonging to the family of NADPH-binding catalases, was efficiently overexpressed in E. coli. The recombinant catalase (rec PMC) was deficient in heme with one-third heme and two-thirds protoporphyrin IX as determined by mass spectrometry and chemical methods. This ratio was influenced by the expression conditions, but the enzyme-specific activity calculated relative to the heme content remained unchanged. The crystal structure of rec PMC was solved to a resolution of 2.0 A, the highest resolution obtained to date with PMC. The overall structure was quite similar to that of wild-type PMC, and it is surprising that the absence of iron had no effect on the structure of the active site. Met 53 close to the essential His 54 was found less oxidized in rec PMC than in the wild-type enzyme. An acetate anion was modeled in an anionic pocket, away from the heme group but important for the enzymatic reaction. An alternate conformation observed for Arg 99 could play a role in the formation of the H-bond network connecting two symmetrical subunits of the tetramer.  相似文献   

12.
In order to investigate the effect of the alpha beta subunit contacts on the subunit structure of human adult methemoglobin, the hyperfine shifted proton NMR spectra of several high spin complexes (water, cyanate, thiocyanate, formate, fluoride, and nitrite) and low spin complexes (imisazole, azide, and cyanide) of hemoglobin and its isolated subunits were characterized at 220 MHz and 22 degrees C. The spectra of ferric low spin derivatives of the isolated subunits were approximately superimposable on the corresponding hemoglobin spectra. On the other hand, the high spin spectra of the isolated subunits were greatly different from each other. The spectral anomaly in the ferric high spin complexes of the isolated beta subunit were interpreted to indicate other structural change than the hemichrome formation in the beta heme pocket. Difference in the subunit association effect between the high and low spin complexes of the isolated beta subunit was interpreted on the basis of a conformational change of the apoprotein dependent on the spin state of the beta heme iron.  相似文献   

13.
The active site of heme catalases is buried deep inside a structurally highly conserved homotetramer. Channels leading to the active site have been identified as potential routes for substrate flow and product release, although evidence in support of this model is limited. To investigate further the role of protein structure and molecular channels in catalysis, the crystal structures of four active site variants of catalase HPII from Escherichia coli (His128Ala, His128Asn, Asn201Ala, and Asn201His) have been determined at approximately 2.0-A resolution. The solvent organization shows major rearrangements with respect to native HPII, not only in the vicinity of the replaced residues but also in the main molecular channel leading to the heme distal pocket. In the two inactive His128 variants, continuous chains of hydrogen bonded water molecules extend from the molecular surface to the heme distal pocket filling the main channel. The differences in continuity of solvent molecules between the native and variant structures illustrate how sensitive the solvent matrix is to subtle changes in structure. It is hypothesized that the slightly larger H(2)O(2) passing through the channel of the native enzyme will promote the formation of a continuous chain of solvent and peroxide. The structure of the His128Asn variant complexed with hydrogen peroxide has also been determined at 2.3-A resolution, revealing the existence of hydrogen peroxide binding sites both in the heme distal pocket and in the main channel. Unexpectedly, the largest changes in protein structure resulting from peroxide binding are clustered on the heme proximal side and mainly involve residues in only two subunits, leading to a departure from the 222-point group symmetry of the native enzyme. An active role for channels in the selective flow of substrates through the catalase molecule is proposed as an integral feature of the catalytic mechanism. The Asn201His variant of HPII was found to contain unoxidized heme b in combination with the proximal side His-Tyr bond suggesting that the mechanistic pathways of the two reactions can be uncoupled.  相似文献   

14.
BACKGROUND: Catalases are important antioxidant metalloenzymes that catalyze disproportionation of hydrogen peroxide, forming dioxygen and water. Two families of catalases are known, one having a heme cofactor, and the other, a structurally distinct family containing nonheme manganese. We have solved the structure of the mesophilic manganese catalase from Lactobacillus plantarum and its azide-inhibited complex. RESULTS: The crystal structure of the native enzyme has been solved at 1.8 A resolution by molecular replacement, and the azide complex of the native protein has been solved at 1.4 A resolution. The hexameric structure of the holoenzyme is stabilized by extensive intersubunit contacts, including a beta zipper and a structural calcium ion crosslinking neighboring subunits. Each subunit contains a dimanganese active site, accessed by a single substrate channel lined by charged residues. The manganese ions are linked by a mu1,3-bridging glutamate carboxylate and two mu-bridging solvent oxygens that electronically couple the metal centers. The active site region includes two residues (Arg147 and Glu178) that appear to be unique to the Lactobacillus plantarum catalase. CONCLUSIONS: A comparison of L. plantarum and T. thermophilus catalase structures reveals the existence of two distinct structural classes, differing in monomer design and the organization of their active sites, within the manganese catalase family. These differences have important implications for catalysis and may reflect distinct biological functions for the two enzymes, with the L. plantarum enzyme serving as a catalase, while the T. thermophilus enzyme may function as a catalase/peroxidase.  相似文献   

15.
The three-dimensional structure of beef liver catalase has been determined to 2.5 å resolution by a combination of isomorphous and molecular replacement techniques. Heavy-atom positions were found using vector search and difference Fourier methods. The tetrameric catalase molecule has 222 symmetry with one of its dyads coincident with a crystallographic 2-fold axis. The known polypeptide sequence has been unambiguously fitted to the electron density map. The heme is well buried in a hydrophobic pocket, 20 Å below the surface of the molecule, and accessible through a hydrophobic channel. Residues that line the heme pocket belong to two different subunits. Tyr357 is the proximal heme ligand and the catalytically important residues on the distal side are residues His74 and Asnl47. The tertiary structure consists of four domains: an extended non-globular amino-terminal arm, which stabilizes the quaternary structure; an anti-parallel, eight-stranded β-barrel providing the residues on the distal side of the heme; a rather random “wrapping domain” around the subunit exterior including the proximal heme ligand; and a final λ-helical structure resembling the E, F, G and H helices of the globins.  相似文献   

16.
Chlorite dismutase (Cld) is a key enzyme of perchlorate and chlorate respiration. This heme-based protein reduces the toxic compound chlorite into the innocuous chloride anion in a very efficient way while producing molecular oxygen. A sequence comparison between Cld homologues shows a highly conserved family. The crystal structure of Azospira oryzae strain GR-1 Cld is reported to 2.1 Å resolution. The structure reveals a hexameric organization of the Cld, while each monomer exhibits a ferredoxin-like fold. The six subunits are organized in a ring structure with a maximal diameter of 9 nm and an inner diameter of 2 nm. The heme active-site pocket is solvent accessible both from the inside and the outside of the ring. Moreover, a second anion binding site that could accommodate the assumed reaction intermediate ClO‾ for further transformation has been identified near the active site.The environment of the heme cofactor was investigated with electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. Apart from the high-spin ferric signal of the five-coordinate resting-state enzyme, two low-spin signals were found corresponding to six-coordinate species. The current crystal structure confirms and complements a recently proposed catalytic mechanism that proceeds via a ferryl species and a ClO‾ anion. Our structural data exclude cooperativity between the iron centers.  相似文献   

17.
About thirty years ago the crystal structures of the heme catalases from Penicillium vitale (PVC) and, a few months later, from bovine liver (BLC) were published. Both enzymes were compact tetrameric molecules with subunits that, despite their size differences and the large phylogenetic separation between the two organisms, presented a striking structural similarity for about 460 residues. The high conservation, confirmed in all the subsequent structures determined, suggested a strong pressure to preserve a functional catalase fold, which is almost exclusively found in these mono-functional heme catalases. However, even in the absence of the catalase fold an efficient catalase activity is also found in the heme containing catalase-peroxidase proteins. The structure of these broad substrate range enzymes, reported for the first time less than ten years ago from the halophilic archaebacterium Haloarcula marismortui (HmCPx) and from the bacterium Burkholderia pseudomallei (BpKatG), showed a heme pocket closely related to that of plant peroxidases, though with a number of unique modifications that enable the catalase reaction. Despite the wealth of structural information already available, for both monofunctional catalases and catalase-peroxidases, a number of unanswered major questions require continuing structural research with truly innovative approaches.  相似文献   

18.
The heme methyl and vinyl α-proton signals have been assigned in low-spin ferric cyanide and azide ligated derivatives of the intact tetramer of hemoglobin A, as well as the isolated chains, by reconstituting the proteins with selectively deuterated hemins. For the hemoglobin cyanide tetramer, assignment to individual subunits was effected by forming hybrid hemoglobins possessing isotope-labeled hemins in only one type of subunit. The heme methyl contact shift pattern has 1-methyl and 5-methyl shifts furthest downfield in both chains and the individual subunits of the intact hemoglobin in both the cyanide- and azide-ligated species, which is consistent with a dominant rhombic perturbation due to the proximal His-F8 imidazole π bonding in the known structure for human adult hemoglobin. The individual chain and subunit assignments confirm that the detailed electronic/magnetic properties of the heme pocket are essentially unaltered upon assembling the R-state tetramer from the isolated subunits.  相似文献   

19.
Robinson VL  Smith BB  Arnone A 《Biochemistry》2003,42(34):10113-10125
In 1947, Perutz and co-workers reported that crystalline horse methemoglobin undergoes a large lattice transition as the pH is decreased from 7.1 to 5.4. We have determined the pH 7.1 and 5.4 crystal structures of horse methemoglobin at 1.6 and 2.1 A resolution, respectively, and find that this lattice transition involves a 23 A translation of adjacent hemoglobin tetramers as well as changes in alpha heme ligation and the tertiary structure of the alpha subunits. Specifically, when the pH is lowered from 7.1 to 5.4, the Fe(3+) alpha heme groups (but not the beta heme groups) are converted from the aquomet form, in which the proximal histidine [His87(F8)alpha] and a water molecule are the axial heme ligands, to the hemichrome (bishistidine) form, in which the proximal histidine and the distal histidine [His58(E7)alpha] are the axial heme ligands. Hemichrome formation is coupled to a large tertiary structure transition in the eight-residue segment Pro44(CD2)alpha-Gly51(D7)alpha that converts from an extended loop structure at pH 7.1 to a pi-like helix at pH 5.4. The formation of the pi helix forces Phe46(CD4)alpha out of the alpha heme pocket and into the interface between adjacent hemoglobin tetramers where it participates in crystal lattice contacts unique to the pH 5.4 structure. In addition, the transition from aquomet alpha subunits to bishistidine alpha subunits is accompanied by an approximately 1.2 A movement of the alpha heme groups to a more solvent-exposed position as well as the creation of a solvent channel from the interior of the alpha heme pocket to the outside of the tetramer. These changes and the extensive rearrangement of the crystal lattice structure allow the alpha heme group of one tetramer to make direct contact with an alpha heme group on an adjacent tetramer. These results suggest possible functional roles for hemichrome formation in vivo.  相似文献   

20.
The heme methyl and vinyl alpha-proton signals have been assigned in low-spin ferric cyanide and azide ligated derivatives of the intact tetramer of hemoglobin A, as well as the isolated chains, by reconstituting the proteins with selectively deuterated hemins. For the hemoglobin cyanide tetramer, assignment to individual subunits was effected by forming hybrid hemoglobins possessing isotope-labeled hemins in only one type of subunit. The heme methyl contact shift pattern has 1-methyl and 5-methyl shifts furthest downfield in both chains and the individual subunits of the intact hemoglobin in both the cyanide- and azide-ligated species, which is consistent with a dominant rhombic perturbation due to the proximal His-F8 imidazole pi bonding in the known structure for human adult hemoglobin. The individual chain and subunit assignments confirm that the detailed electronic/magnetic properties of the heme pocket are essentially unaltered upon assembling the R-state tetramer from the isolated subunits.  相似文献   

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