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1.
The spread of the abnormal conformation of the prion protein, PrP(Sc), within the spinal cord is central to the pathogenesis of transmissible prion diseases, but the mechanism of transport has not been determined. For this report, the route of transport of the HY strain of transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME), a prion disease of mink, in the central nervous system following unilateral inoculation into the sciatic nerves of Syrian hamsters was investigated. PrP(Sc) was detected at 3 weeks postinfection in the lumbar spinal cord and ascended to the brain at a rate of approximately 3.3 mm per day. At 6 weeks postinfection, PrP(Sc) was detected in the lateral vestibular nucleus and the interposed nucleus of the cerebellum ipsilateral to the site of sciatic nerve inoculation and in the red nucleus contralateral to HY TME inoculation. At 9 weeks postinfection, PrP(Sc) was detected in the contralateral hind limb motor cortex and reticular thalamic nucleus. These patterns of PrP(Sc) brain deposition at various times postinfection were consistent with that of HY TME spread from the sciatic nerve to the lumbar spinal cord followed by transsynaptic spread and retrograde transport to the brain and brain stem along descending spinal tracts (i.e., lateral vestibulospinal, rubrospinal, and corticospinal). The absence of PrP(Sc) from the spleen suggested that the lymphoreticular system does not play a role in neuroinvasion following sciatic nerve infection. The rapid disease onset following sciatic nerve infection demonstrated that HY TME can spread by retrograde transport along specific descending motor pathways of the spinal cord and, as a result, can initially target brain regions that control vestibular and motor functions. The early clinical symptoms of HY TME infection such as head tremor and ataxia were consistent with neuronal damage to these brain areas.  相似文献   

2.
Interspecies transmission of the transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs), or prion diseases, can result in the adaptation and selection of TSE strains with an expanded host range and increased virulence such as in the case of bovine spongiform encephalopathy and variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. To investigate TSE strain adaptation, we serially passaged a biological clone of transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME) into Syrian golden hamsters and examined the selection of distinct strain phenotypes and conformations of the disease-specific isoform of the prion protein (PrP(Sc)). The long-incubation-period drowsy (DY) TME strain was the predominate strain, based on the presence of its strain-specific PrP(Sc) following interspecies passage. Additional serial passages in hamsters resulted in the selection of the hyper (HY) TME PrP(Sc) strain-dependent conformation and its short incubation period phenotype unless the passages were performed with a low-dose inoculum (e.g., 10(-5) dilution), in which case the DY TME clinical phenotype continued to predominate. For both TME strains, the PrP(Sc) strain pattern preceded stabilization of the TME strain phenotype. These findings demonstrate that interspecies transmission of a single cloned TSE strain resulted in adaptation of at least two strain-associated PrP(Sc) conformations that underwent selection until one type of PrP(Sc) conformation and strain phenotype became predominant. To examine TME strain selection in the absence of host adaptation, hamsters were coinfected with hamster-adapted HY and DY TME. DY TME was able to interfere with the selection of the short-incubation HY TME phenotype. Coinfection could result in the DY TME phenotype and PrP(Sc) conformation on first passage, but on subsequent passages, the disease pattern converted to HY TME. These findings indicate that during TSE strain adaptation, there is selection of a strain-specific PrP(Sc) conformation that can determine the TSE strain phenotype.  相似文献   

3.
The molecular basis of strain variation in scrapie diseases is unknown. The only identified component of the agent is the posttranslationally modified host prion protein (PrPSc). The biochemical and physical properties of PrP from two strains of transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME), called hyper (HY) and drowsy (DY), were compared to investigate if PrP heterogeneity could account for strain diversity. The degradation rate of PrPTME digested with proteinase K was found to be strain specific and correlated with inactivation of the TME titer. Edman protein sequencing revealed that the major N-terminal end of HY PrPTME commenced at least 10 amino acid residues prior to that of DY PrPTME after digestion with proteinase K. Analysis of the brain distribution of PrPTME exhibited a strain-specific pattern and localization of PrPTME to the perikarya of specific neuron populations. Our findings are consistent with HY and DY PrPTME having distinct protein conformations and/or strain-specific ligand interactions that influence PrPTME properties. We propose that PrPTME conformation could play a role in targeting TME strains to different neuron populations in which strain-specific formation occurs. These data are consistent with the idea that PrPTME protein structure determines the molecular basis of strain variation.  相似文献   

4.
Shikiya RA  Bartz JC 《Journal of virology》2011,85(24):13439-13442
Prions are composed mainly, if not entirely, of PrP(Sc), an infectious misfolded isoform of PrP(C), the normal isoform of the prion protein. Here we show that protein misfolding cyclic amplification (PMCA)-generated hypertransmissible mink encephalopathy (HY TME) PrP(Sc) is highly infectious and has a titer that is similar, if not identical, to that associated with brain tissue from animals infected with the HY TME agent that are in the terminal stage of disease. These data demonstrate that PMCA efficiently replicates the prion agent and provide further support for the hypothesis that in vitro-generated prions are bona fide and are not due to contamination.  相似文献   

5.
When two prion strains infect a single host, one strain can interfere with the ability of the other to cause disease but it is not known whether prion replication of the second strain is also diminished. To further investigate strain interference, we infected hamsters in the sciatic nerve with the long-incubation-period transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME) agent DY TME prior to superinfection of hamsters with the short-incubation-period HY TME agent. Increases in the interval between TME agent inoculations resulted in an extension of the incubation period of HY TME or a complete block of the ability of the HY TME agent to cause disease. The sciatic nerve route of inoculation gave the two TME strains access to the same population of neurons, allowing for the potential of prion interference in the lumbar spinal cord. The ability of the DY TME agent to extend the incubation period of HY TME corresponds with detection of DY TME PrP(Sc), the abnormal isoform of the prion protein, in the lumbar spinal cord. The increased incubation period of HY TME or the inability of the HY TME agent to cause disease in the coinfected animals corresponds with a reduction in the abundance of HY TME PrP(Sc) in the lumbar spinal cord. When the two strains were not directed to the same populations of neurons within the lumbar spinal cord, interference between HY TME and DY TME did not occur. This suggests that DY TME agent replication interferes with HY TME agent replication when the two strains infect a common population of neurons.  相似文献   

6.
The molecular basis of prion strain diversity is proposed to be encoded by distinct conformations of the abnormal scrapie isoform of the prion protein (PrP(Sc)). PrP(Sc) formation for the hyper (HY) and drowsy (DY) strains of the transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME) agent was investigated using the cell-free PrP conversion reaction to determine the role of distinct PrP(Sc) conformations in the rate of in vitro conversion of cellular PrP into protease-resistant PrP. PrP conversion increased at an exponential rate for both TME strains until peak levels were reached at 72-96 h of reaction time. The amount and rate of PrP conversion for HY TME was greater than those for DY TME between 48 h and the peak level of PrP conversion. Between 96 and 120 h, there was a negative rate of PrP conversion; and between 120 and 168 h, the net rate of HY and DY PrP conversion approached zero. These findings suggest that PrP conversion can occur in three distinct stages: an elongation phase, a depolymerization phase, and a steady-state phase. Strain-specific properties between the TME strains were identified only during the elongation phase. The steady-state phase could be disrupted by the addition of PrP(Sc) to, or by sonication of, the cell-free PrP conversion reaction. These treatments resulted in an increase in the amount of PrP conversion that was equal to or greater than that found during the peak level of PrP conversion for both TME strains, indicating that the steady-state phase was in dynamic equilibrium. In a related study, the rate of accumulation of HY and DY PrP(Sc) in hamster brain exhibited a strain-specific pattern that had similarities to the strain-specific PrP conversion reaction during the elongation phase. These results suggest that strain-specific conformations of PrP(Sc) have the ability to influence the rate of additional PrP(Sc) formation from cellular PrP both in vitro and in vivo.  相似文献   

7.
Transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME) has been transmitted to Syrian golden hamsters, and two strains of the causative agent, HYPER (HY) and DROWSY (DY), have been identified that have different biological properties. During scrapie, a TME-like disease, an endogenous cellular protein, the prion protein (PrPC), is modified (to PrPSc) and accumulates in the brain. PrPSc is partially resistant to proteases and is claimed to be an essential component of the infectious agent. Purification and analysis of PrP from hamsters infected with the HY and DY TME agent strains revealed differences in properties of PrPTME sedimentation in N-lauroylsarcosine, sensitivity to digestion with proteinase K, and migration in polyacrylamide gels. PrPC and HY PrPTME can be distinguished on the basis of their relative solubilities in detergent and protease sensitivities. PrPTME from DY-infected brain tissue shared solubility characteristics of PrP from both uninfected and HY-infected tissue. Limited protease digestion of PrPTME revealed strain-specific migration patterns upon polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Prolonged proteinase K treatment or N-linked deglycosylation of PrPTME did not eliminate such differences but demonstrated the PrPTME from DY-infected brain was more sensitive to protease digestion than HY PrPTME. Antigenic mapping of PrPTME with antibodies raised against synthetic peptides revealed strain-specific differences in immunoreactivity in a region of the amino-terminal end of PrPTME containing amino acid residues 89 to 103. These findings indicate that PrPTME from the two agent strains, although originating from the same host, differ in composition, conformation, or both. We conclude that PrPTME from the HY and DY strains undergo different posttranslational modifications that could explain differences in the biochemical properties of PrPTME from the two sources. Whether these strain-specific posttranslational events are directly responsible for the distinct biological properties of the HY and DY agent strains remains to be determined.  相似文献   

8.
Animals that naturally acquire the prion diseases have a well-developed olfactory sense that they utilize for a variety of basic behaviors. To assess the potential for the nasal cavity to serve as a point of entry for prion diseases, a small amount of prion-infected brain homogenate was placed inferior to the nostrils of hamsters, where it was immediately sniffed into the nasal cavity. Hamsters extra-nasally inoculated with the HY strain of transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME) agent had an incubation period that was not significantly different from per os inoculation of the same dose of the HY TME agent. However, the efficiency of the nasal route of inoculation was determined to be 10 to 100 times greater based on endpoint dilution analysis. Immunohistochemistry on tissues from hamsters killed at 2-week intervals after inoculation was used to identify the disease-associated form of the prion protein (PrP(d)) to determine the route of prion neuroinvasion. Nasal mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue and submandibular lymph nodes initially accumulated PrP(d) as early as 4 weeks postinfection. PrP(d) was first identified in cervical lymph nodes at 8 weeks, in the mesenteric lymph nodes, spleen, and Peyer's patches at 14 weeks, and in the tongue 20 weeks after inoculation. Surprisingly, there was no evidence of PrP(d) in olfactory epithelium or olfactory nerve fascicles at any time after inoculation. Therefore, the HY TME agent did not enter the central nervous system via the olfactory nerve; instead, PrP(d) accumulated in elements of the cranial lymphoreticular system prior to neuroinvasion.  相似文献   

9.
Food-borne transmission of prions can lead to infection of the gastrointestinal tract and neuroinvasion via the splanchnic and vagus nerves. Here we report that the transmission of transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME) is 100,000-fold more efficient by inoculation of prions into the tongues of hamsters than by oral ingestion. The incubation period following TME agent (hereinafter referred to as TME) inoculation into the lingual muscles was the shortest among the five nonneuronal routes of inoculation, including another intramuscular route. Deposition of the abnormal isoform of the prion protein, PrP(Sc), was first detected in the tongue and submandibular lymph node at 1 to 2 weeks following inoculation of the tongue with TME. PrP(Sc) deposits in the tongue were associated with individual axons, and the initial appearance of TME in the brain stem was found in the hypoglossal nucleus at 2 weeks postinfection. At later time points, PrP(Sc) was localized to brain cell groups that directly project to the hypoglossal nucleus, indicating the transneuronal spread of TME. TME PrP(Sc) entry into the brain stem preceded PrP(Sc) detection in the rostral cervical spinal cord. These results demonstrate that TME can replicate in both the tongue and regional lymph nodes but indicate that the faster route of brain invasion is via retrograde axonal transport within the hypoglossal nerve to the hypoglossal nucleus. Topical application of TME to a superficial wound on the surface of the tongue resulted in a higher incidence of disease and a shorter incubation period than with oral TME ingestion. Therefore, abrasions of the tongue in livestock and humans may predispose a host to oral prion infection of the tongue-associated cranial nerves. In a related study, PrP(Sc) was detected in tongues following the intracerebral inoculation of six hamster-adapted prion strains, which demonstrates that prions can also travel from the brain to the tongue in the anterograde direction along the tongue-associated cranial nerves. These findings suggest that food products containing ruminant or cervid tongue may be a potential source of prion infection for humans.  相似文献   

10.
Centrifugal spread of the prion agent to peripheral tissues is postulated to occur by axonal transport along nerve fibers. This study investigated the distribution of the pathological isoform of the protein (PrP(Sc)) in the tongues and nasal cavities of hamsters following intracerebral inoculation of the HY strain of the transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME) agent. We report that PrP(Sc) deposition was found in the lamina propria, taste buds, and stratified squamous epithelium of fungiform papillae in the tongue, as well as in skeletal muscle cells. Using laser scanning confocal microscopy, PrP(Sc) was localized to nerve fibers in each of these structures in the tongue, neuroepithelial taste cells of the taste bud, and, possibly, epithelial cells. This PrP(Sc) distribution was consistent with a spread of HY TME agent along both somatosensory and gustatory cranial nerves to the tongue and suggests subsequent synaptic spread to taste cells and epithelial cells via peripheral synapses. In the nasal cavity, PrP(Sc) accumulation was found in the olfactory and vomeronasal epithelium, where its location was consistent with a distribution in cell bodies and apical dendrites of the sensory neurons. Prion spread to these sites is consistent with transport via the olfactory nerve fibers that descend from the olfactory bulb. Our data suggest that epithelial cells, neuroepithelial taste cells, or olfactory sensory neurons at chemosensory mucosal surfaces, which undergo normal turnover, infected with the prion agent could be shed and play a role in the horizontal transmission of animal prion diseases.  相似文献   

11.
We characterized mink cell focus-forming murine leukemia viruses that were isolated from C3H/MCA-5 cells after induction with 5-iododeoxyuridine in culture. Mink lung epithelial cells malignantly transformed in vitro by induced virus were the source of four molecular clones of mink cell focus-forming virus. CI-1, CI-2, CI-3, and CI-4. Three clones, CI-1, CI-2, and CI-3, had full-length mink cell focus-forming viral genomes, one of which (CI-3) was infectious. In addition, we obtained a defective viral genome (CI-4) which had a deletion in the envelope gene. A comparison between the envelope genes of CI-4 and those of spleen focus-forming virus by heteroduplex mapping showed close homology in the substitution region and defined the deletion as being identical to the p15E deletion of spleen focus-forming virus. The recombinant mink cell focus-forming genomes are not endogenous in C3H/MCA-5 cells and therefore must have been formed in culture after induction by 5-iododeoxyuridine. CI-3, the infectious clone of mink cell focus-forming murine leukemia virus, was dualtropic, and mink cells infected with CI-3 were altered in their response to epidermal growth factor. In the presence of epidermal growth factor at 10 ng/ml, uninfected mink cells retained their epithelial morphology in monolayer culture and did not form colonies in soft agar. In contrast, CI-3 virus-infected mink cells grew with fibroblastic morphology in monolayer culture and showed an increased growth rate in soft agar in the presence of epidermal growth factor.  相似文献   

12.
While prion infection of the lymphoreticular system (LRS) is necessary for neuroinvasion in many prion diseases, in bovine spongiform encephalopathy and atypical cases of sheep scrapie there is evidence to challenge that LRS infection is required for neuroinvasion. Here we investigated the role of prion infection of LRS tissues in neuroinvasion following extraneural inoculation with the HY and DY strains of the transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME) agent. DY TME agent infectivity was not detected in spleen or lymph nodes following intraperitoneal inoculation and clinical disease was not observed following inoculation into the peritoneum or lymph nodes, or after oral ingestion. In contrast, inoculation of the HY TME agent by each of these peripheral routes resulted in replication in the spleen and lymph nodes and induced clinical disease. To clarify the role of the LRS in neuroinvasion, the HY and DY TME agents were also inoculated into the tongue because it is densely innervated and lesions on the tongue, which are common in ruminants, increase the susceptibility of hamsters to experimental prion disease. Following intratongue inoculation, the DY TME agent caused prion disease and was detected in both the tongue and brainstem nuclei that innervate the tongue, but the prion protein PrP(Sc) was not detected in the spleen or lymph nodes. These findings indicate that the DY TME agent can spread from the tongue to the brain along cranial nerves and neuroinvasion does not require agent replication in the LRS. These studies provide support for prion neuroinvasion from highly innervated peripheral tissues in the absence of LRS infection in natural prion diseases of livestock.  相似文献   

13.
LP-BM5 murine leukemia virus, a derivative of Duplan-Laterjet virus, contains a mixture of replication-competent B-tropic ecotropic and mink cell focus-inducing (MCF) viruses and a defective genome that is the proximal cause of a syndrome, murine AIDS (MAIDS), characterized by lymphoproliferation and immunodeficiency. The defective (BM5d) and ecotropic components of this mixture were molecularly cloned, and complete (BM5d) or partial (ecotropic) nucleotide sequences were determined. BM5d closely resembled the Du5H genome cloned from the Duplan virus, featuring a highly divergent p12 sequence in the gag open reading frame. In MAIDS-sensitive C57BL/6 mice, BM5d was detected in tissues within 2 weeks of infection but was absent from tissues of the MAIDS-resistant strain, A/J, 12 weeks after infection. B-cell-lineage tumors from mice with MAIDS contained and expressed BM5d, and clonal integrations of this genome were variably associated with clonal expansions of B cells in infected mice. Finally, mRNA crosshybridizing with a probe for BM5d was present in spleen but not kidney cells of uninfected B6 mice.  相似文献   

14.
The work is aimed at establishing the interspecies mouse-mink hybridomas from the fusion of American mink B-lymphocytes with the murine cell line NSO. The hybridoma (lime 10-B5) continued to secrete mink immunoglobulin L-chains in the culture for 6 months with constant reclonings. The hybridoma clone was characterized by a decrease in the secretory activity of cells. The karyological study et this clone has not reliably revealed the mink chromosomes in the genome of hybrid cells.  相似文献   

15.
Friend mink cell focus-inducing virus (Fr-MCF) is a leukemogenic murine retrovirus that was isolated from a leukemic NIH Swiss mouse. We molecularly cloned the genome of this virus into pBR322. Restriction enzyme mapping of this cloned Fr-MCF DNA revealed a 1.0-kilobase-pair region in the envelope gene which differs from the restriction map of the Friend ecotropic virus (Friend murine leukemia virus). A 400-base-pair Fr-MCF envelope gene fragment was subcloned from this region and designated pLEK. Probes made with pLEK hybridize to Fr-MCF DNA but do not hybridize to either Friend or amphotropic murine leukemia virus DNA. Polyadenylic acid-selected RNA was prepared from the hematopoietic tissues of normal NIH Swiss mice, Fr-MCF-infected erythroleukemia cells (TP-1), and uninfected chemically transformed T lymphocytes (RB-1). The pLEK probe identified 34S and 22S messages in the TP-1 cells and in the normal hematopoietic tissues. RB-1 cells contain 32S and 26S messages that hybridize to pLEK. However, the pLEK-like RNAs found in the normal hematopoietic tissues and in the RB-1 cells were 400-fold less abundant than the RNAs found in the TP-1 cells.  相似文献   

16.
Prion diseases are characterised by the conversion of a cellular prion protein (PrP(C)) by its misfolded, hence pathogenic, isoform (PrP(Sc)). The efficiency of this transition depends on the molecular similarities between both interaction partners and on the intrinsic convertibility of PrP(C). Transgenic mice expressing chimeric murine/ovine PrP(C) (Tgmushp mice) are susceptible to BSE and/or scrapie prions of bovine or ovine origin while transgenic mice expressing similar murine/bovine PrP(C) chimera (Tgmubo mice) are essentially resistant. We have studied this phenomenon by cell-free conversion on procaryotically expressed chimeric PrP(C). Mouse passaged scrapie or BSE PrP(Sc) was used as a seed and the conversion reaction was carried out under semi-native conditions. The results obtained in this assay were similar to those of our in vivo experiments. Since mubo- and mushp-PrP(C) differ only at four amino acid positions (S96G, N142S, Y154H and Q185E), single or double point mutations of mushp-PrP(C) were examined in the cell-free conversion assay. While the scrapie Me7 prion induced conversion was largely reduced by the N142S and Q185E but not by the S96G and Y154H mutation, the BSE induced conversion was retained in all mutants. Newly formed PrP(res) exhibited strain specific characteristics, such as the localisation of the proteinase K cleavage site, even in the chimeric PrP(C) mutants. We therefore postulate that the efficiency of the conversion of chimeric PrP(C) depends on the amino acid sequence as well as on prion strain specific effects.  相似文献   

17.
18.
The prion agent has been detected in skeletal muscle of humans and animals with prion diseases. Here we report scrapie infection of murine C2C12 myoblasts and myotubes in vitro following coculture with a scrapie-infected murine neuroblastoma (N2A) cell line but not following incubation with a scrapie-infected nonneuronal cell line or a scrapie brain homogenate. Terminal differentiation of scrapie-infected C2C12 myoblasts into myotubes resulted in an increase in the expression of the disease-specific prion protein, PrP(Sc). The amount of scrapie infectivity or PrP(Sc) in C2C12 myotubes was comparable to the levels found in scrapie-infected N2A cells, indicating that a high level of infection was established in muscle cells. Subclones of scrapie-infected C2C12 cells produced high levels of PrP(Sc) in myotubes, and the C-terminal C2 polypeptide fragment of PrP(Sc) was found based on deglycosylation and PrP(Sc)-specific immunoprecipitation of cell lysates. This is the first report of a stable prion infection in muscle cells in vitro and of a long-term prion infection in a nondividing, differentiated peripheral cell type in culture. These in vitro studies also suggest that in vivo prion infection of skeletal muscle requires contact with prion-infected neurons or, possibly, nerve terminals.  相似文献   

19.
《朊病毒》2013,7(2):61-63
Co-inoculation of prion strains into the same host can result in interference, where replication of one strain hinders the ability of another strain to cause disease. The drowsy (DY) strain of hamster-adapted transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME) extends the incubation period or completely blocks the hyper (HY) strain of TME following intracerebral, intraperitoneal or sciatic nerve routes of inoculation. However, it is not known if the interfering effect of the DY TME agent is exclusive to the HY TME agent by these experimental routes of infection. To address this issue, we show that the DY TME agent can block hamster-adapted chronic wasting disease (HaCWD) and the 263K scrapie agent from causing disease following sciatic nerve inoculation. Additionally, per os inoculation of DY TME agent slightly extends the incubation period of per os superinfected HY TME agent. These studies suggest that prion strain interference can occur by a natural route of infection and may be a more generalized phenomenon of prion strains.  相似文献   

20.
Recombinant viruses have been implicated in the pathogenesis of murine leukemias induced by a variety of long-latency retroviruses. Neonatal mice of several strains were inoculated with Friend ecotropic virus (F-Eco) and analyzed for the presence of mink cell focus-inducing (MCF) virus or DNA restriction enzyme fragments which were specific for Friend MCF virus (F-MCF). MCF virus was detected within 2 weeks of inoculation in NFS /N mice and at about 2 months after inoculation in BALB/c mice. Both of these strains developed erythroblastosis after inoculation with F-Eco. In contrast, MCF virus was not detected in F-Eco-inoculated C57BL mice. These mice were resistant to erythroblastosis but developed lymphoma or myelogenous leukemia or both at about 5 months after inoculation. Thus, although MCF viruses were associated with F-Eco erythroblastosis in NFS /N and BALB/c mice, they were not necessary for F-Eco-induced lymphoid or myeloid leukemias in C57BL mice. To investigate the association between resistance to erythroblastosis and absence of MCF virus, C57BL mice were inoculated with pseudotypic mixtures of F-Eco plus F-MCF; MCF virus replicated well in these mice, but the mice remained resistant to erythroblastosis. Furthermore, in genetic crosses between C57BL and NFS /N or BALB/c, some mice inherited resistance to F-Eco erythroblastosis without inheriting the C57BL resistance to the generation of MCF viruses. These results indicate that C57BL mice carry a gene for resistance to F-Eco erythroblastosis which is distinct from the C57BL genes which interfere with the generation of MCF viruses.  相似文献   

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