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1.
We have performed density functional theory calculations on an oxo-iron porphyrin catalyst with chloride as an axial ligand and tested its reactivity toward propene. The reactions proceed via multistate reactivity on competing doublet and quartet spin surfaces. Close-lying epoxidation and hydroxylation mechanisms are identified, whereby in the gas phase the epoxidation reaction is dominant, while in environments with a large dielectric constant the hydroxylation pathways become competitive. By contrast to reactions with thiolate as an axial ligand all low-lying pathways have small ring-closure and rebound barriers, so it is expected that side products and rearrangements will be unlikely with Fe=O(porphyrin)Cl, whereas with Fe=O(porphyrin)SH some side products were predicted. The major differences in the electronic configurations of Fe=O(porphyrin)Cl and Fe=O(porphyrin)SH are due to strong mixing of thiolate orbitals with iron 3d orbitals, a mixing which is much less with chloride as an axial ligand. Predictions of the reactivity of ethylbenzene-h 12 versus ethylbenzene-d 12 are made. Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available for this article at and is accessible for authorized users.  相似文献   

2.
Thioether-ligated iron porphyrin (complex 1) was synthesized as a model of the protonated form of P450 to explore the possible involvement of the protonated form in the catalytic cycle, and ether-ligated iron porphyrin (complex 2) was also synthesized for comparison. The thioether and ether ligands enhanced heterolytic O-O bond cleavage of peroxy acid-iron porphyrin complex even in highly hydrophobic media without the assistance of acid or base, using mCPPAA as an oxidant. Competitive oxidation of cyclooctane/cyclooctene catalyzed by iron porphyrins showed that complexes 1 and 2 are less effective than heme thiolate (P450 and a synthetic heme thiolate (SR complex)) in oxidizing alkane. The possibility that thiol-ligated heme, which is a protonated form of heme thiolate, is not involved in the active intermediate structure of P450 is indicated by this result. This is the first report concerning the oxidizing ability of a thioether-ligated iron porphyrin.  相似文献   

3.
An electron-rich iron(III) porphyrin complex (meso-tetramesitylporphinato)iron(III) chloride [Fe(TMP)Cl], was found to catalyze the epoxidation of olefins by aqueous 30% H2O2 when the reaction was carried out in the presence of 5-chloro-1-methylimidazole (5-Cl-1-MeIm) in aprotic solvent. Epoxides were the predominant products with trace amounts of allylic oxidation products, indicating that Fenton-type oxidation reactions were not involved in the olefin epoxidation reactions. cis-Stilbene was stereospecifically oxidized to cis-stilbene oxide without giving isomerized trans-stilbene oxide product, demonstrating that neither hydroperoxy radical (HOO·) nor oxoiron(IV) porphyrin [(TMP)FeIV=O] was responsible for the olefin epoxidations. We also found that the reactivities of other iron(III) porphyrin complexes such as (meso-tetrakis(2,6-dichlorophenyl)porphinato)iron(III) chloride [Fe(TDCPP)Cl], (meso-tetrakis(2,6-difluorophenyl)porphinato)iron(III) chloride [Fe(TDFPP)Cl], and (meso-tetrakis(pentafluorophenyl)porphinato)iron(III) chloride [Fe(TPFPP)Cl] were significantly affected by the presence of the imidazole in the epoxidation of olefins by H2O2. These iron porphyrin complexes did not yield cyclohexene oxide in the epoxidation of cyclohexene by H2O2 in the absence of 5-Cl-1-MeIm in aprotic solvent; however, addition of 5-Cl-1-MeIm to the reaction solutions gave high yields of cyclohexene oxide with the formation of trace amounts of allylic oxidation products. We proposed, on the basis of the results of mechanistic studies, that the role of the imidazole is to decelerate the O–O bond cleavage of an iron(III) hydroperoxide porphyrin (or H2O2–iron(III) porphyrin adduct) and that the intermediate transfers its oxygen to olefins prior to the O–O bond cleavage.  相似文献   

4.
An electron-rich iron(III) porphyrin complex (meso-tetramesitylporphinato)iron(III) chloride [Fe(TMP)Cl], was found to catalyze the epoxidation of olefins by aqueous 30% H2O2 when the reaction was carried out in the presence of 5-chloro-1-methylimidazole (5-Cl-1-MeIm) in aprotic solvent. Epoxides were the predominant products with trace amounts of allylic oxidation products, indicating that Fenton-type oxidation reactions were not involved in the olefin epoxidation reactions. cis-Stilbene was stereospecifically oxidized to cis-stilbene oxide without giving isomerized trans-stilbene oxide product, demonstrating that neither hydroperoxy radical (HOO·) nor oxoiron(IV) porphyrin [(TMP)FeIV=O] was responsible for the olefin epoxidations. We also found that the reactivities of other iron(III) porphyrin complexes such as (meso-tetrakis(2,6-dichlorophenyl)porphinato)iron(III) chloride [Fe(TDCPP)Cl], (meso-tetrakis(2,6-difluorophenyl)porphinato)iron(III) chloride [Fe(TDFPP)Cl], and (meso-tetrakis(pentafluorophenyl)porphinato)iron(III) chloride [Fe(TPFPP)Cl] were significantly affected by the presence of the imidazole in the epoxidation of olefins by H2O2. These iron porphyrin complexes did not yield cyclohexene oxide in the epoxidation of cyclohexene by H2O2 in the absence of 5-Cl-1-MeIm in aprotic solvent; however, addition of 5-Cl-1-MeIm to the reaction solutions gave high yields of cyclohexene oxide with the formation of trace amounts of allylic oxidation products. We proposed, on the basis of the results of mechanistic studies, that the role of the imidazole is to decelerate the O–O bond cleavage of an iron(III) hydroperoxide porphyrin (or H2O2–iron(III) porphyrin adduct) and that the intermediate transfers its oxygen to olefins prior to the O–O bond cleavage.  相似文献   

5.
Recent computational studies of alkane hydroxylation and alkene epoxidation by a model active species of the enzyme cytochrome P-450 reveal a two-state reactivity (TSR) scenario in which the information content of the product distribution is determined jointly by two states. TSR is used to reconcile the dilemma of the consensus 'rebound mechanism' of alkane hydroxylation, which emerged from experimental studies of ultra-fast radical clocks. The dilemma, stated succinctly as 'radicals are both present and absent and the rebound mechanism is both right and wrong', is simply understood once one is cognizant that the mechanism operates by two states, one low-spin (LS) the other high-spin (HS). In both states, bond activation proceeds in a manner akin to the rebound mechanism, but the LS mechanism is effectively concerted, whereas the HS is stepwise with incursion of radical intermediates.  相似文献   

6.
The push effect of anionic axial ligands of high-valent iron(IV)-oxo porphyrin pi-cation radicals, (Porp)(+.)Fe(IV)(O)(X) (X=OH(-), AcO(-), Cl(-), and CF(3)SO(3)(-)), in alkane hydroxylation is investigated by B3LYP DFT calculations. The electron-donating ability of anionic axial ligands influences the activation energy for the alkane hydroxylation by the iron(IV)-oxo intermediates and the Fe-O bond distance of the iron-oxo species in transition state.  相似文献   

7.
We have converted cytochrome P450 BM-3 from Bacillus megaterium (P450 BM-3), a medium-chain (C12-C18) fatty acid monooxygenase, into a highly efficient catalyst for the conversion of alkanes to alcohols. The evolved P450 BM-3 exhibits higher turnover rates than any reported biocatalyst for the selective oxidation of hydrocarbons of small to medium chain length (C3-C8). Unlike naturally occurring alkane hydroxylases, the best known of which are the large complexes of methane monooxygenase (MMO) and membrane-associated non-heme iron alkane monooxygenase (AlkB), the evolved enzyme is monomeric, soluble, and requires no additional proteins for catalysis. The evolved alkane hydroxylase was found to be even more active on fatty acids than wild-type BM-3, which was already one of the most efficient fatty acid monooxgenases known. A broad range of substrates including the gaseous alkane propane induces the low to high spin shift that activates the enzyme. This catalyst for alkane hydroxylation at room temperature opens new opportunities for clean, selective hydrocarbon activation for chemical synthesis and bioremediation.  相似文献   

8.
There is an intriguing, current controversy on the involvement of multiple oxidizing species in oxygen transfer reactions by cytochromes P450 and iron porphyrin complexes. The primary evidence for the multiple oxidants theory was that products and/or product distributions obtained in the catalytic oxygenations were different depending on reaction conditions such as catalysts, oxidants, and solvents. In the present work, we carried out detailed mechanistic studies on competitive olefin epoxidation, alkane hydroxylation, and C=C epoxidation versus allylic C–H hydroxylation in olefin oxygenation with in situ generated oxoiron(IV) porphyrin -cation radicals (1) under various reaction conditions. We found that the products and product distributions were markedly different depending on the reaction conditions. For example, 1 bearing different axial ligands showed different product selectivities in competitive epoxidations of cis-olefins and trans-olefins and of styrene and para-substituted styrenes. The hydroxylation of ethylbenzene by 1 afforded different products, such as 1-phenylethanol and ethylbenzoquinone, depending on the axial ligands of 1 and substrates. Moreover, the regioselectivity of C=C epoxidation versus C–H hydroxylation in the oxygenation of cyclohexene by 1 changed dramatically depending on the reaction temperatures, the electronic nature of the iron porphyrins, and substrates. These results demonstrate that 1 can exhibit diverse reactivity patterns under different reaction conditions, leading us to propose that the different products and/or product distributions observed in the catalytic oxygenation reactions by iron porphyrin models might not arise from the involvement of multiple oxidizing species but from 1 under different circumstances. This study provides strong evidence that 1 can behave like a chameleon oxidant that changes its reactivity and selectivity under the influence of environmental changes.Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available for this article at .  相似文献   

9.
The active intermediates in most heme enzyme-catalyzed oxidations such as epoxidation and hydroxylation have been attributed to the O=Fe(IV) porphyrin ?-cation radical, so-called compound I. This could be correct for many cases, however, alternatives to compound I have been proposed for several oxidations including aliphatic hydroxylation catalyzed by P450. Therefore, two-electron oxidized iron porphyrin complexes other than compound I have been reviewed as candidates for the active species responsible for oxidations catalyzed by heme enzymes.  相似文献   

10.
Oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) catalyzed by a bio-inspired iron porphyrin bearing a hanging carboxylic acid group over the porphyrin ring, and a tethered axial imidazole ligand was studied by DFT calculations. BP86 free energy calculations of the redox potentials and pK a’s of reaction components involved in the proton coupled electron transfer (PCET) reactions of the ferric-hydroxo and -superoxo complexes were performed based on Born–Haber thermodynamic cycle in conjunction with a continuum solvation model. The comparison was made with iron porphyrins that lack either in the hanging acid group or axial ligand, suggesting that H-bond interaction between the carboxylic acid and iron-bound hydroxo, aquo, superoxo, and peroxo ligands (de)stabilizes the Fe–O bonding, resulting in the increase in the reduction potential of the ferric complexes. The axial ligand interaction with the imidazole raises the affinity of the iron-bound superoxo and peroxo ligands for proton. In addition, a low-spin end-on ferric-hydroperoxo intermediate, a key precursor for O–O cleavage, can be stabilized in the presence of axial ligation. Thus, selective and efficient ORR of iron porphyrin can be achieved with the aid of the secondary coordination sphere and axial ligand interactions.  相似文献   

11.
To develop artificial hemoproteins that could lead to new selective oxidation biocatalysts, a strategy based on the insertion of various iron-porphyrin cofactors into Xylanase A (Xln10A) was chosen. This protein has a globally positive charge and a wide enough active site to accommodate metalloporphyrins that possess negatively charged substituents such as microperoxidase 8 (MP8), iron(III)-tetra-alpha4-ortho-carboxyphenylporphyrin (Fe(ToCPP)), and iron(III)-tetra-para-carboxyphenylporphyrin (Fe(TpCPP)). Coordination chemistry of the iron atom and molecular modeling studies showed that only Fe(TpCPP) was able to insert deeply into Xln10A, with a KD value of about 0.5 microM. Accordingly, Fe(TpCPP)-Xln10A bound only one imidazole molecule, whereas Fe(TpCPP) free in solution was able to bind two, and the UV-visible spectrum of the Fe(TpCPP)-Xln10A-imidazole complex suggested the binding of an amino acid of the protein on the iron atom, trans to the imidazole. Fe(TpCPP)-Xln10A was found to have peroxidase activity, as it was able to catalyze the oxidation of typical peroxidase cosubstrates such as guaiacol and o-dianisidine by H2O2. With these two cosubstrates, the KM value measured with the Fe(TpCPP)-Xln10A complex was higher than those values observed with free Fe(TpCPP), probably because of the steric hindrance and the increased hydrophobicity caused by the protein around the iron atom of the porphyrin. The peroxidase activity was inhibited by imidazole, and a study of the pH dependence of the oxidation of o-dianisidine suggested that an amino acid with a pKA of around 7.5 was participating in the catalysis. Finally, a very interesting protective effect against oxidative degradation of the porphyrin was provided by the protein.  相似文献   

12.
 The reaction mechanism for the hydroxylation of benzene and monofluorobenzene, catalysed by a ferryl-oxo porphyrin cation radical complex (compound) is described by electronic structure calculations in local spin density approximation. The active site of the enzyme is modelled as a six-coordinated (Por+)Fe(IV)O a2u complex with imidazole or H3CS as the axial ligand. The substrates under study are benzene and fluorobenzene, with the site of attack in para, meta and ortho position with respect to F. Two reaction pathways are investigated, with direct oxygen attack leading to a tetrahedral intermediate and arene oxide formation as a primary reaction step. The calculations show that the arene oxide pathway is distinctly less probable, that hydroxylation by an H3CS–coordinated complex is energetically favoured compared with imidazole, and that the para position with respect to F is the preferred site for hydroxylation. A partial electron transfer from the substrate to the porphyrin during the reaction is obtained in all cases. The resulting charge distribution and spin density of the substrates reveal the transition state as a combination of a cation and a radical σ-adduct intermediate with slightly more radical character in the case of H3CS as axial ligand. A detailed analysis of the orbital interactions along the reaction pathway yields basically different mechanisms for the modes of substrate–porphyrin electron transfer and rupture of the Fe–O bond. In the imidazole-coordinated complex an antibonding π*(Fe–O) orbital is populated, whereas in the H3CS–coordinated system a shift of electron density occurs from the Fe–O bond region into the Fe–S bond. Received: 1 July 1995 / Accepted: 18 December 1995  相似文献   

13.
To clarify the influence of protein surrounding on the heme reactivity in heme proteins the effect of interaction between a porphyrin ring and pi-acceptor molecule, 1,2,4-trimethyl-pyridinium (TMP), on the affinity of deuteroheme to axial ligands (imidazole and cyanide) has been studied as a model system. It is shown that TMP induces the fourfold decrease in equilibrium constant of imidazole to deuteroheme. From the analysis of the two stages for cyanide binding it is concluded that TMP decreases the binding constant of the first cyanide by 40 times and does not apparently influence the second ligand binding. The effect of TMP on the reactivity of deuteroheme to axial ligands is interpreted as a result of a decrease in the electron density on the iron orbitals which is due to the altered pi-eleectron density in the porphyrin pi-system through the donor-acceptor interaction with TMP molecules. The possible significance of the contacts between the porphyrin and neighboring amino acid residues in determining heme affinity to axial ligands is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
During the enzymatic cycle of the cytochromes P450, dioxygen binds to the ferrous haemprotein when the resting ferric haemprotein has undergone a one-electron oxidation after substrate binding. A further one-electron reduction generates an intermediate that is isoelectronic with a peroxide dianion coordinated to a ferric iron. Heterolytic cleavage of the omicron--omicron bond generates water and a species which is formally an oxene (oxygen atom) coordinated by iron(III). However, on the basis of model reactions and by analogy to the catalases and peroxidases, this active oxidizing intermediate is formulated as an oxo-FeIV porphyrin pi-cation radical. The radical is stabilized by delocalization on the porphyrin macrocycle and the high oxidation state is achieved by oxidizing both the metal and the porphyrin ring of the haemprotein. Hydrogen atom abstraction from a saturated hydrocarbon substrate generates a substrate free radical, constrained by the protein binding site, and the equivalent of a hydroxyl radical bound to iron(III). Coupling of the 'hydroxy' and substrate radicals generates hydroxylated product and resting protein. For olefins an initial electron transfer to oxidized haemprotein gives a substrate cation radical. Further reaction of this radical can give the epoxide, the principal product; an aldehyde or ketone by rearrangement; or an alkylated haemprotein resulting in suicide inhibition.  相似文献   

15.
The reactions of dilute solutions of octaethylporphyrin and its iron (II) and iron (III) complexes with methyl, 2-cyanopropyl, t-butoxy, and benzoyloxy radicals are described. The results are summarized: (i) The reactivity of the porphyrin and its high-spin iron (II) and iron (III) complexes toward alkyl and t-butoxy radicals stands in the order: FeII > FeIII ? free porphyrin. For benzoyloxy radicals the order is FeII > Porp > FeIII. (ii) The exclusive path of reaction of high-spin iron (II) porphyrin with radicals is the rapid reduction of the radical and generation of an iron (III) porphyrin. The dominant path of reaction of high-spin iron (III) porphyrin with alkyl and (presumably) t-butoxy radicals is a rapid axial inner sphere reduction of the porphyrin. An axial ligand of iron is transferred to the radical. (iv) The reaction of benzoyloxy radicals with high or low-spin iron (III) porphyrins occurs primarily at the meso position. With the low-spin dipyridyl complex in pyridine the attendant reduction to iron (II) can be observed spectrally. Methyl radicals also reduce this complex by adding to the meso position. (v) The reaction of a radical with either an iron (II) or an iron (III) porphyrin results in the generation of the other valence state of iron and consequently oxidation and reduction products emanating from both iron species are obtained. (vi) No evidence for an iron (IV) is intermediate is apparent. (vii) Iron (II) porphyrins in solvents that impart either spin state are easily oxidized by diacyl peroxides. The occurrence of both axial and peripheral redox reactions with the iron complexes supports an underlying premise of a recent theory of hemeprotein reactivity. The relevance of the work to bioelectron transfer and heme catabolism is noted.  相似文献   

16.
Solution properties of the iron-(III) 'picket-fence-like' porphyrin, Fe(III)-alpha,alpha,alpha, beta-tetra-ortho (N-methyl-isonicotinamidophenyl) porphyrin, (Fe(III)PFP) were investigated. These were acid/base properties of the aquo complex with pKa of 3.9 and its aggregation (formation of dimer with K = 1 X 10(-10) dm3 mol-1), complex formation with cyanide ions and 1-methyl imidazole (1-MeIm), spectral properties of the three iron complexes in their ferric and ferrous form and the one-electron reduction potential of these complexes. Knowing these properties, the reaction of the ferric complexes, aquo, dicyano and bis (1-MeIm), with the superoxide radical and other reducing radicals were studied using the pulse radiolysis technique. The second-order reaction rate constant of O2- with the iron (III) aquo complex which governs the catalytic efficiency of the metalloporphyrin upon the disproportionation of the superoxide radical was 7.6 X 10(7) dm3 mol-1 s-1, two orders of magnitude faster when compared to the reaction of each of the other complexes. The reduction by other radicals with all iron (III) complexes had similar second-order rate constants (10(9) to 10(10) dm3 mol-1 s-1). The reduction reaction in all cases produced Fe(II)PEP and no intermediate was found. The oxidation reaction of Fe(II)PEP by O2- was one order of magnitude faster when compared to the reduction of Fe(III)PFP by the same radical. Since the reactivity of O2- toward the three iron (III) porphyrin complexes follows their reduction potentials, it is suggesting the formation of a peroxo Fe(II) porphyrin as an intermediate. The reactions of the Fe(II)PFP complexes with dioxygen were also studied. The aquo complex was found to be first order in O2 and second order in Fe(II)PFP, suggesting the formation of a peroxo Fe(II) porphyrin as an intermediate. The intermediate formation was corroborated by evidence of the rapid CO binding reaction to the aquo complex of Fe(II)PFP. The two other complexes reacted very slowly with O2 as well as with CO.  相似文献   

17.
Noncompetitive and competitive intermolecular deuterium isotope effects were measured for the cytochrome P-450 catalyzed hydroxylation of a series of selectively deuterated chlorobenzenes. An isotope effect of 1.27 accompanied the meta hydroxylation of chlorobenzene-2H5 as determined by two totally independent methods (EC-LC and GC-MS assays). All isotope effects associated with the meta hydroxylation of chlorobenzenes-3,5-2H2 and -2,4,6-2H3 were approximately 1.1. In contrast, competitive isotope studies on the ortho and para hydroxylation of chlorobenzenes-4-2H1, -3,5-2H2, and -2,4,6-2H3 resulted in significant inverse isotope effects (approximately 0.95) when deuterium was substituted at the site of oxidation whereas no isotope effect was observed for the oxidation of protio sites. These results eliminate initial epoxide formation and initial electron abstraction (charge transfer) as viable mechanisms for the cytochrome P-450 catalyzed hydroxylation of chlorobenzene. The results, however, can be explained by a mechanism in which an active triplet-like oxygen atom adds to the pi system in a manner analogous to that for olefin oxidation. The resulting tetrahedral intermediate can then rearrange to phenol directly or via epoxide or ketone intermediates.  相似文献   

18.
The biomimetic oxidation of 5-5' condensed and diphenylmethane lignin model compounds with several water soluble anionic and cationic iron and manganese porphyrins in the presence of hydrogen peroxide is reported. The oxidative efficiency of manganese and iron meso-tetra(2,6-dichloro-3-sulphonatophenyl) porphyrin chloride (TDCSPPMnCl and TDCSPPFeCl, respectively), meso-tetra-3-sulphonatophenyl porphyrin chloride (TSPPMnCl) and manganese meso-tetra(N-methylpyridinio)porphyrin pentaacetate (TPyMePMn(CH3COO)5) was compared on the basis of the oxidation extent of the models tested. Manganese porphyrins were found more effective in degrading lignin substructures than iron ones. Among them the cationic TPyMePMn (CH3COO)5, never used before in lignin oxidation, showed to be the best catalyst. The catalytic activity of porphyrins in hydrogen peroxide oxidation of residual kraft lignin was also investigated. The use of quantitative 31P NMR allowed the focusing on the occurrence of different degradative pathways depending on the catalyst used. TPyMePMn(CH3COO)5 was able to perform the most extensive degradation of the lignin structure, as demonstrated by the decrease of aliphatic hydroxyl groups and carboxylic acids. Noteworthy, no significant condensation reactions occurred during manganese porphyrins catalyzed oxidations of residual kraft lignin, while in the presence of iron porphyrins a substantial increase of condensed substructures was detected.  相似文献   

19.
The electron withdrawing 5,10,15,20-tetra(2′,6′-dichlorophenyl)porphyrin iron (III) chloride [C18TPPFe(III)C1] and 5,10,15,20-tetra(2′,3′,4′,5′,6′-pentafluorophenyl)porphyrin iron(III)chloride [F20TPPFe(III)C1] are more efficient catalysts than sterically hindered 5,10,15,20-tetra (2′,4′,6′-trimethylphenyl)porphyrin iron (III)chloride during the biomimetic oxidation of 21-hydroxypregn-4-en-3,20-dione with CumOOH in the presence of N-methylimidazole.  相似文献   

20.
High-valent iron in chemical and biological oxidations   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Various aspects of the reactivity of iron(IV) in chemical and biological systems are reviewed. Accumulated evidence shows that the ferryl species [Fe(IV)O](2+) can be formed under a variety of conditions including those related to the ferrous ion-hydrogen peroxide system known as Fenton's reagent. Early evidence that such a species could hydroxylate typical aliphatic C-H bonds included regioselectivities and stereospecificities for cyclohexanol hydroxylation that could not be accounted for by a freely diffusing hydroxyl radical. Iron(IV) porphyrin complexes are also found in the catalytic cycles of cytochrome P450 and chloroperoxidase. Model oxo-iron(IV) porphyrin complexes have shown reactivity similar to the proposed enzymatic intermediates. Mechanistic studies using mechanistically diagnostic substrates have implicated a radical rebound scenario for aliphatic hydroxylation by cytochrome P450. Likewise, several non-heme diiron hydroxylases, AlkB (Omega-hydroxylase), sMMO (soluble methane monooxygenase), XylM (xylene monooxygenase) and T4moH (toluene monooxygenase) all show clear indications of radical rearranged products indicating that the oxygen rebound pathway is a ubiquitous mechanism for hydrocarbon oxygenation by both heme and non-heme iron enzymes.  相似文献   

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