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1.
The NADPH-diaphorase (NADPH-d) histochemical technique is commonly used to localize the nitric oxide (NO) produced by the enzyme nitric oxide synthase (NOS) in neural tissue. The expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) is induced in the late stage of cerebral ischemia, and NO produced by iNOS contributes to the delay in recovery from brain neuronal damage. The present study was performed to investigate whether the increase in nitric oxide production via inducible nitric oxide synthase was suppressed by the administration of aminoguanidine, a selective iNOS inhibitor, as it follows a decrease of NADPH-diaphorase activity (a marker for NOS) after four-vessel occlusion used as an ischemic model. The administration of aminoguanidine (100 mg/kg i.p., twice per day up to 3 days immediately after the ischemic insult) reduced the number of NADPH-diaphorase positive cells to control levels. Our results indicated that aminoguanidine suppressed NADPH-diaphorase activity, and also decreased the number of NADPH-diaphorase positive cells in the CA1 region of the hippocampus following ischemic brain injury.  相似文献   

2.
Nitric oxide has been shown to be beneficial for gastric ulcer healing. We determined the relative effects of endothelial and inducible nitric oxide synthases on gastric ulcer healing in rats. Ulcers were induced by serosal application of acetic acid. Ulcer severity, angiogenesis, and nitric oxide synthase expression were assessed 3-10 days later. The effects of inhibitors of nitric oxide synthase were also examined. Inducible nitric oxide synthase mRNA was only detected in ulcerated tissue (maximal at day 3), whereas the endothelial isoform mRNA was detected in normal tissue and increased during ulcer healing. Inducible nitric oxide synthase was expressed in inflammatory cells in the ulcer bed, whereas endothelial nitric oxide synthase was found in the vascular endothelium and in some mucosal cells in both normal and ulcerated tissues. Angiogenesis changed in parallel with endothelial nitric oxide synthase expression. N(6)-(iminoethyl)-L-lysine did not affect angiogenesis or ulcer healing, while N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester significantly reduced both. In conclusion, endothelial nitric oxide synthase, but not the inducible isoform, plays a significant role in gastric ulcer healing.  相似文献   

3.
Role of Nitric Oxide in the Progression of Pneumoconiosis   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Conflicting evidence has been reported as to whether nitric oxide (NO) possesses anti-inflammatory or inflammatory properties. Data are presented indicating that in vitro or in vivo exposure to selected occupational dusts, i.e., crystalline silica, organic dust contaminated with endotoxin, or asbestos, results in upregulation of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) and the production of NO by alveolar macrophages and pulmonary epithelial cells. Nitric oxide production is associated temporally and anatomically with pulmonary damage, inflammation, and disease progression in response to occupational dusts. Blockage of inducible nitric oxide synthase by administration of NOS inhibitors or in iNOS knockout mice decreases the magnitude of injury and inflammation following in vivo exposure to silica, endotoxin, or asbestos. Therefore, NO may play an important role in the initiation and progression of pneumoconiosis.  相似文献   

4.
Major physical traumas provoke a systemic inflammatory response and immune dysfunction. In a model of thermal injury in rats, we previously showed that an overproduction of nitric oxide (NO) was responsible for the collapse of lymphoproliferative responses. In the present work, we performed a time-course analysis of cell proliferation and cell death parameters in order to establish the sequence of events triggered by the high NO output in Wistar/Han rat splenocytes activated with Con A, 10 days after burn injury. We demonstrate that activated T cells from burned rats never divided whereas normal T cells underwent four division cycles. However, T cells from both burned and normal rat entered the G1 phase as shown by increase of cell size, mitochondria hyperpolarization, and expression of cyclin D1. Burned rat T cells progressed to the late G1 phase as shown by expression of the nuclear Ki-67 antigen, but they never entered the S phase. They underwent apoptosis as shown by morphological parameters, disruption of transmembrane mitochondrial potential, and DNA fragmentation. Persistent accumulation of the p53 protein accompanied these phenomena. NO synthase inhibitors antagonize alterations of cell proliferation and cell death parameters in burned rat T cells and accelerated p53 turnover.  相似文献   

5.
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), also known as vascular permeability factor, is highly expressed in the myocardium under various stimuli including hypoxia and ischemia. On the other hand, lipopolysaccharide (LPS) causes systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS), which consists of systemic pathophysiological changes related to vascular hyperpermeability. To test the hypothesis that VEGF is one of the important mediators of SIRS, we examined effects of LPS on the VEGF expression and secretion in cultured neonatal rat ventricular myocytes. LPS (10 microg/ml) rapidly (within 1 h) augmented the levels of VEGF mRNA in these cells. Pharmacological inhibition of nucleic factor-kappaB or tyrosine kinases did not affect the LPS-induced augmentation of VEGF mRNA expression, while these treatments markedly suppressed the up-regulation of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) expression by LPS. The VEGF concentrations in the conditioned media were also significantly increased by the LPS treatment of 6 h. In conclusion, LPS augments VEGF expression and secretion in rat ventricular myocytes, suggesting that VEGF may be involved in pathogenesis of SIRS. LPS may induce VEGF mRNA through the signaling pathways that are distinct from those responsible for the iNOS induction.  相似文献   

6.
We studied the actions of purified Helicobacter pylori endotoxin (3 mg kg(-1), i.v.) on rat intestinal vascular permeability (assessed by the radiolabelled human serum albumin leakage technique) and on nitric oxide synthase induction (assessed by the citrulline assay) 4 h later. We found increased albumin leakage and expression of the inducible nitric oxide synthase in jejunum and colon, effects reversed by a selective inducible nitric oxide synthase inhibitor N-(8-(aminomethyl)benzyl)-acetamidine (1400W; 0.2-1 mg kg(-1), s.c., concurrently with endotoxin). Thus, H. pylori endotoxin seems to be capable of provoking an inflammatory response in the rat intestinal tissue. Systemic liberation of H. pylori endotoxin might possibly attenuate jejunal and colonic mucosal barrier function, a process mediated by the expression of the inducible nitric oxide synthase.  相似文献   

7.
We have examined the effects of intravenous administration of a purified lipopolysaccharide (LPS) from Helicobacter pylori (3 mg kg(-1), i.v.) on rat vascular permeability, assessed by the radiolabelled human serum albumin leakage technique in the heart, kidney, liver and lung 4 h after challenge. An increased vascular permeability in cardiac, renal, hepatic and pulmonary tissues after challenge was determined. The albumin leakage observed in all these organs could be prevented by the selective inducible nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, N-(8-(aminomethyl)benzyl)-acetamidine (1400W; 0.2-1 mg kg(-1), s.c.) administered concurrently with LPS. Thus, H. pylori LPS can provoke a microvascular inflammatory response in the rat cardiac, renal, hepatic and pulmonary tissues, actions mediated through the activation of the inducible nitric oxide synthase isoenzyme.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Nitric oxide is produced from the amino acid L-arginine by nitric oxide synthase, which has three known isoforms: (1) endothelial nitric oxide synthase and (2) brain nitric oxide synthase, both of which are constitutive nitric oxide synthase; and (3) inducible nitric oxide synthase. The authors' hypothesis is that after reperfusion injury, endothelial cell dysfunction leads to disruption of nitric oxide synthase-mediated nitric oxide production and that this may in part explain the deleterious effects of ischemia-reperfusion injury on tissue survival and blood reflow in flaps. An experiment was designed to study the effects of ischemia-reperfusion injury on the bioactivity of all three isoforms of nitric oxide synthase. Buttock skin flaps and latissimus dorsi myocutaneous flaps were elevated in eight pigs. Flaps on one side of the animal were randomized to receive 6 hours of arterial ischemia, whereas flaps on the other side served as controls. At 6 hours of ischemia and at 1, 4, and 18 hours after reflow, tissue biopsy specimens were obtained and were processed for both constitutive nitric oxide synthase and inducible nitric oxide synthase enzyme activity on the basis of the L-citrulline assay. In addition, specimens were processed for Western blot analysis of the three isoforms. The authors' results revealed three key findings: first, there was a statistically significant (p < 0.001) decrease in constitutive nitric oxide synthase activity of ischemia-reperfusion-injured flaps as compared with controls in both skin and muscle for all time intervals measured. Second, Western blot analyses of endothelial nitric oxide synthase and brain nitric oxide synthase showed a significant decrease in the signal intensity in ischemic and reperfused tissue as compared with controls. Third, the inducible nitric oxide synthase isoform's activity and protein remained undetectable in both tissue types for all time points measured. The authors' data demonstrated that following ischemia-reperfusion injury in the pig flap model there was a disruption of constitutive nitric oxide synthase expression and activity, which may lead to decreased nitric oxide production. The significant decrease in nitric oxide synthase activity found in the current study may partly explain the mechanism of tissue damage in flaps subjected to ischemia-reperfusion injury. Knowledge of the kinetics of nitric oxide synthase activity under conditions of ischemia-reperfusion injury has important implications for the choice and timing of delivery of therapeutic agents whose goal is to increase the bioavailability of nitric oxide in reperfused tissue.  相似文献   

10.
The existence of an inducible mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase has been recently related to the nitrosative/oxidative damage and mitochondrial dysfunction that occurs during endotoxemia. Melatonin inhibits both inducible nitric oxide synthase and inducible mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase activities, a finding related to the antiseptic properties of the indoleamine. Hence, we examined the changes in inducible nitric oxide synthase/inducible mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase expression and activity, bioenergetics and oxidative stress in heart mitochondria following cecal ligation and puncture-induced sepsis in wild-type (iNOS(+/+)) and inducible nitric oxide synthase-deficient (iNOS(-/-)) mice. We also evaluated whether melatonin reduces the expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase/inducible mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase, and whether this inhibition improves mitochondrial function in this experimental paradigm. The results show that cecal ligation and puncture induced an increase of inducible mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase in iNOS(+/+) mice that was accompanied by oxidative stress, respiratory chain impairment, and reduced ATP production, although the ATPase activity remained unchanged. Real-time PCR analysis showed that induction of inducible nitric oxide synthase during sepsis was related to the increase of inducible mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase activity, as both inducible nitric oxide synthase and inducible mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase were absent in iNOS(-/-) mice. The induction of inducible mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase was associated with mitochondrial dysfunction, because heart mitochondria from iNOS(-/-) mice were unaffected during sepsis. Melatonin treatment blunted sepsis-induced inducible nitric oxide synthase/inducible mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase isoforms, prevented the impairment of mitochondrial homeostasis under sepsis, and restored ATP production. These properties of melatonin should be considered in clinical sepsis.  相似文献   

11.
Lung inflammatory responses in the absence of infection are considered to be one of primary mechanisms of ventilator-induced lung injury. Here, we determined the role of calpain in the pathogenesis of lung inflammation attributable to mechanical ventilation. Male C57BL/6J mice were subjected to high (28 ml/kg) tidal volume ventilation for 2 h in the absence and presence of calpain inhibitor I (10 mg/kg). To address the isoform-specific functions of calpain 1 and calpain 2 during mechanical ventilation, we utilized a liposome-based delivery system to introduce small interfering RNAs targeting each isoform in pulmonary vasculature in vivo. Mechanical ventilation with high tidal volume induced rapid (within minutes) and persistent calpain activation and lung inflammation as evidenced by neutrophil recruitment, production of TNF-α and IL-6, pulmonary vascular hyperpermeability, and lung edema formation. Pharmaceutical calpain inhibition significantly attenuated these inflammatory responses caused by lung hyperinflation. Depletion of calpain 1 or calpain 2 had a protective effect against ventilator-induced lung inflammatory responses. Inhibition of calpain activity by means of siRNA silencing or pharmacological inhibition also reduced endothelial nitric oxide (NO) synthase (NOS-3)-mediated NO production and subsequent ICAM-1 phosphorylation following high tidal volume ventilation. These results suggest that calpain activation mediates early lung inflammation during ventilator-induced lung injury via NOS-3/NO-dependent ICAM-1 phosphorylation and neutrophil recruitment. Inhibition of calpain activation may therefore provide a novel and promising strategy for the prevention and treatment of ventilator-induced lung injury.  相似文献   

12.
1. The present study was designed to examine the nitric oxide synthase activities (constitutive and inducible) in the site of injury in response to Th10-Th11 spinal cord hemisection and, to determine whether unilateral disconnection of the spinal cord influences the NOS pools on the contra- and ipsilateral sides in segments located far away from the epicentre of injury.2. A radioassay detection was used to determine Ca2+-dependent and inducible nitric oxide synthase activities. Somal, axonal and neuropil neuronal nitric oxide synthase was assessed by immunocytochemical study. A quantitative assessment of neuronal nitric oxide synthase immunoreactivity was made by an image analyser. The level of neuronal nitric oxide synthase protein was measured by the Western blot analysis.3. Our data show the increase of inducible nitric oxide synthase activity and a decrease of Ca2+-dependent nitric oxide synthase activity in the injured site analysed 1 and 7 days after surgery. In segments remote from the epicentre of injury the inducible nitric oxide synthase activity was increased at both time points. Ca2+-dependent nitric oxide synthase activity had decreased in L5-S1 segments in a group of animals surviving for 7 days. A hemisection performed at thoracic level did not cause significant difference in the nitric oxide synthase activities and in the level of neuronal nitric oxide synthase protein between the contra- and ipsilateral sides in C6-Th1 and L5-S1 segments taken as a whole. Significant differences were observed, but only when the spinal cord was analysed segment by segment, and/or was divided into dorsal and ventral parts. The cell counts in the cervicothoracic (C7-Th1) and lumbosacral (L5-S1) enlargements revealed changes in neuronal nitric oxide synthase immunoreactivity on the ipsilateral side of the injury. The densitometric area measurements confirmed the reduction of somal, neuropil and axonal neuronal nitric oxide synthase immunoreactive staining in the ventral part of rostrally oriented segments.4. Our findings provide evidence that the changes in nitric oxide synthase pools are limited not only to impact zone, but spread outside the original lesion. The regional distribution of nitric oxide synthase activity and neuronal nitric oxide synthase immunoreactivity, measured segment by segment shows that nitric oxide may play a significant role in the stepping cycle in the quadrupeds.  相似文献   

13.
Burn injury has been shown to impair gut transit, but the exact mechanism remains unknown. The present study investigated whether nitric oxide synthase (NOS) and cyclooxygenase (COX) mediated changes in burn-induced colonic transit. After rats underwent 30% total body surface area burn injury, they were injected with S-methylisothiourea (SMT, selective inducible NOS inhibitor), 7-nitronidazole (7-NI, selective neuronal NOS inhibitor), and nimesulide (NIM, selective COX-2 inhibitor), respectively. The protein and mRNA of NOS and COX-2 were measured by Western blot analysis and real-time RT-RCR, and localization of NOS and COX-2 protein was determined by immunohistochemistry. Our results showed that colonic transit assessed by the geometric center was delayed from 3.47+/-0.28 in controls to 2.21+/-0.18 after burn (P<0.009). SMT and NIM significantly improved colonic transit in burned rats but had no effect in sham-operated rats. 7-NI failed to modify delayed transit in burned rats but significantly delayed colonic transit in sham-operated rats. Both protein and mRNA of inducible NOS and COX-2 increased significantly but not neuronal NOS in burned rats. Inducible NOS protein expression was noted not only in epithelial cells but also in neurons of the myenteric ganglia in burned rats. These findings suggest that nitric oxide (NO) produced by neuronal NOS plays an important role in mediating colonic transit under the physiological condition. NO produced by inducible NOS and prostaglandins synthesized by COX-2 are both involved in the pathogenesis of delayed colonic transit after burn injury. Inducible NOS expression in neurons of the myenteric ganglia may contribute to dysmotility with burn injury.  相似文献   

14.
Carbon monoxide (CO) and nitric oxide (NO) are two gas molecules which have cytoprotective functions against oxidative stress and inflammatory responses in many cell types. Currently, it is known that NO produced by nitric oxide synthase (NOS) induces heme oxygenase 1 (HO1) expression and CO produced by the HO1 inhibits inducible NOS expression. Here, we first show CO-mediated HO1 induction and its possible mechanism in human hepatocytes. Exposure of HepG2 cells or primary hepatocytes to CO resulted in dramatic induction of HO1 in dose- and time-dependent manner. The CO-mediated HO1 induction was abolished by MAP kinase inhibitors (MAPKs) but not affected by inhibitors of PI3 kinase or NF-kappaB. In addition, CO induced the nuclear translocation and accumulation of Nrf2, which suppressed by MAPKs inhibitors. Taken together, we suggest that CO induces Nrf2 activation via MAPKs signaling pathways, thereby resulting in HO1 expression in HepG2 cells.  相似文献   

15.
Caco-2 cell monolayers exposed to 1000 U/ml interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) for 6 days elicited inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) expression and increased translayer permeability. This iNOS increase was blocked by pyrrolidinedithiocarbamate (an inhibitor of iNOS induction) but it did not suppress the hyperpermeability response. Furthermore, 2,2'-(hydroxynitrosohydrazino) bis-ethanamine (a NO donor) did not increase monolayer permeability. Therefore, IFN-gamma-induced hyperpermeability is not due to its induction of iNOS activity and resulting increases in NO levels.  相似文献   

16.
In young adult females, estrogen treatment suppresses the cerebrovascular inflammatory response; this is mediated in part via NF-kappaB, a key regulator of inflammatory genes. To examine whether age modifies effects of estrogen on vascular inflammation in the brain, female rats, 3 and 12 mo of age, were ovariectomized; half were treated with estrogen for 4 wk. Cerebral blood vessels were isolated from the animals at 4 and 13 mo of age. Inflammation was induced by LPS, either injected in vivo or incubated with isolated vessels ex vivo. Basal levels of cytoplasmic NF-kappaB were significantly higher in cerebral vessels of young rats, but the ratio of nuclear to cytoplasmic levels was greater in middle-aged animals. LPS exposure increased nuclear NF-kappaB DNA binding activity, protein levels of inducible nitric oxide synthase and cyclooxygenase-2, and production of nitric oxide and PGE(2) in cerebral vessels. All effects of LPS were markedly greater in vessels from the older animals. Estrogen significantly inhibited the LPS-induced increase in NF-kappaB DNA binding activity in cerebral vessels from animals at both ages. In 4-mo-old rats, estrogen also significantly suppressed LPS induction of inducible nitric oxide synthase and cyclooxygenase-2 proteins, as well as production of nitric oxide and PGE(2). In contrast, in 13-mo-old females, estrogen did not significantly affect these indexes of cerebrovascular inflammation. Thus the protective, anti-inflammatory effect of estrogen on cerebral blood vessels that is observed in young adults may be attenuated in aged animals, which exhibit a greater overall cerebrovascular response to inflammatory stimuli.  相似文献   

17.
Cellular repressor of E1A stimulated genes (CREG) is a novel modulator that maintains the homeostasis of vascular cells. The present study aimed to investigate the effects of CREG on tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α-mediated inflammatory injury of vascular endothelial cells. Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) were cultured and CREG overexpressing (VC), knockdown (VS) and mock-transfected (VE) HUVECs were challenged with TNF-α. We demonstrated that TNF-α prompted robust intercellular filamentous actin (F-actin) stress fiber formation as examined by rhodamin-phalloidin staining. Transwell assay and rhodamine B isothiocyanate–dextran staining indicated that TNF-α induced intercellular hyperpermeability of the HUVEC monolayers. These effects were attenuated in VC cells with forced CREG overexpression but significantly potentiated in VS cells with CREG silencing. After TNF-α stimulation, interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-8 secretions in VE cells were markedly increased and inducible nitric oxidase (iNOS) expression substantially elevated, whereas these effects were pronouncedly damped in VC cells. Conversely, in VS cells, the increase in inflammatory markers was substantially potentiated. Immunofluorescence staining demonstrated that nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) slowly and transiently translocated into the nuclei of VC cells upon TNF-α stimulation. However, a more swift and sustained nuclear translocation was observed in VS as compared to VE cells. Corresponding changes in the pattern of its protein expression was also observed. These data suggested that CREG can inhibit NF-κB activation, TNF-α-induced inflammatory responses and the hyperpermeability of endothelial cells, and may therefore represent a potential therapeutic target for pathological vascular injury.  相似文献   

18.
Superoxide, which can limit nitric oxide bioavailability, has been implicated in blood cell-vessel wall interactions observed in sickle cell transgenic (beta(S)) mice. Here we report that nonselective chemical inhibition of nitric oxide synthase isoforms dramatically reduces the enhanced leukocyte and platelet adhesion normally observed in cerebral venules of beta(S) mice. Although genetic deficiency of vascular wall inducible nitric oxide synthase does not alter adhesion responses in beta(S) mice, a significant attenuation is noted in beta(S) mice with vascular wall endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) deficiency, while the adhesion responses are exacerbated when eNOS is overexpressed in microvessels. The eNOS-mediated enhancement of blood cell adhesion is reversible by pretreatment with sepiapterin (which generates the eNOS cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin) or polyethyleneglycol-superoxide dismutase, implicating a role for eNOS-dependent superoxide production. These findings suggest that an imbalance between eNOS-derived nitric oxide and superoxide, both generated by the vessel wall, is critical to the proinflammatory and prothrombogenic phenotype that is assumed by the microvasculature in sickle cell disease.  相似文献   

19.
Hepatic ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury is an inflammation-mediated process arising from ischemia/reperfusion-elicited stress in multiple cell types, causing liver damage during surgical procedures and often resulting in liver failure. Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress triggers the activation of the unfolded protein response (UPR) and is implicated in tissue injuries, including hepatic I/R injury. However, the cellular mechanism that links the UPR signaling to local inflammatory responses during hepatic I/R injury remains largely obscure. Here, we report that IRE1α, a critical ER-resident transmembrane signal transducer of the UPR, plays an important role in promoting Kupffer-cell-mediated liver inflammation and hepatic I/R injury. Utilizing a mouse model in which IRE1α is specifically ablated in myeloid cells, we found that abrogation of IRE1α markedly attenuated necrosis and cell death in the liver, accompanied by reduced neutrophil infiltration and liver inflammation following hepatic I/R injury. Mechanistic investigations in mice as well as in primary Kupffer cells revealed that loss of IRE1α in Kupffer cells not only blunted the activation of the NLRP3 inflammasome and IL-1β production, but also suppressed the expression of the inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNos) and proinflammatory cytokines. Moreover, pharmacological inhibition of IRE1α′s RNase activity was able to attenuate inflammasome activation and iNos expression in Kupffer cells, leading to alleviation of hepatic I/R injury. Collectively, these results demonstrate that Kupffer cell IRE1α mediates local inflammatory damage during hepatic I/R injury. Our findings suggest that IRE1α RNase activity may serve as a promising target for therapeutic treatment of ischemia/reperfusion-associated liver inflammation and dysfunction.  相似文献   

20.
Atherosclerosis is a chronic inflammatory process in the intima of conduit arteries, which disturbs the endothelium-dependent regulation of the vascular tone by the labile liposoluble radical nitric oxide (NO) formed by the constitutive endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS). This defect predisposes to coronary vasospasm and cardiac ischaemia, with anginal pain as the typical clinical manifestation. It is now appreciated that endothelial dysfunction is an early event in atherogenesis and that it may also involve the microcirculation, in which atherosclerotic lesions do not develop. On the other hand, the inflammatory environment in atherosclerotic plaques may result in the expression of the inducible NO synthase (iNOS) isozyme. Whether the dysfunction in endothelial NO production is causal to, or the result of, atherosclerotic lesion formation is still highly debated. Most evidence supports the hypothesis that constitutive endothelial NO release protects against atherogenesis e.g. by preventing smooth muscle cell proliferation and leukocyte adhesion. Nitric oxide generated by the inducible isozyme may be beneficial by replacing the failing endothelial production but excessive release may damage the vascular wall cells, especially in combination with reactive oxygen intermediates.  相似文献   

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