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1.
《Chronobiology international》2013,30(10):1272-1282
Rhythmic feeding in rabbit pups is a natural model to study food entrainment because, similar to rodents under a schedule of food restriction, these animals show food-anticipatory activity (FAA) prior to daily nursing. In rodents, several brain systems, including the orexinergic system, shift their activity to the restricted feeding schedule, and remain active when subjects are hungry. As the lamina terminalis and regions of the preoptic area participate in the control of behavioral arousal, it was hypothesized that these brain regions are also activated during FAA. Thus, the effects of daily milk ingestion on FOS protein expression in the organum vasculosum of lamina terminalis (OVLT), median preoptic nucleus (MnPO), and medial preoptic area (MPOA) were examined using immunohistochemistry before and after scheduled time of nursing in nursed and fasted subjects. Additionally, FOS expression was explored in orexin (ORX) cells in the lateral hypothalamic area and in the supraoptic nucleus (SON) because of their involvement in arousal and fluid ingestion, respectively. Pups were entrained by daily nursing, as indicated by a significant increase in locomotor behavior before scheduled time of nursing in both nursed and fasted subjects. FOS was significantly higher in the OVLT, MnPO, and MPOA at the time of nursing, and decreased 8?h later in nursed pups. In fasted subjects, this effect persisted in the OVLT, whereas in the MnPO and MPOA, values did not drop at 8?h later, but remained at the same level or higher than those at the time of scheduled nursing. In addition, FOS was significantly higher in ORX cells during FAA in nursed pups in comparison with 8?h later, but in fasted subjects it remained high during most fasting time points. Additionally, OVLT, SON, and ORX cells were activated 1.5?h after nursing. We conclude that the OVLT, MnPO, and MPOA, but not SON, may participate in FAA, as they show activation before suckling of periodic milk ingestion, and that sustained activation of the OVLT, MnPO, and MPOA by fasting may contribute to the high arousal state associated with food deprivation. In agreement with this, ORX cells also remain active after expected nursing, which is consistent with reports in other species.  相似文献   

2.
Rabbit pups ingest food, in this case milk, once a day with circadian periodicity and are a natural model of food anticipatory activity. During nursing, several sensory systems receive information about properties of the food, one of them being the olfactory system, which has received little attention in relation to synchronization by food. In addition, the olfactory bulb has a circadian pacemaker that exhibits rhythms independently of the suprachiasmatic nucleus, but the biological functions of these rhythms are largely unknown. In the present contribution, we hypothesized that circadian suckling of milk synchronizes rhythms in the olfactory bulb. To this aim we explored by immunohistochemistry, rhythms of FOS and PER1 proteins, as indicators of activation and reporter of oscillations, respectively, through a complete 24-h cycle in periglomerular, mitral and granular cell layers of both the main and the accessory olfactory bulb. Subjects were 7-day-old rabbit pups scheduled to nurse during the night (02∶00 h) or day (10∶00 h), and also fasted subjects, to explore the possible persistence of oscillations. In the three layers of the main olfactory bulb, FOS was high at time of nursing, then further increased 1.5 h afterward, and then decreased to increase again in advance of the next nursing bout. This pattern persisted, without the postprandial increase, in fasted subjects with a shift in subjects nursed at 02∶00. PER1 was increased 2–8 h after nursing and this increase persisted in most cell layers, with a shift, in fasted subjects. In the accessory olfactory bulb we only observed a consistent pattern of FOS expression in the mitral cell layer of nursed subjects, similar to that of the main olfactory bulb. We conclude that the main olfactory bulb is synchronized during milk ingestion, but during fasting its oscillations perhaps are modulated by the suprachiasmatic nucleus, as proposed for rodents.  相似文献   

3.
Rabbit does nurse their litter once every 24 h during the night. We hypothesized that corticosterone, ghrelin, leptin, and metabolites such as glucose, liver glycogen, and free fatty acids could be affected in the pups by the time at which does nurse them. Therefore, we measured these parameters in pups nursed at 02:00 h (nighttime for the doe) to compare them with results from a previous study where does nursed at 10:00 h, during daytime. From postnatal day 7, pups were sacrificed either just before their scheduled time of nursing or at 4, 8, 12, 16, or 20 h after nursing (n = 6 at each time point); additional pups were sacrificed at 4 h intervals between 48 and 72 h after nursing to study the persistence of oscillations during fasting. All pups developed locomotor anticipatory activity to nursing. Corticosterone, ghrelin, and free fatty acids exhibited a rhythm that persisted in fasted pups. Glucose concentrations were lower in fasted than in nursed pups, and glycogen was only detected in nursed subjects. Leptin values were stable and low in nursed subjects but increased significantly in fasted subjects up to 72 h after the expected nursing time. The rhythm of ghrelin persisted during fasting, contrary to our previous findings in pups nursed during daytime (i.e., outside the natural time of nursing for this species). Therefore, in 7-day-old rabbit pups, night nursing is a strong zeitgeber for corticosterone, ghrelin, free fatty acids, and energy metabolites but not for leptin.  相似文献   

4.
Previous findings have shown that some of the neurons in the median preoptic nucleus (MnPO) receive both catecholaminergic inputs from the brainstem and angiotensinergic inputs from the subfornical organ (SFO), and that alterations in the function of the brain renin-ANG system are implicated in hypertension, especially in spontaneous hypertensive rats (SHR). In an attempt to clarify the action of these inputs on MnPO neurons and to find the difference in the action between normotensive Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats and SHR, we used microdialysis to investigate the effects of injections of saralasin (Sar), an angiotensin II (ANG II) antagonist, into the third ventricle (3V) on monoamine release in the MnPO area of awake WKY and SHR. The content of noradrenaline (NA) in the MnPO area was significantly higher in SHR. No significant differences were observed between WKY and SHR in the concentrations of dopamine (DA) and of its two metabolites, 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC) and homovanillic acid (HVA). In both WKY and SHR, Sar (Sar, 5 microg in 1 microl, three injections at 2-h intervals) injected into the 3V significantly decreased the extracellular concentrations of NA, DOPAC and HVA in the MnPO area. The decreases were much greater in SHR than in WKY rats. Similar injections of saline vehicle had no significant effect on the extracellular levels of NA, DA and the metabolites. These results suggest that central angiotensinergic circuits may serve to increase NA and DA release in the MnPO area, and support that a disorder in the ANG system may contribute, in part, to the elevated blood pressure of SHR.  相似文献   

5.
The paraventricular nucleus (PVN) of the hypothalamus is involved in the neural control of sympathetic drive, but the precise mechanism(s) that influences the PVN is not known. The activation of the PVN may be influenced by input from higher forebrain areas, such as the median preoptic nucleus (MnPO) and the subfornical organ (SFO). We hypothesized that activation of the MnPO or SFO would drive the PVN through a glutamatergic pathway. Neuroanatomical connections were confirmed by the recovery of a retrograde tracer in the MnPO and SFO that was injected bilaterally into the PVN in rats. Microinjection of 200 pmol of N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) or bicuculline-induced activation of the MnPO and increased renal sympathetic activity (RSNA), mean arterial pressure, and heart rate in anesthetized rats. These responses were attenuated by prior microinjection of a glutamate receptor blocker AP5 (4 nmol) into the PVN (NMDA - ΔRSNA 72 ± 8% vs. 5 ± 1%; P < 0.05). Using single-unit extracellular recording, we examined the effect of NMDA microinjection (200 pmol) into the MnPO on the firing activity of PVN neurons. Of the 11 active neurons in the PVN, 6 neurons were excited by 95 ± 17% (P < 0.05), 1 was inhibited by 57%, and 4 did not respond. The increased RSNA after activation of the SFO by ANG II (1 nmol) or bicuculline (200 pmol) was also reduced by AP5 in the PVN (for ANG II - ΔRSNA 46 ± 7% vs. 17 ± 4%; P < 0.05). Prior microinjection of ANG II type 1 receptor blocker losartan (4 nmol) into the PVN did not change the response to ANG II or bicuculline microinjection into the SFO. The results from this study demonstrate that the sympathoexcitation mediated by a glutamatergic mechanism in the PVN is partially driven by the activation of the MnPO or SFO.  相似文献   

6.
It is known that mice injected peripherally with ANG II do not show a drinking response but that cFos immunoreactivity (ir) is induced in brain regions similar to those in rats. We now show in Crl:CD1(ICR) mice that peripheral injection of the ANG II type 1 receptor antagonist losartan was sufficient to prevent this induction of Fos-ir in the subfornical organ (SFO). Injection of ANG II into the lateral cerebral ventricle produced a robust water intake in mice and induced Fos-ir in SFO, as well as in median preoptic (MnPO) and paraventricular (PVN) nuclei. Peripheral injection of losartan blocked this drinking response and prevented the induction of Fos-ir in each of these brain regions. Hypovolemia produced by polyethylene glycol (PEG) produced a robust water intake but no evidence of sodium appetite, and it induced Fos-ir in SFO, MnPO, and PVN. Peripheral injection of losartan did not affect this drinking response. Fos-ir induced by PEG in SFO and MnPO was reduced by treatment with losartan, while that induced in the PVN was further increased by losartan. Sodium depletion with furosemide and low-sodium diet produced a strong sodium appetite and induced Fos-ir in SFO and MnPO. Treatment with losartan completely blocked the sodium appetite, as well as the induction of Fos-ir in these brain regions. These data indicate that endogenous production of ANG II and action at forebrain receptors is critically involved in depletion-related sodium appetite in mice. The absence of an effect of losartan on PEG-induced drinking suggests the critical involvement of other factor(s) such as arterial or venous baroreceptor input, and we discuss how this factor could also explain why peripheral ANG II is not dipsogenic in mice.  相似文献   

7.
The present study investigates the influence of a chronic high Na+ diet (8% Na+) on the expression of the angiotensin type 1A (AT1A) receptor gene in the lamina terminalis and paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (PVH) in normotensive Wistar (W) rats, as well as in Dahl salt-resistant (DR) and Dahl salt-sensitive (DS) rats. Three weeks of 8% Na+ diet led to a higher blood pressure in DS rats compared to DR and W rats. Moreover, the high Na+ diet was correlated with a decreased expression of AT1A receptor mRNA in the median preoptic nucleus (MnPO) and in the PVH of DS rats, compared to DR and W rats. Contrastingly, the AT1A receptor mRNA expression was not altered by the high Na+ diet in the forebrain circumventricular organs of all the rat strains. Interestingly, a furosemide-induced Na+ depletion was correlated with an increased expression of AT1A receptor mRNA in the PVH, MnPO and SFO of both the DS and DR rats. It is concluded that chronic high Na+ diet did differently regulate the expression of AT1A receptor mRNA in two hypothalamic integrative centers for hydromineral and cardiovascular balance (the PVH and MnPO) in DS rats, compared to DR and W rats. However, the AT1A receptor mRNA expression was similarly regulated in DS and DR rats in response to an acute Na+ depletion, suggesting a distinct high Na+ -induced regulation of the AT1A receptor gene in the PVH and MnPO of DS rats.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Acute increases in peripheral osmolality evoke a pressor response and baroreflex-mediated bradycardia. These experiments were designed to determine if the fall in heart rate during peripheral sodium loading is 1) equivalent to bradycardia accompanying phenylephrine (PE) infusion, 2) mediated by the parasympathetic (PSNS) or sympathetic (SNS) nervous system, and 3) controlled by the median preoptic nucleus (MnPO). Male rats received an intravenous infusion of isotonic saline, hypertonic saline (2.5 M NaCl), or PE for 30 min. Blood pressure increased equivalently in the hypertonic NaCl and PE groups. However, heart rate fell more in animals infused with PE. Furthermore, pretreatment with methylatropine to block the PSNS had no effect on bradycardia, whereas blocking SNS influences on cardiac function significantly attenuated the fall in heart rate during peripheral hyperosmolality. Finally, kainic acid administration in the MnPO before testing increased bradycardia observed during hypertonic saline loading. Taken together, these data suggest that acute peripheral hyperosmolality acts at the MnPO to reduce cardiac SNS withdrawal during the pressor response that reduces the associated baroreflex bradycardia.  相似文献   

10.
The olfactory bulb (OB) has a circadian clock independent of the suprachiasmatic nucleus, but very little is known about the functional significance of its oscillations. The OB plays a major role in food intake as it contributes to the evaluation of the hedonic properties of food, it is necessary for a normal pattern of locomotor behavior and their ablation disrupts feeding patterns. Previously we demonstrated that OB of rabbit pups can be entrained by periodic nursing but it was not clear whether food was the entraining signal. Here we hypothesized that OB can be entrained by a food pulse during the day in adult rats under a restricted feeding schedule. Then we expect that OB will have a high activation before food presentation when animals show food anticipatory activity (FAA). To this aim we determined by immunohistochemistry the expression of FOS protein, as an indicator of neural activation, in the mitral and granular cell layers of the main and accessory OB. Additionally we also explored two of the OB brain targets, the piriform cortex (PC) and bed nuclei of the accessory olfactory tract (BAOT), in three groups: ad libitum (ALF), restricted feeding (RF), and fasted rats after restricted feeding (RF-F). In ALF group FOS levels in both main and accessory OB were low during the day and high during the night at the normal onset of the increase of activity, in agreement with previous reports. On the contrary in RF and RF-F groups FOS was high at the time of FAA, just before food presentation, when animals are in a state of high arousal and during food consumption but was low during the night. In their brain targets, we observed a similar pattern as OB in all groups with the only difference being that FOS levels remained high during the night in RF-F group. We conclude that the OB is entrained by food restriction by showing high activation at the time of food presentation, which persists during fasting and impose a similar FOS pattern to the two brain targets explored only in fed animals.  相似文献   

11.
The brain renin-angiotensin system plays an important role in the regulation of arterial pressure in response to stress, in part due to activation of AT1 receptors in the hypothalamic median preoptic nucleus (MnPO) by endogenous angiotensin II (ANG II). N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptors are also involved in the angiotensinergic signaling pathway through the MnPO. We investigated whether AT1 and NMDA receptors in the MnPO are responsible for variable hemodynamic response patterns to stress. Cocaine or startle with cold water evoked a pressor response in Sprague-Dawley rats due, in some rats [vascular responders (VR)], to a large increase in systemic vascular resistance (SVR) and, in other rats [mixed responders (MR)], to small increases in SVR and cardiac output (CO). Microinjection of the GABAA agonist muscimol into the MnPO to block synaptic transmission attenuated the cocaine- or stress-induced increase in SVR and the decrease in CO seen in VR without altering either response in MR. Likewise, administration of either an AT1 receptor antagonist, losartan, or an NMDA receptor antagonist, MK-801, attenuated the increase in SVR and the decrease in CO in VR in response to either cocaine (losartan and MK-801) or startle with cold water (losartan) without altering either response in MR. We propose that the MnPO is responsible for greater SVR responses in VR and that AT1 and NMDA receptors play an important role in greater SVR responses in VR. These data provide additional support for the critical role of the MnPO in cardiovascular responses to stress.  相似文献   

12.
We surveyed the neural substrata for behavioral thermoregulation with immunohistochemical analysis of the expression of Fos protein in the rat brain. We used an operant system in which a rat exposed to heat (40 degrees C) could get cold air (0 degrees C) for 30 s when it moved into the reward area. Rats moved in and out of the reward area of the system periodically and thus maintained their body temperature at a normal level. In the rats performing heat escape behavior (active group), strong Fos immunoreactivity (Fos-IR) was found in the median preoptic nucleus (MnPO), parastrial nucleus (PS), and dorsomedial hypothalamus (DMH) compared with the controls. Another group of rats (passive group) were given the same temperature changes, regardless of the rat's movement, as those obtained by rats of the active group. Fos-IR in the MnPO was also seen in this group. The present results suggest that the PS and DMH play an important role in the genesis of thermoregulatory behavior, whereas the MnPO may be important for detecting changes in ambient and/or body temperatures.  相似文献   

13.
Pressor responses to increases in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) sodium in Wistar rats and to high salt intake in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) involve both brain ouabainlike activity ("ouabain") and the brain renin-angiotensin system (RAS). Because some of the effects of "ouabain" are mediated by the median preoptic nucleus (MnPO) and this nucleus contains all elements of the RAS, the present study assessed possible interactions of "ouabain" and ANG II in this nucleus. In conscious Wistar rats, injection of ANG II into the MnPO significantly increased mean arterial pressure (MAP) and heart rate (HR). This response was not affected by pretreatment with a subpressor dose of ouabain. MAP and HR increases by ouabain in the MnPO were significantly attenuated by MnPO pretreatment with losartan. In Wistar rats, losartan in the MnPO also abolished pressor and HR responses to intracerebroventricular 0.3 M NaCl and attenuated MAP and HR responses to intracerebroventricular ouabain. Five weeks of a high-salt diet in SHRs resulted in exacerbation of hypertension and increased responses to air-jet stress and intracerebroventricular guanabenz. Losartan injected into the MnPO reversed the salt-sensitive component of the hypertension and normalized the depressor response to guanabenz but did not change responses to air-jet stress. We conclude that in the MnPO, ANG II via AT(1) receptors mediates cardiovascular responses to an acute increase in CSF sodium as well as the chronic pressor responses to high sodium intake in SHR.  相似文献   

14.
15.
16.
Evidence is reviewed implicating the preoptic region in angiotensin-induced thirst. The most responsive area according to results obtained with behavioral, electrophysiological, and autoradiographic mapping techniques is at the caudal border of the medial preoptic region and rostral border of the anterior hypothalamus. The neural pathway from this preoptic site for angiotensin-induced thirst extends along the medial forebrain bundle through the midlateral hypothalamus to the paramedial midbrain tegmentum and to an area ventrolateral to the central gray. Lesions of this pathway in the midlateral hypothalamus and rostral midbrain significantly attenuated drinking induced by microinjections of angiotensin II into the preoptic area but did not disrupt water intake induced by microinjections of angiotensin II into the subfornical organ or cerebral ventricles. Although the efferent pathways from angiotensin-receptive sites in the subfornical organ and cerebral ventricles are unknown, it appears from these observations that the medial forebrain bundle is not involved. Lesions of the medial forebrain bundle-lateral hypothalamus also do not disrupt drinking induced by microinjections of hypertonic saline into the preoptic region although lesions placed 1 mm further lateral do. Since fat lateral hypothalamic lesions are without effect on drinking induced by centrally administered angiotensin II, this suggests that intracellular and extracellular thirst signals are subserved by separate neural pathways in the hypothalamus.  相似文献   

17.
Dexfenfluramine (dF) and dexnorfenfluramine (dNF), its metabolite, are anorectic agents that release serotonin (5-HT) and may have a direct postsynaptic action. The effects on the anorectic effects of dF and dNF of either acute (p-chlorophenylalanine, PCPA) or chronic (5,7-dihydroxytryptamine, 5,7-DHT) brain 5-HT depletions were studied in rats and compared with the actions of a 5-HT uptake inhibitor (fluoxetine) and 5-HT(1B/2C) receptor agonists [1-(3-trifluoromethyl-phenyl)-piperazine and 1-(3-chlorophenyl) piperazine]. The anorexia caused by these agonists was enhanced in rats with 5,7-DHT lesions, possibly a result of receptor supersensitivity. In contrast, fluoxetine anorexia was somewhat reduced in one study and was unchanged in a second. Both dF and dNF anorexias were enhanced in rats with 5,7-DHT lesions. In contrast, the anorectic effects of either dF or dNF were unchanged in PCPA-treated rats relative to controls. Compared with controls, 5, 7-DHT-lesion rats showed greatly increased dF- and dNF-induced Fos-like immunoreactivity (ir) in the paraventricular (PVN) and supraoptic (SON) hypothalamic nuclei, and in the median preoptic area (MnPO), but were similar to controls in most other areas. PCPA pretreatment increased dF- and dNF-induced Fos-ir in the PVN, SON, and MnPO. In controls, equianorectic doses of dF and dNF induced Fos-ir in similar brain regions, but dNF produced relatively larger effects than dF in SON, PVN, and MnPO. The data are discussed in terms of multiple pathways in the anorectic actions of dF and dNF.  相似文献   

18.
In rodents, daily feeding schedules induce food anticipatory activity (FAA) rhythms with formal properties suggesting mediation by food-entrained circadian oscillators (FEOs). The search for the neuronal substrate of FEOs responsible for FAA is an active area of research, but studies spanning several decades have yet to identify unequivocally a brain region required for FAA. Variability of results across studies leads to questions about underlying biology versus methodology. Here we describe in C57BL/6 male mice the effects of varying the ‘dose’ of caloric restriction (0%, 60%, 80%, 110%) on the expression of FAA as measured by a video-based analysis system, and on the induction of c-Fos in brain regions that have been implicated in FAA. We determined that more severe caloric restriction (60%) leads to a faster onset of FAA with increased magnitude. Using the 60% caloric restriction, we found little evidence for unique signatures of neuronal activation in the brains of mice anticipating a daily mealtime compared to mice that were fasted acutely or fed ad-libitum–even in regions such as the dorsomedial and ventrolateral hypothalamus, nucleus accumbens, and cerebellum that have previously been implicated in FAA. These results underscore the importance of feeding schedule parameters in determining quantitative features of FAA in mice, and demonstrate dissociations between behavioral FAA and neural activity in brain areas thought to harbor FEOs or participate in their entrainment or output.  相似文献   

19.
《Journal of Physiology》1997,91(1):31-37
We investigated the influence of ibotenic acid lesions of the medial hypothalamus (MH) on salt appetite and arterial blood pressure responses induced by angiotensinergic and adrenergic stimulation of the median preoptic nucleus (MnPO) of rats. Previous injection of the adrenergic agonists norepinephrine, clonidine, phenylephrine, and isoproterenol into the MnPO of sham MH-lesioned rats caused no change in the sodium intake induced by ANG II. ANG II injected into the MnPO of MH-lesioned rats increased sodium intake compared with sham-lesioned rats. Previous injection of clonidine and isoproterenol increased, whereas phenylephrine abolished the salt intake induced by ANG II into the MnPO of MH-lesioned rats. Previous injection of norepinephrine and clonidine into the MnPO of sham MH-lesioned rats caused no change in the mean arterial pressure (MAP) induced by ANG II. Under the same conditions, previous injection of phenylephrine increased, whereas isoproterenol reversed the increase in MAP induced by angiotensin II (ANG II). ANG II injected into the MnPO of MH-lesioned rats induce a decrease in MAP compared with sham-lesioned rats. Previous injection of phenylephrine or norepinephrine into the MnPO of MH-lesioned rats induced a negative MAP, whereas pretreatment with clonidine or isoproterenol increased the MAP produced by ANG II injected into the MnPO of sham- or MH-lesioned rats. These data show that ibotenic acid lesion of the MH increases the sodium intake and pressor responses induced by the concomitant angiotensinergic, α2 and β adrenergic activation of the MnPO, whereas α1 activation may have opposite effects. MH involvement in excitatory and inhibitory mechanisms related to sodium intake and MAP control is suggested.  相似文献   

20.
The median preoptic nucleus (MnPO) in the lamina terminalis receives a prominent catecholaminergic innervation from the dorsomedial and ventrolateral medulla. The present investigation used whole cell patch-clamp recordings in rat brain slice preparations to evaluate the hypothesis that presynaptic adrenoceptors could modulate GABAergic inputs to MnPO neurons. Bath applications of norepinephrine (NE; 20-50 microM) induced a prolonged and reversible suppression of inhibitory postsynaptic currents (IPSCs) and reduced paired-pulse depression evoked by stimulation in the subfornical organ and organum vasculosum lamina terminalis. These events were not correlated with any observed changes in membrane conductance arising from NE activity at postsynaptic alpha(1)- or alpha(2)-adrenoceptors. Consistent with a role for presynaptic alpha(2)-adrenoceptors, responses were selectively mimicked by an alpha(2)-adrenoceptor agonist (UK-14304) and blockable with an alpha(2)-adrenoceptor antagonist (idazoxan). Although the alpha(1)-adrenoceptor agonist cirazoline and the alpha(1)-adrenoceptor antagonist prazosin were without effect on these evoked IPSCs, NE was noted to increase (via alpha(1)-adrenoceptors) or decrease (via alpha(2)-adrenoceptors) the frequency of spontaneous and tetrodotoxin-resistant miniature IPSCs. Collectively, these observations imply that both presynaptic and postsynaptic alpha(1)- and alpha(2)-adrenoceptors in MnPO are capable of selective modulation of rapid GABA(A) receptor-mediated inhibitory synaptic transmission along the lamina terminalis and therefore likely to exert a prominent influence in regulating cell excitability within the MnPO.  相似文献   

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