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1.
Non-helical peptide fragments were isolated from rabbit skin collagen after cleavage of alpha chains with cyanogen bromide and proteases. Determination of their amino acid sequence indicated a length of 9, 16 and 25 amino acid residues for the non-helical sequences located in the N-terminal region of alpha2 and alpha1 chain and in the C-terminal region of alpha1 chain, respectively. The C-terminal sequence Tyr-Tyr hitherto considered as the genuine end of collagen alpha1 chain is in part of rabbit collagen extended by two residues, alanine and arginine. Rabbit collagen may differ considerably in its non-helical sequences from other vertebrate collagens, particularly in the C-terminal part. Some but not all of these differences are clustered in areas occupied by antigenic determinants which are recognized in the antibody response of rabbits to rat or calf collagen. On the other hand, a high homology to rabbit collagen, e.g. in the N-terminal region of rat collagen alpha1 chain or calf collagen alpha2 chain, probably prevents immunological recognition by the rabbit. The degree of foreignness alone, however, may not necessarily determine whether a particular non-helical area is able to express immunogenic activity.  相似文献   

2.
Structural analyses of fibrinogens from patients with congenital dysfibrinogenemia, designated as fibrinogens Kawaguchi and Osaka, have been performed to identify the difference responsible for the lack of fibrinopeptide A release. For the structural studies, a new strategy was employed. Amino acid sequence analysis of one of the lysyl endopeptidase-peptides isolated from the abnormal fibrinogens indicated that in both fibrinogens, arginine-16 of the A alpha chain had been replaced by cysteine. To characterize the chemical nature of the sulfhydryl group of cysteine-16, a tryptic peptide containing cysteine-16 of the A alpha chain was prepared from intact fibrinogen Kawaguchi. The amino acid composition and the molecular weight determination of this aberrant peptide revealed that it was a dimeric NH2-terminal peptide corresponding to residues 1-19 derived from the abnormal A alpha chain. These results indicate that the half-cystine at position 16 in the abnormal A alpha chain forms an intramolecular disulfide bridge with the same residue in the other abnormal A alpha chain and that fibrinogen Kawaguchi is a homo dimer composed of two identical abnormal halves.  相似文献   

3.
Collagen VI, a microfibrillar protein found in virtually all connective tissues, is composed of three distinct subunits, alpha1(VI), alpha2(VI), and alpha3(VI), which associate intracellularly to form triple helical heterotrimeric monomers then dimers and tetramers. The secreted tetramers associate end-to-end to form beaded microfibrils. Although the basic steps in assembly and the structure of the tetramers and microfibrils are well defined, details of the interacting protein domains involved in assembly are still poorly understood. To explore the role of the C-terminal globular regions in assembly, alpha3(VI) cDNA expression constructs with C-terminal truncations were stably transfected into SaOS-2 cells. Control alpha3(VI) N6-C5 chains with an intact C-terminal globular region (subdomains C1-C5), and truncated alpha3(VI) N6-C1, N6-C2, N6-C3, and N6-C4 chains, all associated with endogenous alpha1(VI) and alpha2(VI) to form collagen VI monomers, dimers and tetramers, which were secreted. These data demonstrate that subdomains C2-C5 are not required for monomer, dimer or tetramer assembly, and suggest that the important chain selection interactions involve the C1 subdomains. In contrast to tetramers containing control alpha3(VI) N6-C5 chains, tetramers containing truncated alpha3(VI) chains were unable to associate efficiently end-to-end in the medium and did not form a significant extracellular matrix, demonstrating that the alpha3(VI) C5 domain plays a crucial role in collagen VI microfibril assembly. The alpha3(VI) C5 domain is present in the extracellular matrix of SaOS-2 N6-C5 expressing cells and fibroblasts demonstrating that processing of the C-terminal region of the alpha3(VI) chain is not essential for microfibril formation.  相似文献   

4.
The COOH-terminal portion of the A alpha chain of human fibrinogen is highly susceptible to proteolytic degradation. This property has prevented isolation of the COOH-terminal domain of fibrinogen for the direct investigation of its functional characteristics. Human fibrinogen was degraded with hementin, a fibrinogen-olytic protease from the posterior salivary glands of the leech, Haementeria ghilianii. Two initial fragments, Yhem1 and Dhem1, produced by cleavage through the three polypeptide chains in the connector region, were characterized and shown to retain the entire A alpha COOH-terminal domain. Late cleavages by hementin occurred in the A alpha chain COOH-terminal region to produce fragments Yhem and Dhem with shorter A alpha chain remnants. Fragments Dhem were isolated from an intermediate hementin digest of fibrinogen using anion-exchange chromatography. Fragment Dhem1 was separated further from Dhem fragments with shorter alpha chain remnants by affinity chromatography on immobilized plasma fibronectin. Fragment Dhem1 represents a unique proteolytic fragment of fibrinogen containing an intact A alpha chain COOH-terminal region. NH2-terminal sequence analysis of isolated chains from fragment Dhem1 located hementin cleavage sites in the connector region to A alpha Asn102-Asn103, B beta Lys130-Gln131, and gamma Pro76-Asn77. The specific interaction of fragment Dhem1 with immobilized fibronectin indicated that the binding site probably was located within the COOH-terminal 111 amino acids of the A alpha chain. The overall pattern of fibrinogen cleavage by hementin is similar to that of plasmin, yet hementin cleaves preferably in the coiled-coil connector, sparing the A alpha COOH-terminal domain.  相似文献   

5.
The pyruvate dehydrogenase complex of Bacillus stearothermophilus was treated with Staphylococcus aureus V8 proteinase, causing cleavage of the dihydrolipoamide acetyltransferase polypeptide chain (apparent Mr 57 000), inhibition of the enzymic activity and disassembly of the complex. Fragments of the dihydrolipoamide acetyltransferase chains with apparent Mr 28 000, which contained the acetyltransferase activity, remained assembled as a particle ascribed the role of an inner core of the complex. The lipoic acid residue of each dihydrolipoamide acetyltransferase chain was found as part of a small but stable domain that, unlike free lipoamide, was able still to function as a substrate for reductive acetylation by pyruvate in the presence of intact enzyme complex or isolated pyruvate dehydrogenase (lipoamide) component. The lipoyl domain was acidic and had an apparent Mr of 6500 (by sedimentation equilibrium), 7800 (by sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis) and 10 000 and 20 400 (by gel filtration in the presence and in the absence respectively of 6M-guanidinium chloride). 1H-n.m.r. spectroscopy of the dihydrolipoamide acetyltransferase inner core demonstrated that it did not contain the segments of highly mobile polypeptide chain found in the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex. 1H-n.m.r. spectroscopy of the lipoyl domain demonstrated that it had a stable and defined tertiary structure. From these and other experiments, a model of the dihydrolipoamide acetyltransferase chain is proposed in which the small, folded, lipoyl domain comprises the N-terminal region, and the large, folded, core-forming domain that contains the acetyltransferase active site comprises the C-terminal region. These two regions are separated by a third segment of the chain, which includes a substantial region of polypeptide chain that enjoys high conformational mobility and facilitates movement of the lipoyl domain between the various active sites in the enzyme complex.  相似文献   

6.
Human C1s proenzyme (Mr 83 000) was isolated by a rapid two-stage method involving affinity chromatography of C1 on IgG-Sepharose and isolation of subcomponent C1s by ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel. Single-chain C1s proenzyme was activated to two-chain C1s with self-activated C1r. After reduction and S-carboxamidomethylation the heavy chain of C1s (Mr 57 000) was isolated by ion exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel. Cleavage of C1s heavy chain with CNBr yielded five fragments whose N-terminal sequences were determined. The alignment of the fragments within the heavy chain was established by tryptic peptides containing methionine. C1s heavy chain comprises about 470 amino acid residues and 42% of its sequence was determined. An intrachain sequence homology and a homology to the alpha 2 chain of human haptoglobin were identified. The C-terminal CNBr fragment comprising 44 amino acid residues was completely sequenced. From BNPS-skatole cleavage of reduced and alkylated C1s proenzyme a fragment was isolated which overlaps the C1s heavy and light chain parts and which contains the peptide bond cleaved during activation. The results show that this is an Arg-Ile bond and that under standard conditions of activation no peptide material is liberated from this portion of the molecule. The sequence data and homology to two-chain serine proteases indicate a single interchain disulfide bond in C1s.  相似文献   

7.
Laminin-5 (alpha3beta3gamma2) is an important component of epithelial basement membranes. The 190-kDa alpha3 chain undergoes extracellular cleavage within the carboxyl (C) terminus consisting of five globular domains (G1 to G5), producing the mature laminin-5 with the 160-kDa alpha3 chain. To understand the physiological meaning of this processing, we isolated the C-terminal fragments of the alpha3 chain from the conditioned media of two kinds of human cell lines. The amino-terminal sequence of the fragments suggested that the cleavage occurs at Gln(1337)-Asp(1338) in the spacer region between the G3 and G4 domains. The G4-G5 fragment itself did not show significant activity, but it stimulated cell migration in the presence of a low concentration of the mature laminin-5, suggesting its regulatory role in cell migration.  相似文献   

8.
L V Medved  T F Busby  K C Ingham 《Biochemistry》1989,28(13):5408-5414
Cl-s is a multidomain serine protease that participates in Ca2+-dependent protein-protein interactions with other subcomponents of Cl, the first component of human complement. Proteolytically derived fragments that retain some of the functional properties of the parent protein have been isolated, and their thermal stability has been investigated by differential scanning calorimetry. Three endothermic transitions are observed in whole Cl-s near 37, 49, and 60 degrees C in 0.05 M Tris-HCl, pH 7.2, containing 0.22 M NaCl and 0.1 mM EDTA. The first (37 degrees C) and third (60 degrees C) transitions are also seen in Cl-s-A, a derivative comprised mainly of the intact nonenzymatic A chain. The second (49 degrees C) and third transitions are seen in Cl-s-gamma B, a fragment comprised of the intact B chain, disulfide linked to the C-terminal gamma region of the A chain. Thus, the first transition, which is alone stabilized by Ca2+, corresponds to the melting of the N-terminal alpha beta region of the A chain, the second to the melting of the catalytic B chain domain, and the third to the gamma region. The gamma region is comprised of two homologous short consensus repeat (SCR) motifs that are also found in several other complement and coagulation proteins. A new 24-kDa fragment, Cl-s-gamma, which contains these two SCRs, was isolated from plasmic and chymotryptic digests of Cl-s-A. Cl-s-gamma exhibits a reversible transition near 60 degrees C corresponding to the highest temperature peak in whole Cl-s and Cl-s-A.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Tryptic and cyanogen bromide peptides of pig brain alpha- and beta-tubulin reacting with monoclonal antibodies YOL1/34, DM1A and DM1B have been isolated and identified. They all correspond to parts of the C-terminal regions of either alpha- or beta-tubulin, and those peptides reacting with a given antibody have overlapping sequences. In the case of YOL1/34, its relatively high reactivity with small peptides suggests that many of the determinants for this antibody are within the overlapping region of these peptides comprising only nine amino acids in positions alpha 414 to 422. The smallest common region of peptides reacting with the other alpha-tubulin antibody DM1A corresponds to positions alpha 426 to 450, whereby amino acids within the positions 426 and 430 appear to be particularly important for reactivity. Since the last C-terminal residues of alpha-tubulin are also accessible to antibodies and enzymes, it seems that an extensive part (35 to 40 residues) of this very acidic C-terminal domain is exposed on the surface of native tubulin dimers. In microtubules, however, the amino-terminal end of this region appears to be less accessible, as YOL1/34 reacts poorly, if at all, with intact microtubules. All of the peptides reacting with beta-tubulin monoclonal antibody DM1B were derived from the acidic C-terminal domain and they overlapped in positions beta 416 to 430. This indicates that beta-tubulin is also positioned with at least part of its acidic C-terminal domain on the surface of microtubules, since DM1B reacts with unfixed microtubules after microinjection.  相似文献   

10.
We have isolated a cDNA clone for part of the alpha 2 type IV collagen (pCIV-2-176). Deoxynucleotide sequence analysis shows that this clone codes for 439 amino acids from the helical domain adjacent to the C-terminal globular domain of the alpha 2 (IV) chain. By aligning the deduced amino acid sequence of the alpha 2 (IV) chain with the published sequence for the alpha 1 (IV) chain, we find that all interruptions in the alpha 1 (IV) chain coincide with an interruption in the alpha 2 (IV) chain. Additional interruptions in the alpha 2 (IV) chain exist, however, three out of the four analysed only slightly disturb the collagen triple helix.  相似文献   

11.
12.
1. 'Inhibitor fragment' isolated from human serum albumin degraded by rabbit cathepsin D is composed of one peptide chain with two intrachain disulphide bonds. There are two kinds of inhibitor molecules having different N-terminal amino acids: one is threonine and the other glutamine. 2. Fragment F1, isolated from inhibitor degraded by trypsin, is composed of two chains linked by a disulphide bond. There are three kinds of fragment F1. All have one alpha chain in common, which has an intrachain disulphide bond. They differ by the nature of the chain, which is linked to the alpha chain by a disulphide bond. The epsilon chain is present in trace amounts. The two other chains, beta and gamma, differ by their C-terminal amino acid, which is respectively arginine and lysine. 3. Inhibitor is composed of the last 92 or 89 residues of the human albumin molecule and fragment F1 is composed of two parts of this C-terminal portion of the albumin molecule.  相似文献   

13.
Glass-adsorbed intact sea urchin outer arm dynein and its beta/IC1 subunit supports movement of microtubules, yet does not form a rigor complex upon depletion of ATP (16). We show here that rigor is a feature of the isolated intact outer arm, and that this property subfractionates with its alpha heavy chain. Intact dynein mediates the formation of ATP-sensitive microtubule bundles, as does the purified alpha heavy chain, indicating that both particles are capable of binding to microtubules in an ATP-sensitive manner. In contrast, the beta/IC1 subunit does not bundle microtubules. Bundles formed with intact dynein are composed of ribbon-like sheets of parallel microtubules that are separated by 54 nm (center-to-center) and display the same longitudinal repeat (24 nm) and cross-sectional geometry of dynein arms as do outer doublets in situ. Bundles formed by the alpha heavy chain are composed of microtubules with a center-to-center spacing of 43 nm and display infrequent, fine crossbridges. In contrast to the bridges formed by the intact arm, the links formed by the alpha subunit are irregularly spaced, suggesting that binding of the alpha heavy chain to the microtubules is not cooperative. Cosedimentation studies showed that: (a) some of the intact dynein binds in an ATP-dependent manner and some binds in an ATP-independent manner; (b) the beta/IC1 subunit does not cosediment with microtubules under any conditions; and (c) the alpha heavy chain cosediments with microtubules in the absence or presence of MgATP2-. These results suggest that the structural binding observed in the intact arm also is a property of its alpha heavy chain. We conclude that whereas force-generation is a function of the beta/IC1 subunit, both structural and ATP-sensitive (rigor) binding of the arm to the microtubule are mediated by the alpha subunit.  相似文献   

14.
The molecular organization of the protein HC-IgA complex (HC-IgA)   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Complexes of protein HC and monoclonal IgA1 or IgA2 or polyclonal IgA were isolated from human blood plasma. Dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting showed that all complexes contain three types of chains: two light immunoglobulin chains, one regular IgA alpha-chain, and one chain with Mr = 90,000 carrying both alpha-chain and protein HC epitopes. The complexes were split into Fab alpha and Fc alpha fragments by bacterial IgA proteases. The protein HC epitopes were linked to the Fc fragments. Complexes of protein HC and an alpha-chain devoid of the variable region and the first heavy chain constant domain could also be demonstrated to be present in the blood plasma of a patient with alpha-heavy chain disease. Pepsin digestion of HC-IgA released a fragment containing all the protein HC epitopes and the C-terminal nonapeptide of the IgA alpha-chain. The light immunoglobulin chains, the regular alpha-chain, and the 90,000-Da chain from monoclonal HC-IgA1 were isolated by preparative dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and by repeated gel filtration in dodecyl sulfate-containing buffer. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the alpha-chain was identical with that of a regular human heavy immunoglobulin chain of subgroup III. Subtractive degradations of the 90,000-Da chain displayed 2 amino acid residues in each position in a pattern suggesting simultaneous degradations of a chain identical with the regular alpha-chain of HC-IgA and of uncomplexed, low molecular weight, protein HC. All the results are compatible with a model for HC-IgA in which a single low molecular weight protein HC polypeptide chain is covalently linked, side by side, to the C-terminal nonapeptide of one of the two alpha-chains of a regular monomeric IgA unit.  相似文献   

15.
The two globular head portions, each bearing an active site, contain an uncleaved heavy chain when isolated by chymotrypsin from intact myosin. By specific labeling with radioactive N-ethylmaleimide the essential thiol 1 and thiol 2 groups were found to reside in this heavy chain. In intact myosin nonessential thiol 3 groups become the most reactive during ATP hydrolysis above 15 degrees C. These thiol 3 groups are located in a portion of the myosin heavy chain which appears as a fragment with an apparent molecular weight of 11 000 during proteolysis. The facts that this fragment is produced in an almost 1: 1 molar ratio with the head heavy chain and that it bears unblocked N-terminal amino groups whereas the heavy chain does not and is not contained in the rod portion of the myosin molecule indicate that it may orginate from the heavy chains in the neck region where the heads are joined to the rod. Since this fragment is removed by ion-exchange chromatography, it is not part of the functioning head and hence not involved in the active site. As its nonessential thiol 3 groups are rendered the most reactive of all thiol groups in the enzyme-product complex M**ADP.Pi, the hydrolytic step induces an allosteric conformational change in the neck region of intact myosin.  相似文献   

16.
The carboxyl-terminal residues of mammalian fibrinogens of six different species and the chain peptides, alpha(A), beta(B) and gamma, isolated from these fibrinogens were determined by hydrazinolysis, digestion with carboxypeptidases and selective tritium labelling. The C-terminal ends of bovine fibrinogen and fibrin were identified as proline and valine, in the molar ratio of approximately 1:2. Proline was identified as the C-terminus of the alpha(A)-chain, and C-terminal valine was found on both the beta(B)- and gamma-chains. On hydrazinolysis after selective tritium labelling of fibrinogen, radioactive C-terminal valine was also identified. The same C-terminal ends as those of bovine fibrinogen were found on the corresponding chain peptides isolated from sheep fibrinogen. The C-terminal residues of all the chain peptides of human and horse fibrinogens, however, were valine. In hog and dog fibrinogens, proline was identified at the C-termini of the alpha(A)-chains, and C-terminal valine and isoleucine were found on the beta(B)- and gamma-chains, respectively. Thus, the C-terminal amino acid residues of the fibrinogens of all mammalian species tested were very similar. It should be noted that hydrophobic amino acids, like isoleucine, valine and proline, are mainly located in the C-terminal ends of all three chain peptides in the fibrinogen molecule.  相似文献   

17.
The 20 kDa alpha A and alpha B subunits of alpha-crystallin from mammalian eye lenses form large aggregates with an average molecular weight of 800,000. To get insight into the interactions responsible for aggregate formation, we expressed in Escherichia coli the putative N- and C-terminal domains of alpha A-crystallin, as well as the intact alpha A-crystallin chain. The proteins are expressed in a stable form and in relatively high amounts (20-60% of total protein). Recombinant alpha A-crystallin and the C-terminal domain are expressed in a water-soluble form. Recombinant alpha A-crystallin forms aggregates comparable with alpha-crystallin aggregates from calf lenses, whereas the C-terminal domain forms dimers or tetramers. The N-terminal domain is expressed in an initially water-insoluble form. After solubilization, denaturation and reaggregation the N-terminal domain exists in a high molecular weight multimeric form. These observations suggest that the interactions leading to aggregation of alpha A-crystallin subunits are mainly located in the N-terminal half of the chain.  相似文献   

18.
The conformation of the carboxy-terminal aspects of the A alpha chain of human fibrinogen has been assessed by immunochemically characterizing the A alpha 239-476 and A alpha 518-584 regions of the molecule. Two peptides, corresponding to these regions, were isolated from cyanogen bromide digests of the A alpha chain by molecular exclusion and high-performance liquid chromatography. Each peptide reacted with antibodies elicited by immunization with the A alpha chain and intact fibrinogen. A alpha 239-476 appears to be a relatively immunodominant region of the molecule. Competitive inhibition analyses confirmed the accessibility of these regions to antibody in native fibrinogen. Each peptide, however, contained one or more epitopes, which was occult in the native molecule. These occult epitopes were expressed by the intact A alpha chain and became accessible when fibrinogen was cleaved with plasmin. With plasmic degradation the epitopes expressed by fibrinogen and contained within these two peptide regions became significantly more reactive with antibody. This change occurred in concert with release of the A alpha 518-584 region from the core of the molecule but did not require the generation of free A alpha 239-476. Ultimately the epitopes within both regions were shed from the plasmin-resistant core of fibrinogen. Peptide epitopes were expressed in a similar manner by prolonged plasmic degradation of fibrinogen and fibrin with alpha chain cross-linking. These results are generally consistent with models depicting the carboxy-terminal aspects of the A alpha chain as being surface-oriented but suggest a systematic ordering of structure when these regions are integrated into the native molecule. Plasmic cleavage significantly relaxes the conformational restraints on the organization within this region.  相似文献   

19.
Native type III collagen and procollagen were prepared from fetal bovine skin. Examination of the cleavage products produced by digestion with tadpole collagenase demonstrated that the three palpha1(III) chains of type III procollagen were linked together by disulfide bonds occurring at both the amino-terminal and carboxy-terminal portions of the molecule. Type III collagen contained interchain disulfide bonds only in the carboxy-terminal region of the molecule. After digestion of procollagen with bacterial collagenase an amino-terminal, triple-stranded peptide fragment was isolated. The reduced and alkylated chain constituents of this fragment had molecular weights of about 21 000. After digestion of procollagen with cyanogen bromide a related triple-stranded fragment was isolated. The chains of the cyanogen bromide fragment had a molecular weight of about 27 000. When the collagenase-derived peptide was fully reduced and alkylated, it became susceptible to further digestion with bacterial collagenase. This treatment released a fragment of about 97 amino acid residues which contained 12 cystein residues and had an amino acid composition typical for globular proteins. A second, non-helical fragment of about 48 amino acid residues contained three cysteines. This latter fragment is formed from sequences that overlap the amino-terminal region in the collagen alpha1(III) chain by 20 amino acids and possesses an antigenic determinant specific for the alpha1(III) chain. The collagenase-sensitive region exposed by reduction comprised about 33 amino acid residues. It was recovered as a mixture of small peptides. These results indicate that the amino-terminal region of type III procollagen has the same type of structure as the homologous region of type I procollagen. It consists of a globular, a collagen-like and a non-helical domain. Interchain disulfide bonding and the occurrence of cysteines in the non-helical domain are, however, unique for type III procollagen.  相似文献   

20.
Activated human complement-classical-pathway enzyme C1r has previously been shown to undergo autolytic cleavages occurring in the A chain [Arlaud, Villiers, Chesne & Colomb (1980) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 616, 116-129]. Chemical analysis of the autolytic products confirms that the A chain undergoes two major cleavages, generating three fragments, which have now been isolated and characterized. The N-terminal alpha fragment (approx. 210 residues long) has a blocked N-terminus, as does the whole A chain, whereas N-terminal sequences of fragments beta and gamma (approx. 66 and 176 residues long respectively) do not, and their N-terminal sequences were determined. Fragments alpha, beta and gamma, which are not interconnected by disulphide bridges, are located in this order within C1r A chain. Fragment gamma is disulphide-linked to the B chain of C1r, which is C-terminal in the single polypeptide chain of precursor C1r. CNBr cleavage of C1r A chain yields seven major peptides, CN1b, CN4a, CN2a, CN1a, CN3, CN4b and CN2b, which were positioned in that order, on the basis of N-terminal sequences of the methionine-containing peptides generated from tryptic cleavage of the succinylated (3-carboxypropionylated) C1r A chain. About 60% of the sequence of C1r A chain (440-460 residues long) was determined, including the complete sequence of the C-terminal 95 residues. This region shows homology with the corresponding parts of plasminogen and chymotrypsinogen and, more surprisingly, with the alpha 1 chain of human haptoglobin 1-1, a serine proteinase homologue.  相似文献   

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