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1.
The ability of sulphate-reducing bacterial biofilms to reduce hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)) to insoluble Cr(III), a process of environmental and biotechnological significance, was investigated. The reduction of chromate to insoluble form has been quantified and the effects of chromate on the carbon source utilization and sulphate-reducing activity of the bacterial biofilms evaluated. Using lactate as the carbon/energy source and in the presence of sulphate, reduction of 500 micromol l-1 Cr(VI) was monitored over a 48-h period where 88% of the total chromium was removed from solution. Mass balance calculations showed that ca 80% of the total chromium was precipitated out of solution with the bacterial biofilm retaining less than 10% of the chromium. Only ca 12% of the chromate added was not reduced to insoluble form. Although Cr(VI) did not have a significant effect on C source utilization, sulphate reduction was severely inhibited by 500 micromol-1 Cr(VI) and only ca 10% of the sulphate reducing activity detected in control biofilms occurred in the presence of Cr(VI). Low levels of sulphide were also produced in the presence of chromate, with control biofilms producing over 10-times more sulphide than Cr(VI)-exposed biofilms. Sulphide- or other chemically-mediated Cr(VI) reduction was not detected. The biological mechanism of Cr(VI) reduction is likely to be similar to that found in other sulphate-reducing bacteria.  相似文献   

2.
Hexavalent chromium reduction by bacteria from tannery effluent   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Chromium is generated from several industrial processes. It occurs in different oxidation states, but Cr(III) and Cr(VI) are the most common ones. Cr(VI) is a toxic, soluble environmental contaminant. Some bacteria are able to reduce hexavalent chromium to the insoluble and less toxic Cr(III), and thus chromate bioremediation is of considerable interest. An indigenous chromium-reducing bacterial strain, Rb-2, isolated from a tannery water sample, was identified as Ochrobactrum intermedium, on the basis of 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The influence of factors like temperature of incubation, initial concentration of Cr, mobility of bacteria, and different carbon sources were studied to test the ability of the bacterium to reduce Cr(VI) under variable environmental conditions. The ability of the bacterial strain to reduce hexavalent chromium in artificial and industrial sewage water was evaluated. It was observed that the mechanism of resistance to metal was not due to the change in the permeability barrier of the cell membrane, and the enzyme activity was found to be inductive. Intracellular reduction of Cr(VI) was proven by reductase assay using cell-free extract. Scanning electron microscopy revealed chromium precipitates on bacterial cell surfaces, and transmission electron microscopy showed the outer as well as inner distribution of Cr(VI). This bacterial strain can be useful for Cr(VI) detoxification under a wide range of environmental conditions.  相似文献   

3.
Aims:  To investigate the genetic basis of Cr(VI) resistance and its reduction to Cr(III) in indigenous bacteria isolated from tannery effluent.
Methods and Results:  Four bacteria resistant to high Cr(VI) levels were isolated and identified as Bacillus spp. Their Cr(VI) reduction ability was tested. To assess the genetic basis of Cr(VI) resistance and reduction, plasmid transfer and curing studies were performed. Among all, B. brevis was resistant to 180 μg Cr(VI) ml−1 and showed the greatest degree of Cr(VI) reduction (75·8%) within 28 h and its transformant was resistant to 160 μg Cr(VI) ml−1 and reduced 69·9% chromate. It harboured a stable 18 kb plasmid DNA. Transfer and curing studies revealed that both the chromate resistance and reduction were plasmid mediated. The presence of other metal cations did not have any significant effect on Cr(VI) bioreduction.
Conclusions:  Bacillus brevis was resistant to elevated Cr(VI) levels and may potentially reduce it in short time from an environment where other metal ions are also present in addition to chromium ions. The strain tested shows a positive correlation between genetic basis of Cr(VI) resistance and reduction.
Significance and Impact of the Study:  To our knowledge, this is the first study on the genetic correlation between chromium resistance and reduction in bacteria. Such strains may potentially be useful in biotechnological applications and in situ Cr(VI) bioremediation.  相似文献   

4.
Intracellular chromium reduction   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Two steps are involved in the uptake of Cr(VI): (1) the diffusion of the anion CrO4(2-) through a facilitated transport system, presumably the non-specific anion carrier and (2) the intracellular reduction of Cr(VI) to Cr(III). The intracellular reduction of Cr(VI), keeping the cytoplasmic concentration of Cr(VI) low, facilitates accumulation of chromate from extracellular medium into the cell. In the present paper, a direct demonstration of intracellular chromium reduction is provided by means of electron paramagnetic (spin) resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Incubation of metabolically active rat thymocytes with chromate originates a signal which can be attributed to a paramagnetic species of chromium, Cr(V) or Cr(III). The EPR signal is originated by intracellular reduction of chromium since: (1) it is observed only when cells are incubated with chromate, (2) it is present even after extensive washings of the cells in a chromium-free medium; (3) it is abolished when cells are incubated with drugs able to reduce the glutathione pool, i.e., diethylmaleate or phorone; and (4) it is abolished when cells are incubated in the presence of a specific inhibitor of the anion carrier, 4-acetamido-4'-isothiocyanatostilbene-2-2'-disulfonic acid.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of pretreatment with ascorbic acid (vitamin C) on chromate-induced DNA damage, cytotoxicity, and enzyme inhibition as well as on the cellular reduction of chromium(VI) was investigated using Chinese hamster V-79 cells. Cellular pretreatment with nontoxic levels of 1 mM ascorbic acid for 24 h prior to exposure resulted in a significant increase (1.7-fold) in cellular levels of this vitamin. Alkaline elution assays demonstrated that this pretreatment decreased cellular levels of Na2CrO4-induced alkali-labile sites while the numbers of DNA-protein crosslinks produced by chromate increased. In colony-forming assays, pretreatment with ascorbic acid enhanced the cytotoxicity of chromate. However, the inhibition of glutathione reductase attributed to Na2CrO4 was attenuated by this pretreatment. Under the same experimental condition, the uptake of chromate in pretreated cells was found to increase. ESR studies revealed that cellular pretreatment with ascorbic acid reduced the level of chromium(V) intermediate and increased the level of chromium(III) complex, indicating that cellular reduction of chromium(VI) to chromium(III) was accelerated by this vitamin. These results suggest that ascorbic acid decreases chromate-induced alkali-labile sites and chromium inhibition of glutathione reductase, but it enhances DNA-protein cross-links and cytotoxicity caused by this metal through its ability to directly reduce chromium(VI).  相似文献   

6.
The carcinogen chromate is efficiently taken up and reduced to chromium(III) compounds by various biological systems. To test the possible DNA damage induced in the course of chromium(VI) reduction, we used a combination of chromate with the reductant glutathione (GSH) as well as a green complex of chromium(V), which is formed in the reaction of chromate with GSH. The combination of chromate and glutathione was found to cause single-strand breaks in supercoiled circular DNA of the bacteriophage PM2. The green chromium(V) complex Na4(GSH)4Cr(V).8H2O, prepared from chromate and glutathione, also cleaved supercoiled PM2 DNA. No DNA-degrading effects were observed with either chromate or the final product of the reaction with GSH, a purple anionic chromium(III) GSH complex. The nature of the buffering agents revealed a strong influence on the extent of DNA strand breaks produced by chromate and GSH. A variation of the GSH concentration in the reaction with chromate and PM2 DNA, performed in sodium phosphate-buffered solutions showed an initial increase in the number of strand breaks at GSH concentrations up to 1 mM followed by a decline at higher GSH concentrations. Since neither chromate, when administered individually, nor the final product of chromium(VI) reduction, the purple chromium(III) GSH complex, produced any detectable DNA cleavage, the critical steps leading to DNA strand breaks occur in the course of the conversion of chromium(VI) to chromium(III) by GSH, the most abundant intracellular low molecular thiol. Moreover, the demonstration that DNA cleavage is induced in the presence of the chromium(V) complex identifies chromium(V) as the oxidation state of the metal, which is involved in the steps leading to DNA-damaging effects of chromate.  相似文献   

7.
Bacillus strain QC1-2, isolated from a chromium-polluted zone, was selected by its high ability to both tolerate and reduce hexavalent chromium [Cr(VI)] to less-toxic trivalent chromium [Cr(III)]. Cell suspensions of strain QC1-2 rapidly reduced Cr(VI), in both aerobic and anaerobic conditions, to Cr(III) which remained in the supernatant. Cr(VI) reduction was dependent on the addition of glucose but sulfate, an inhibitor of chromate transport, had no effect. Studies with permeabilized cells and cell extracts showed that the Cr(VI) reductase of strain QC1-2 is a soluble NADH-dependent enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
Acidiphilium cryptum JF-5, an acidophilic iron-respiring Alphaproteobacterium, has the ability to reduce chromate under aerobic and anaerobic conditions, making it an intriguing and useful model organism for the study of extremophilic bacteria in bioremediation applications. Genome sequence annotation suggested two potential mechanisms of Cr(VI) reduction, namely, a number of c-type cytochromes, and a predicted NADPH-dependent Cr(VI) reductase. In laboratory studies using pure cultures of JF-5, an NADPH-dependent chromate reductase activity was detected primarily in soluble protein fractions, and a periplasmic c-type cytochrome (ApcA) was also present, representing two potential means of Cr(VI) reduction. Upon further examination, it was determined that the NADPH-dependent activity was not specific for Cr(VI), and the predicted proteins were not detected in Cr(VI)-grown cultures. Proteomic data did show measureable amounts of ApcA in cells grown with Cr(VI). Purified ApcA is reducible by menadiol, and in turn can reduce Cr(VI), suggesting a means to obtain electrons from the respiratory chain and divert them to Cr(VI). Electrochemical measurements confirm that Cr reduction by ApcA is pH dependent, with low pH being favored. Homology modeling of ApcA and comparison to a known Cr(VI)-reducing c-type cytochrome structure revealed basic amino acids which could interact with chromate ion. From these studies, it can be concluded that A. cryptum has the physiologic and genomic capability to reduce Cr(VI) to the less toxic Cr(III). However, the expected chromate reductase mechanism may not be the primary means of Cr(VI) reduction in this organism.  相似文献   

9.
Mechanisms of bacterial resistance to chromium compounds   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Chromium is a non-essential and well-known toxic metal for microorganisms and plants. The widespread industrial use of this heavy metal has caused it to be considered as a serious environmental pollutant. Chromium exists in nature as two main species, the trivalent form, Cr(III), which is relatively innocuous, and the hexavalent form, Cr(VI), considered a more toxic species. At the intracellular level, however, Cr(III) seems to be responsible for most toxic effects of chromium. Cr(VI) is usually present as the oxyanion chromate. Inhibition of sulfate membrane transport and oxidative damage to biomolecules are associated with the toxic effects of chromate in bacteria. Several bacterial mechanisms of resistance to chromate have been reported. The best characterized mechanisms comprise efflux of chromate ions from the cell cytoplasm and reduction of Cr(VI) to Cr(III). Chromate efflux by the ChrA transporter has been established in Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Cupriavidus metallidurans (formerly Alcaligenes eutrophus) and consists of an energy-dependent process driven by the membrane potential. The CHR protein family, which includes putative ChrA orthologs, currently contains about 135 sequences from all three domains of life. Chromate reduction is carried out by chromate reductases from diverse bacterial species generating Cr(III) that may be detoxified by other mechanisms. Most characterized enzymes belong to the widespread NAD(P)H-dependent flavoprotein family of reductases. Several examples of bacterial systems protecting from the oxidative stress caused by chromate have been described. Other mechanisms of bacterial resistance to chromate involve the expression of components of the machinery for repair of DNA damage, and systems related to the homeostasis of iron and sulfur.  相似文献   

10.
The cellular reduction of chromate(VI) was studied by electron spin resonance spectrometry. Incubation of Chinese hamster V-79 cells with Na2CrO4 resulted in the formation of both chromium(V) and chromium(III) complex in a manner dependent on time (30 min-2 h) and concentration (50-500 microM). Following removal of extracellular chromate, the level of chromium(V) complex decreased quickly during the first hour but more slowly for the next hour, whereas the level of chromium(III) remained unchanged, indicating that chromium(III) is the ultimate ion of this metal in cells. Alkaline elution studies demonstrated that treatment of cells with Na2CrO4 induced DNA single-strand breaks that decreased quickly and DNA-protein crosslinks that persisted for 2 h after removal of this metal. These results suggest that the cellular levels of chromium(V) and chromium(III) may be associated with the formation of DNA damage induced by chromium (VI).  相似文献   

11.
Toxic heavy metals constitute a worldwide environmental pollution problem. Bioremediation technologies represent efficient alternatives to the classic cleaning-up of contaminated soil and ground water. Most toxic heavy metals such as chromium are less soluble and toxic when reduced than when oxidized. Sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) are able to reduce heavy metals by a chemical reduction via the production of H2S and by a direct enzymatic process involving hydrogenases and c3 cytochromes. We have previously reported the effects of chromate [Cr(VI)] on SRB bioenergetic metabolism and the molecular mechanism of the metal reduction by polyhemic cytochromes. In the current work, we pinpoint the bacteria–metal interactions using Desulfovibrio vulgaris strain Hildenborough as a model. The bacteria were grown in the presence of high Cr(VI) concentration, where they accumulated precipitates of a reduced form of chromium, trivalent chromium [Cr(III)], on their cell surfaces. Moreover, the inner and outer membranes exhibited precipitates that shared the spectroscopic signature of trivalent chromium. This subcellular localization is consistent with enzymatic metal reduction by cytochromes and hydrogenases. Regarding environmental significance, our findings point out the Cr(VI) immobilization mechanisms of SRB; suggesting that SRB are highly important in metal biogeochemistry.  相似文献   

12.
Cr(VI) (chromate) is a toxic, soluble environmental contaminant. Bacteria can reduce chromate to the insoluble and less toxic Cr(III), and thus chromate bioremediation is of interest. Genetic and protein engineering of suitable enzymes can improve bacterial bioremediation. Many bacterial enzymes catalyze one-electron reduction of chromate, generating Cr(V), which redox cycles, generating excessive reactive oxygen species (ROS). Such enzymes are not appropriate for bioremediation, as they harm the bacteria and their primary end product is not Cr(III). In this work, the chromate reductase activities of two electrophoretically pure soluble bacterial flavoproteins--ChrR (from Pseudomonas putida) and YieF (from Escherichia coli)-were examined. Both are dimers and reduce chromate efficiently to Cr(III) (kcat/Km = approximately 2 x 10(4) M(-1) x s(-1)). The ChrR dimer generated a flavin semiquinone during chromate reduction and transferred >25% of the NADH electrons to ROS. However, the semiquinone was formed transiently and ROS diminished with time. Thus, ChrR probably generates Cr(V), but only transiently. Studies with mutants showed that ChrR protects against chromate toxicity; this is possibly because it preempts chromate reduction by the cellular one-electron reducers, thereby minimizing ROS generation. ChrR is thus a suitable enzyme for further studies. During chromate reduction by YieF, no flavin semiquinone was generated and only 25% of the NADH electrons were transferred to ROS. The YieF dimer may therefore be an obligatory four-electron chromate reducer which in one step transfers three electrons to chromate and one to molecular oxygen. As a mutant lacking this enzyme could not be obtained, the role of YieF in chromate protection could not be directly explored. The results nevertheless suggest that YieF may be an even more suitable candidate for further studies than ChrR.  相似文献   

13.
Hexavalent chromium Cr(VI) is regularly introduced into the environment through diverse anthropogenic activities. It is highly toxic, mutagenic and carcinogenic, and because of its solubility in water, chromate contamination can be difficult to contain. Bacteria can reduce chromate to insoluble and less toxic trivalent chromium Cr(III), and thus increasing attention is paid to chromate bioremediation to reduce its ecotoxicological impacts. In this study, the factorial design 23 was employed to optimize critical parameters responsible for higher Cr(VI) removal by a bacterial consortium. The factors considered were pH, temperature, and inoculum size at two markedly different levels. All three dependent variables have significant effect on Cr(VI) reduction. Optimal Cr(VI) removal by the bacterial consortium occurred at pH 9, temperature 37°C, and inoculum size OD = 3. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) showed a high coefficient of determination (R2) value of 0.984, thus ensuring a satisfactory adjustment of the second-order regression model with the experimental data. In addition, the effect of bioaugmentation of Cr(VI)-polluted soil microcosms with the bacterial consortium was investigated using the best factor levels. Contaminated soil by 20 and 60 mg/Kg of Cr(VI) showed reductions of 83% and 65% of initial Cr(VI) by the bacterial consortium, suggesting that this bacterial consortium might diminish phytoavailable Cr(VI) in soil and be useful for cleaning up chromium-contaminated sites.  相似文献   

14.
Two different H2-based, denitrifying membrane-biofilm reactors (MBfRs) initially reduced Se(VI) or Cr(VI) stably to Se0 or Cr(III). When the oxidized contaminants in the influent were switched, each new oxidized contaminant was reduced immediately, and its reduction soon was approximately the same or greater than it had been in its original MBfR. The precipitation of reduced selenium and chromium in the biofilm was verified by scanning electron microscopy and energy dispersive X-ray analysis. These results on selenate and chromate reduction are consistent with the interpretation that the H2-based biofilm community had a high level of functional diversity. The communities’ structures were assessed by cloning analysis. Dechloromonas spp., a known perchlorate-reducing bacteria, dominated the clones from both reactors during selenate and chromate reductions, which suggests that it may have functional diversity capable of reducing selenate and chromate as secondary and dissimilatory acceptors.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Chromate-reducing bacteria were isolated from the cooling water of an electricity generating station where reduction of chromate had caused blockage of pipes by precipitation of chromium(III) oxide. Isolates identified included the generaAlcaligenes, Vibrio, Bacillus, Micrococcus, Staphylococcus andCorynebacterium. Isolate VMC-2 with the highest chromate-reducing activity was tentatively identified asComanonas testosteroni. The concentration of added chromate (K2CrO4, 20 M)_decreased by 95% during 45 min incubation with whole cells of VMC-2. In comparison, two Fe(III)-reducing isolates,Vibrio metschnikovii andAeromonas hydrophila, from lake sediments, showed similarly high chromate-reducing activities, and were able to reduce 99% of added chromate (20 M) in 45 min. Moderate Cr(VI)-reducers included strains ofBacillus, Vibrio andCorynebacterium. Micrococcus andStaphylococcus did not reduce Cr(VI). Sulfate (0.5 and 1.0 mM) inhibited the reduction of chromate by VMC-2 suggesting competition between the two oxyanions. Chromate-reducing activity was located in the soluble fraction of this isolate. The intermediacy of Cr(V)_in the reduction of chromate was confirmed by EPR spectroscopy. The bactericidal activity of hypochlorite towards isolate VMC-2 was determined.  相似文献   

16.
Bioreduction of Cr(VI) to less toxic Cr(III) by chromate-reducing bacteria has offered an ecological and economical option for chromate detoxification. The present study reports isolation of chromate-resistant bacterial strain Cr8 from chromium slag, identified as Pseudomonas stutzeri, based on 16S rRNA gene sequencing and their potential use in Cr(VI) reduction. The reduced product associated with bacterial cell was characterized by scanning electron microscopy–energy-dispersive x-ray spectroscopy (SEM-EDS) and x-ray diffraction (XRD) analyses. At initial concentrations of 100 and 200 mg L?1 Cr(VI), P. stutzeri Cr8 reduced Cr(VI) completely within 24 h, whereas it reduced almost 1000 mg L?1 Cr(VI) at the end of 120 h. Further, soil column leaching experiments were performed and found that bacterial cells reduced Cr(VI) leachate at faster rate that almost disappeared at the end of 168 h. The leachate precipitates also revealed efficient chromate bioreduction. The remediation process utilizing P. stutzeri could be considered as a viable alternative to reduce Cr(VI) contamination, especially emanating from the overburden dumps of chromite ores and mine drainage.  相似文献   

17.
Large-scale industrial use of chromium (Cr) resulted in widespread environmental contamination with hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)). The ability of microorganisms to survive in these environments and detoxify chromate requires the presence of specific resistance systems. Several Cr(VI) resistant species, belonging to a variety of genera, have been isolated in recent years. Ochrobactrum tritici strain 5bvl1 is a model for a highly Cr(VI)-resistant and reducing microorganism, with different strategies to cope with chromium. The strain contains the transposon-located (TnOtChr) chromate resistance genes chrB, chrA, chrC, chrF. The chrB and chrA genes were found to be essential for the establishment of high resistance but not chrC or chrF genes. Other mechanisms involved in chromium resistance in this strain were related to strategies such as specific or unspecific Cr(VI) reduction, free-radical detoxifying activities, and repairing DNA damage. Expression of the chrB, chrC or chrF genes was related to increased resistance to superoxide-generating agents. Genetic analyses also showed that, the ruvB gene is related to chromium resistance in O. tritici 5bvl1. The RuvABC complex probably does not form when ruvB gene is interrupted, and the repair of DNA damage induced by chromium is prevented. Aerobic or anaerobic chromate reductase activity and other unspecific mechanisms for chromium reduction have been identified in different bacteria. In the strain O. tritici 5bvl1, several unspecific mechanisms were found. Dichromate and chromate have different effects on the physiology of the chromium resistant strains and dichromate seems to be more toxic. Toxicity of Cr(VI) was evaluated by following growth, reduction, respiration, glucose uptake assays and by comparing cell morphology.  相似文献   

18.
Biological reduction of carcinogenic chromate has been extensively studied in eukaryotic cells partly because the reduction produces stable chromium(III)-DNA adducts, which are mutagenic. Microbial reduction of chromate has been studied for bioremediation purposes, but little is known about the reduction mechanism. In eukaryotic cells chromate is mainly reduced non-enzymatically by ascorbate, which is usually absent in bacterial cells. We have characterized the reduction of chromate by a flavin reductase (Fre) from Escherichia coli with flavins. The Fre-flavin system rapidly reduced chromate, whereas chemical reduction by NADH and glutathione was very slow. Thus, enzymatic chromate reduction is likely the dominant mechanism in bacterial cells. Furthermore, the end-product was a soluble and stable Cr(III)-NAD(+) complex, instead of Cr(III) precipitate. Since intracellularly generated Cr(III) forms adducts with DNA, protein, glutathione, and ascorbate in eukaryotic cells, we suggest that the produced Cr(III) is primarily complexed to NAD(+), DNA, and other cellular components inside bacteria.  相似文献   

19.
In recent years, more and more attentions are put on the remediation of Cr(VI) contamination with chromate resistant bacteria. Leucobacter sp. CRB1 was a novel chromate reducing bacteria isolated from the soil of chromite ore processing residue (COPR) disposal site in Changsha, China. The objectives of this study were to evaluate the Cr(VI) tolerance of Leucobacter sp. CRB1 as well as its tolerant mechanism, and Cr(VI) reduction ability. The results showed that Leucobacter sp. CRB1 was able to tolerate 4,000 mg/l of hexavalent chromium with 34.5% reduction efficiency. At the optimum pH 9.0, the maximum concentration of chromate be reduced completely was 1,818 mg/l in growing cells and 2,100 mg/l in resting cells. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and energy dispersive X-ray analysis (EDAX) showed that extracellular Cr(VI) reduction of Leucobacter sp. CRB1 contributed to its high tolerance and high reduction ability. With repeating spiking, 2,490 mg/l hexavalent chromium was reduced totally within 17 h. The results suggest Leucobacter sp. CRB1 has potential application for remediation of high concentration of Cr(VI) contamination.  相似文献   

20.
After treatment with potassium chromate at concentrations causing ultramicroscopic cellular lesions, a significant proportion (up to 75%) of TA100 colonies fail to replicate on fresh minimal plates containing biotin. This suggests that chromium(VI) may not always induce his- reversion to his+ in Salmonella TA100. The terms 'false' or phenotypic reversion have been used to distinguish such instances from 'true' or genotypic reversion, where progeny his+ cells readily grow on biotin replica plates. Results of the present study indicate that the majority of chromate-exposed colonies, initially scored as his-, are identifiable as his+ after 24 h culture on nutrient agar. Moreover, chromate exerts a cytostatic effect on TA100 since early colony development is suppressed at high chromate concentrations. A gradual chemical reduction of chromium(VI) ions by normal media compounds is probably responsible for the re-emergence of colony growth during prolonged incubation of test plates. Thus, temporary growth inhibition at high chromate concentration appears to be responsible for most of the non-replicating colonies detected in mutagenicity assays of chromium(VI).  相似文献   

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