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1.
Ceramide is a membrane lipid involved in a number of crucial biological processes. Recent evidence suggests that ceramide is likely to reside and function within lipid rafts; ordered sphingolipid and cholesterol-rich lipid domains believed to exist within many eukaryotic cell membranes. Using lipid vesicles containing co-existing raft domains and disordered fluid domains, we find that natural and saturated synthetic ceramides displace sterols from rafts. Other raft lipids remain raft-associated in the presence of ceramide, showing displacement is relatively specific for sterols. Like cholesterol-containing rafts, ceramide-rich "rafts" remain in a highly ordered state. Comparison of the sterol-displacing abilities of natural ceramides with those of saturated diglycerides and an unsaturated ceramide demonstrates that tight lipid packing is critical for sterol displacement by ceramide. Based on these results, and the fact that cholesterol and ceramides both have small polar headgroups, we propose that ceramides and cholesterol compete for association with rafts because of a limited capacity of raft lipids with large headgroups to accommodate small headgroup lipids in a manner that prevents unfavorable contact between the hydrocarbon groups of the small headgroup lipids and the surrounding aqueous environment. Minimizing the exposure of cholesterol and ceramide to water may be a strong driving force for the association of other molecules with rafts. Furthermore, displacement of sterol from rafts by ceramide is very likely to have marked effects upon raft structure and function, altering liquid ordered properties as well as molecular composition. In this regard, certain previously observed physiological processes may be a result of displacement. In particular, a direct connection to the previously observed sphingomyelinase-induced displacement of cholesterol from plasma membranes in cells is proposed.  相似文献   

2.
Recent evidence suggests that phospholipase D (PLD) can be regulated through its association/dissociation to lipid rafts. We show here that modifying lipid rafts either by cholesterol depletion using methyl-beta-cyclodextrin and filipin or by conversion of sphingomyelin to ceramide with exogenous bacterial sphingomyelinase (bSMase) markedly activated the PLD of human PBMC. bSMase was the most potent PLD activator, giving maximal 6- to 7-fold increase in PLD activity. Triton X-100-treated lysates prepared from control PBMC and from bSMase-treated cells were fractionated by centrifugation on sucrose density gradient. We observed that bSMase treatment of the cells induced a larger ceramide increase in raft than in nonraft membranes and displaced both the Src kinase Lck and PLD1 out of the raft fractions. In addition, the three raft-modifying agents markedly inhibited the lymphoproliferative response to mitogenic lectin. To examine further the potential role of PLD activation in the control of lymphocyte responses, we transiently overexpressed either of the PLD1 and PLD2 isoforms in Jurkat cells and analyzed the phorbol ester plus ionomycin-induced expression of IL-2 mRNA, which is one of the early responses of lymphocyte to activation. We observed a 43% decrease of IL-2 mRNA level in Jurkat cells overexpressing PLD1 as compared with mock- or PLD2-transfected cells, which indicates that elevated PLD1, but not PLD2, activity impairs lymphocyte activation. Altogether, the present results support the hypothesis that PLD1 is activated by exclusion from lipid rafts and that this activation conveys antiproliferative signals in lymphoid cells.  相似文献   

3.
Ali MR  Cheng KH  Huang J 《Biochemistry》2006,45(41):12629-12638
The effect of brain ceramide on the maximum solubility of cholesterol in ternary mixtures of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC), cholesterol, and ceramide was investigated at 37 degrees C by a cholesterol oxidase (COD) reaction rate assay and by optical microscopy. The COD reaction rate assay showed a sharp increase in cholesterol chemical potential as the cholesterol mole fraction approaches the solubility limit. A decline in the COD reaction rate was found after the formation of cholesterol crystals. The maximum solubility of brain ceramide in POPC bilayers was determined to be 68 +/- 2 mol % by microscopy. We found that ceramide has a much higher affinity for the ordered bilayers than cholesterol, and the maximum solubility of cholesterol decreases with the increase in ceramide content. More significantly, the displacement of cholesterol by ceramide follows a 1:1 relation. At the cholesterol solubility limit, adding one more ceramide molecule to the lipid bilayer drives one cholesterol out of the bilayer into the cholesterol crystal phase, and cholesterol is incapable of displacing ceramide from the bilayer phase. On the basis of these findings, a ternary phase diagram of the POPC/cholesterol/ceramide mixture was constructed. The behaviors of ceramide and cholesterol can be explained by the umbrella model. Both ceramide and cholesterol have small polar headgroups and relatively large nonpolar bodies. In a PC bilayer, ceramide and cholesterol compete for the coverage of the headgroups of neighboring PC to prevent the exposure of their nonpolar bodies to water. This competition results in the 1:1 displacement as well as the displacement of cholesterol by ceramide from lipid raft domains.  相似文献   

4.
We have previously demonstrated that hexanoyl-D-erythro-sphingosine (C(6)-ceramide), an anti-mitogenic cell-permeable lipid metabolite, limited vascular smooth muscle growth by abrogating trauma-induced Akt activity in a stretch injury model of neointimal hyperplasia. Furthermore, ceramide selectively and directly activated protein kinase C zeta (PKC zeta) to suppress Akt-dependent mitogenesis. To further analyze the interaction between ceramide and PKC zeta, the ability of ceramide to localize within highly structured lipid microdomains (rafts) and activate PKC zeta was investigated. Using rat aorta vascular smooth muscle cells (A7r5), we now demonstrate that C(6)-ceramide treatment results in an increased localization and phosphorylation of PKC zeta within caveolin-enriched lipid microdomians to inactivate Akt. In addition, ceramide specifically reduced the association of PKC zeta with 14-3-3, a scaffold protein localized to less structured regions within membranes. Pharmacological disruption of highly structured lipid microdomains resulted in abrogation of ceramide-activated, PKC zeta-dependent Akt inactivation, whereas molecular strategies suggest that ceramide-dependent PKC zeta phosphorylation of Akt3 at Ser(34) was necessary for ceramide-induced vascular smooth muscle cell growth arrest. Taken together, these data demonstrate that structured membrane microdomains are necessary for ceramide-induced activation of PKC zeta and resultant diminished Akt activity, leading to vascular smooth muscle cell growth arrest.  相似文献   

5.
6.
We use electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) with liposoluble spin labels in order to study the lipid structures obtained after Triton X-100 extraction of erythrocyte membranes. The apparent order profile in these detergent resistant membranes (DRM) is very similar to that of the parent membrane, although with higher absolute values, consistent with a liquid-ordered state. DRM could also be obtained from erythrocytes previously depleted in a 40% of their membrane cholesterol, in apparent opposition to the phenomenon of raft disruption reported by other authors. However, the protein profile of these samples showed important differences with that of DRM from untreated cells. The analysis of our results suggests that the effect of Triton X-100 on cholesterol depleted erythrocytes is limited to the solubilization of raft proteins, without disrupting the lipid matrix of DRM.  相似文献   

7.
Elevated ceramide concentrations in adipocytes and skeletal muscle impair PKB (protein kinase B; also known as Akt)-directed insulin signalling to key hormonal end points. An important feature of this inhibition involves the ceramide-induced activation of atypical PKCzeta (protein kinase C-zeta), which associates with and negatively regulates PKB. In the present study, we demonstrate that this inhibition is critically dependent on the targeting and subsequent retention of PKCzeta-PKB within CEM (caveolin-enriched microdomains), which is facilitated by kinase interactions with caveolin. Ceramide also recruits PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homologue detected on chromosome 10), a 3'-phosphoinositide phosphatase, thereby creating a repressive membrane microenvironment from which PKB cannot signal. Disrupting the structural integrity of caveolae by cholesterol depletion prevented caveolar targeting of PKCzeta and PKB and suppressed kinase-caveolin association, but, importantly, also ameliorated ceramide-induced inhibition of PKB. Consistent with this, adipocytes from caveolin-1-/- mice, which lack functional caveolae, exhibit greater resistance to ceramide compared with caveolin-1+/+ adipocytes. We conclude that the recruitment and retention of PKB within CEM contribute significantly to ceramide-induced inhibition of PKB-directed signalling.  相似文献   

8.
Coxiella burnetii directs the synthesis of a large parasitophorous vacuole (PV) required for replication. While some lysosomal characteristics of the PV have been described, the origin and composition of the PV membrane is largely undefined. Cholesterol is an essential component of mammalian cell membranes where it plays important regulatory and structural roles. Here we investigated the role of host cholesterol in biogenesis and maintenance of the C. burnetii PV in Vero cells. The C. burnetii PV membrane stained with filipin and was positive for the lipid raft protein flotillin-1, suggesting PV membranes are enriched in cholesterol and contain lipid raft microdomains. C. burnetii infection increased host cell cholesterol content by 1.75-fold with a coincident upregulation of host genes involved in cholesterol metabolism. Treatment with U18666A, lovastatin, or 25-hydroxycholesterol, pharmacological agents that inhibit cholesterol uptake and/or biosynthesis, altered PV morphology and partially inhibited C. burnetii replication. Complete inhibition of C. burnetii PV development and replication was observed when infected cells were treated with imipramine or ketoconazole, inhibitors of cholesterol uptake and biosynthesis respectively. We conclude that C. burnetii infection perturbs host cell cholesterol metabolism and that free access to host cholesterol stores is required for optimal C. burnetii replication.  相似文献   

9.
Purified renal globotriaosyl ceramide (Gb3)/cholesterol mixtures sonicated heated in a Triton-containing buffer placed below a discontinuous sucrose gradient form glycosphingolipid (GSL)-containing dense lipid structures at the 30/5% sucrose interface after centrifugation. Inclusion of fluorescein-labeled verotoxin 1 B subunit (FITC-VT1 B) within the most dense sucrose layer results in the fluorescent labeling of this Gb3-containing raft structure. Alternatively inclusion of I-labeled VT1 fractionation allows quantitation of binding. FITC-VT1 B effectively competes for I-VT1/Gb3 raft binding. This assay will allow the definition of the optimal raft composition for VT1 (or any other ligand) binding. The effect of several potential cellular raft components are reported. Increased cholesterol content increased VT1 binding. Addition of phosphatidylethanolamine had minimal effect while phosphatidylserine was inhibitory. Although inclusion of sphingomyelin increased the Gb3 content of the "raft" reduced VT1 binding was seen. Inclusion of other glycolipids can also be inhibitory. The addition of globotetraosyl ceramide had no effect; however addition of sulfogalactosyl ceramide but not sulfogalactoglycerolipid inhibited VT1/Gb3 raft binding. These results suggest that certain GSLs can disfavor the formation of the appropriate 'raft' structure for ligand binding that this is dependent on both their carbohydrate lipid structure. Such "deceptor" GSLs may provide an as yet unappreciated mechanism for the regulation of cellular GSL receptor activity. This model is an effective tool to approach the dynamics ligand-binding specificity of GSL/cholesterol-containing lipid microdomains.  相似文献   

10.
MRP1 (multidrug-resistance-related protein 1)/ABCC1 (ATP-binding cassette transporter C1) has been localized in cholesterol-enriched lipid rafts, which suggests a role for these lipid rafts and/or cholesterol in MRP1 function. In the present study, we have shown for the first time that nearly complete oxidation of free cholesterol in the plasma membrane of BHK-MRP1 (MRP1-expressing baby hamster kidney) cells did not affect MRP1 localization in lipid rafts or its efflux function, using 5-carboxyfluorescein diacetate as a substrate. Inhibition of cholesterol biosynthesis, using lovastatin in combination with RO 48-8071, an inhibitor of oxidosqualene cyclase, resulted in a shift of MRP1 out of lipid raft fractions, but did not affect MRP1-mediated efflux in Neuro-2a (neuroblastoma) cells. Short-term methyl-β-cyclodextrin treatment was equally effective in removing free cholesterol from Neuro-2a and BHK-MRP1 cells, but affected MRP1 function only in the latter. The kinetics of loss of both MRP1 efflux function and lipid raft association during long-term methyl-β-cyclodextrin treatment did not match the kinetics of free cholesterol removal in both cell lines. Moreover, MRP1 activity was measured in vesicles consisting of membranes isolated from BHK-MRP1 cells using the substrate cysteinyl leukotriene C4 and was not changed when the free cholesterol level of these membranes was either decreased or increased. In conclusion, MRP1 activity is not correlated with the level of free cholesterol or with localization in cholesterol-dependent lipid rafts.  相似文献   

11.
Although the functional significance of caveolae/lipid rafts in cellular signaling and cholesterol transfer is increasingly recognized, almost nothing is known regarding the lipids, cholesterol dynamics, and factors regulating these properties in caveolae/lipid rafts as opposed to nonlipid raft domains of the plasma membrane. The present findings demonstrate the utility of con-A affinity chromatography for simultaneous isolation of caveolae/lipid raft and nonlipid raft domains from plasma membranes of L-cell fibroblasts. These domains differed markedly in both protein and lipid constituents. Although caveolae/lipid rafts were enriched in total lipid, cholesterol, and phospholipid as well as other markers for these domains, the cholesterol/phospholipid ratio of caveolae/lipid rafts did not differ from that of nonlipid rafts. Nevertheless, spontaneous sterol transfer was 7-12-fold faster from caveolae/lipid raft than nonlipid raft domains of the plasma membrane. This was largely due to the near absence of exchangeable sterol in the nonlipid rafts. SCP-2 dramatically and selectively enhanced sterol transfer from caveolae/lipid rafts, but not from nonlipid rafts. Finally, overexpression of SCP-2 significantly altered the sterol dynamics of caveolae/lipid rafts to facilitate retention of cholesterol within the cell. These results established for the first time that (i) caveolae/lipid rafts, rather than the nonlipid raft domains, contain significant levels of rapidly transferable sterol, consistent with their role in spontaneous sterol transfer from and through the plasma membrane, and (ii) SCP-2 selectively regulates how caveolae/lipid rafts, but not nonlipid raft domains, mediate cholesterol trafficking through the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

12.
Ceramides are sphingolipids that greatly stabilize ordered membrane domains (lipid rafts), and displace cholesterol from them. Ceramide-rich rafts have been implicated in diverse biological processes. Because ceramide analogues have been useful for probing the biological function of ceramide, and may have biomedical applications, it is important to characterize how ceramide structure affects membrane properties, including lipid raft stability and composition. In this report, fluorescence quenching assays were used to evaluate the effect of analogues of ceramide with different N-acyl chains or different sphingoid backbones on raft stability and sterol content. The effect of replacing 18 mol% of sphingomyelin (SM) with ceramide in vesicles composed of a 1:1 (mol:mol) mixture of SM and dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC), with or without 25 mol% sterol, was examined. In the absence of sterol, the thermal stability of the SM-rich ordered domains increased with ceramide N-acyl chain length in the order C2:0 approximately C6:0 approximately C8:0相似文献   

13.
Ordered lipid domains enriched in sphingolipids and cholesterol (lipid rafts) have been implicated in numerous functions in biological membranes. We recently found that lipid domain/raft formation is dependent on the sterol component having a structure that allows tight packing with lipids having saturated acyl chains (Xu, X., and London, E. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 844-849). In this study, the domain-promoting activities of various natural sterols were compared with that of cholesterol using both fluorescence quenching and detergent insolubility methods. Using model membranes, it was shown that, like cholesterol, both plant and fungal sterols promote the formation of tightly packed, ordered lipid domains by lipids with saturated acyl chains. Surprisingly ergosterol, a fungal sterol, and 7-dehydrocholesterol, a sterol present in elevated levels in Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome, were both significantly more strongly domain-promoting than cholesterol. Domain formation was also affected by the structure of the sphingolipid (or that of an equivalent "saturated" phospholipid) component. Sterols had pronounced effects on domain formation by sphingomyelin and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine but only a weak influence on the ability of cerebrosides to form domains. Strikingly it was found that a small amount of ceramide (3 mol %) significantly stabilized domain/raft formation. The molecular basis for, and the implications of, the effects of different sterols and sphingolipids (especially ceramide) on the behavior and biological function of rafts are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Biochemical and cell-biological experiments have identified cholesterol as an important component of lipid 'rafts' and related structures (e.g., caveolae) in mammalian cell membranes, and membrane cholesterol levels as a key factor in determining raft stability and organization. Studies using cholesterol-containing bilayers as model systems have provided important insights into the roles that cholesterol plays in determining lipid raft behavior. This review will discuss recent progress in understanding two aspects of lipid-cholesterol interactions that are particularly relevant to understanding the formation and properties of lipid rafts. First, we will consider evidence that cholesterol interacts differentially with different membrane lipids, associating particularly strongly with saturated, high-melting phospho- and sphingolipids and particularly weakly with highly unsaturated lipid species. Second, we will review recent progress in reconstituting and directly observing segregated raft-like (liquid-ordered) domains in model membranes that mimic the lipid compositions of natural membranes incorporating raft domains.  相似文献   

15.
The translocation of lipids across membranes (flip-flop) is an important biological process. Slow exchange on a physiological timescale allows the creation of asymmetric distributions of lipids across cellular membranes. The location of lipids and their rate of exchange have important biological consequences, especially for lipids involved in cellular signaling. We investigated the translocation of cholesterol, ceramide, and diacylglycerol in two model bilayers using molecular dynamics simulations. We estimate half times for flip-flop for cholesterol, diacylglycerol, and ceramide of 20 μs, 30 μs, and 10 ms in a POPC bilayer, compared with approximately 30 min, 30 ms, and 30 s in a model raft bilayer (1:1:1 PSM, POPC, and cholesterol). Cholesterol has a large (54 kJ/mol) free energy of exchange between the POPC and raft bilayer, and therefore, it strongly prefers the more ordered and rigid raft bilayer over the more liquid POPC bilayer. Ceramide and diacylglycerol have relatively small free energies of exchange, suggesting nearly equal preference for both bilayers. This unexpected result may have implications for ceramide and diacylglycerol signaling and membrane localization.  相似文献   

16.
Biochemical and cell-biological experiments have identified cholesterol as an important component of lipid ‘rafts’ and related structures (e.g., caveolae) in mammalian cell membranes, and membrane cholesterol levels as a key factor in determining raft stability and organization. Studies using cholesterol-containing bilayers as model systems have provided important insights into the roles that cholesterol plays in determining lipid raft behavior. This review will discuss recent progress in understanding two aspects of lipid-cholesterol interactions that are particularly relevant to understanding the formation and properties of lipid rafts. First, we will consider evidence that cholesterol interacts differentially with different membrane lipids, associating particularly strongly with saturated, high-melting phospho- and sphingolipids and particularly weakly with highly unsaturated lipid species. Second, we will review recent progress in reconstituting and directly observing segregated raft-like (liquid-ordered) domains in model membranes that mimic the lipid compositions of natural membranes incorporating raft domains.  相似文献   

17.
A series of cholesterol (Chol) probes with NBD and Dansyl fluorophores attached to the 3-hydroxyl position via carbamate linkers has been designed and synthesized and their ability to mimic the behavior of natural cholesterol in bilayer membranes has been examined. Fluorescence spectroscopy data indicate that the NBD-labeled lipids are located in the polar headgroup region of the bilayer with their position varying with the method of fluorophore attachment and the linker length. The partitioning of the Chol probes between liquid-ordered (Lo) and liquid-disordered (Lo) phases in supported bilayers prepared from ternary lipid mixtures of DOPC, Chol and either egg sphingomyelin or DPPC was examined by fluorescence microscopy. The carbamate-linked NBD-Chols show a stronger preference for partitioning into Lo domains than does a structurally similar probe with an ester linkage, indicating the importance of careful optimization of probe and linker to provide the best Chol mimic. Comparison of the partitioning of NBD probes to literature data for native Chol indicates that the probes reproduce well the modest enrichment of Chol in Lo domains as well as the ceramide-induced displacement of Chol. One NBD probe was used to follow the dynamic redistribution of Chol in phase separated membranes in response to in situ ceramide generation. This provides the first direct optical visualization of Chol redistribution during enzymatic ceramide generation and allows the assignment of new bilayer regions that exclude dye and have high lateral adhesion to ceramide-rich regions.  相似文献   

18.
Purified renal globotriaosyl ceramide (Gb3)/cholesterol mixtures, sonicated and heated in a Triton-containing buffer and placed below a discontinuous sucrose gradient, form glycosphingolipid (GSL)-containing dense lipid structures at the 30/5% sucrose interface after centrifugation. Inclusion of fluorescein-labeled verotoxin 1 B subunit (FITC-VT1 B) within the most dense sucrose layer results in the fluorescent labeling of this Gb3-containing raft structure. Alternatively, inclusion of 125I-labeled VT1 and fractionation allows quantitation of binding. FITC-VT1 B effectively competes for 125I-VT1/Gb3 raft binding. This assay will allow the definition of the optimal raft composition for VT1 (or any other ligand) binding. The effect of several potential cellular raft components are reported. Increased cholesterol content increased VT1 binding. Addition of phosphatidylethanolamine had minimal effect while phosphatidylserine was inhibitory. Although inclusion of sphingomyelin increased the Gb3 content of the 'raft', reduced VT1 binding was seen. Inclusion of other glycolipids can also be inhibitory. The addition of globotetraosyl ceramide had no effect; however, addition of sulfogalactosyl ceramide, but not sulfogalactoglycerolipid, inhibited VT1/Gb3 raft binding. These results suggest that certain GSLs can disfavour the formation of the appropriate 'raft' structure for ligand binding and that this is dependent on both their carbohydrate and lipid structure. Such “deceptor” GSLs may provide an as yet, unappreciated mechanism for the regulation of cellular GSL receptor activity. This model is an effective tool to approach the dynamics and ligand-binding specificity of GSL/cholesterol-containing lipid microdomains. Published in 2004. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

19.
Efflux of excess cellular cholesterol mediated by lipid-poor apolipoproteins occurs by an active mechanism distinct from passive diffusion and is controlled by the ATP-binding cassette transporter ABCA1. Here we examined whether ABCA1-mediated lipid efflux involves the selective removal of lipids associated with membrane rafts, plasma membrane domains enriched in cholesterol and sphingomyelin. ABCA1 was not associated with cholesterol and sphingolipid-rich membrane raft domains based on detergent solubility and lack of colocalization with marker proteins associated with raft domains. Lipid efflux to apoA-I was accounted for by decreases in cellular lipids not associated with cholesterol/sphingomyelin-rich membranes. Treating cells with filipin, to disrupt raft structure, or with sphingomyelinase, to digest plasma membrane sphingomyelin, did not impair apoA-I-mediated cholesterol or phosphatidylcholine efflux. In contrast, efflux of cholesterol to high density lipoproteins (HDL) or plasma was partially accounted for by depletion of cholesterol from membrane rafts. Additionally, HDL-mediated cholesterol efflux was partially inhibited by filipin and sphingomyelinase treatment. Apo-A-I-mediated cholesterol efflux was absent from fibroblasts with nonfunctional ABCA1 (Tangier disease cells), despite near normal amounts of cholesterol associated with raft domains and normal abilities of plasma and HDL to deplete cholesterol from these domains. Thus, the involvement of membrane rafts in cholesterol efflux applies to lipidated HDL particles but not to lipid-free apoA-I. We conclude that cholesterol and sphingomyelin-rich membrane rafts do not provide lipid for efflux promoted by apolipoproteins through the ABCA1-mediated lipid secretory pathway and that ABCA1 is not associated with these domains.  相似文献   

20.
Transport of proteins between intracellular membrane compartments is mediated by a protein machinery that regulates the budding and fusion processes of individual transport steps. Although the core proteins of both processes are defined at great detail, much less is known about the involvement of lipids. Here we report that changing the cellular balance of cholesterol resulted in changes of the morphology of the Golgi apparatus, accompanied by an inhibition of protein transport. By using a well characterized cell-free intra-Golgi transport assay, these observations were further investigated, and it was found that the transport reaction is sensitive to small changes in the cholesterol content of Golgi membranes. Addition as well as removal of cholesterol (10 +/- 6%) to Golgi membranes by use of methyl-beta-cyclodextrin specifically inhibited the intra-Golgi transport assay. Transport inhibition occurred at the fusion step. Modulation of the cholesterol content changed the lipid raft partitioning of phosphatidylcholine and heterotrimeric G proteins, but not of other (non) lipid raft proteins and lipids. We suggest that the cholesterol balance in Golgi membranes plays an essential role in intra-Golgi protein transport and needs to be carefully regulated to maintain the structural and functional organization of the Golgi apparatus.  相似文献   

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