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1.
In the theater of cellular life, iron plays an ambiguous and yet undoubted lead role. Iron is a ubiquitous core element of the earth and plays a central role in countless biochemical pathways. It is integral to the catalysis of the redox reactions of oxidative phosphorylation in the respiratory chain, and it provides a specific binding site for oxygen in the heme binding moiety of hemoglobin, which allows oxygen transport in the blood. Its biological utility depends upon its ability to readily accept or donate electrons, interconverting between its ferric (Fe3+) and ferrous (Fe2+) forms. In contrast to these beneficial features, free iron can assume a dangerous aspect catalyzing the formation of highly reactive compounds such as cytotoxic hydroxyl radicals that cause damage to the macromolecular components of cells, including DNA and proteins, and thereby cellular destruction. The handling of iron in the body must therefore be very carefully regulated. Most environmental iron is in the Fe3+ state, which is almost insoluble at neutral pH. To overcome the virtual insolubility and potential toxicity of iron, a myriad of specialized transport systems and associated proteins have evolved to mediate regulated acquisition, transport, and storage of iron in a soluble, biologically useful, non-toxic form. We are gradually beginning to understand how these proteins individually and in concert serve to maintain cellular and whole body homeostasis of this crucial yet potentially harmful metal ion. Furthermore, studies are increasingly implicating iron and its associated transport in specific pathologies of many organs. Investigation of the transport proteins and their functions is beginning to unravel the detailed mechanisms underlying the diseases associated with iron deficiency, iron overload, and other dysfunctions of iron metabolism.  相似文献   

2.
Iron is the most abundant chemical element on Earth but its most common oxidation state is Fe(III) which presents a very low solubility under physiological conditions. During evolution, micro-organisms have developed sound strategies to acquire iron from both the environment and superior organisms, including direct uptake of iron ions from exogenous iron/heme sources and the synthesis of specialized Fe(III) chelators called siderophores. The present review paper aims at presenting and discussing the latest achievements in siderophore isolation and production, as well as novel applications of these molecules in therapies against iron-related diseases and in vaccines, and their application as antimicrobial agents and biosensors.  相似文献   

3.
Yeast biomass enriched with iron could represent a new and safer solution for prevention from anaemia development. Such an iron source is less toxic and has better absorbability in organisms. The purpose of our research was the determination of the most suitable iron source in the cultivation medium for the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, regarding good growth and iron accumulation in cells. Iron(III) citrate, iron(III) chloride, iron(III) nitrate and Fe-EDTA complex were used. The uptake of the chosen iron compound, Fe(III) citrate, by the yeasts Candida intermedia and Kluyveromyces marxianus was also investigated. Different growth behaviour of the three yeast strains in the presence of Fe(III) citrate was observed. The highest amounts of accumulated iron in S. cerevisiae, C. intermedia and K. marxianus biomass were about 13, 20 and 34mgFeg(-1)dry wt., respectively. To optimise the accumulation of iron in K. marxianus and to characterise iron enriched yeast biomass, further experiments are needed.  相似文献   

4.
Intralysosomal iron: a major determinant of oxidant-induced cell death   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
As a result of continuous digestion of iron-containing metalloproteins, the lysosomes within normal cells contain a pool of labile, redox-active, low-molecular-weight iron, which may make these organelles particularly susceptible to oxidative damage. Oxidant-mediated destabilization of lysosomal membranes with release of hydrolytic enzymes into the cell cytoplasm can lead to a cascade of events eventuating in cell death (either apoptotic or necrotic depending on the magnitude of the insult). To assess the importance of the intralysosomal pool of redox-active iron, we have temporarily blocked lysosomal digestion by exposing cells to the lysosomotropic alkalinizing agent, ammonium chloride (NH(4)Cl). The consequent increase in lysosomal pH (from ca. 4.5 to > 6) inhibits intralysosomal proteolysis and, hence, the continuous flow of reactive iron into this pool. Preincubation of J774 cells with 10 mM NH(4)Cl for 4 h dramatically decreased apoptotic death caused by subsequent exposure to H(2)O(2), and the protection was as great as that afforded by the powerful iron chelator, desferrioxamine (which probably localizes predominantly in the lysosomal compartment). Sulfide-silver cytochemical detection of iron revealed a pronounced decrease in lysosomal content of redox-active iron after NH(4)Cl exposure, probably due to diminished intralysosomal digestion of iron-containing material coupled with continuing iron export from this organelle. Electron paramagnetic resonance experiments revealed that hydroxyl radical formation, readily detectable in control cells following H(2)O(2) addition, was absent in cells preexposed to 10 mM NH(4)Cl. Thus, the major pool of redox-active, low-molecular-weight iron may be located within the lysosomes. In a number of clinical situations, pharmacologic strategies that minimize the amount or reactivity of intralysosomal iron should be effective in preventing oxidant-induced cell death.  相似文献   

5.
Membrane transport of non-transferrin-bound iron by reticulocytes   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
The transport of non-transferrin-bound iron into rabbit reticulocytes was investigated by incubating the cells in 0.27 M sucrose with iron labelled with 59Fe. In most experiments the iron was maintained in the reduced state, Fe(II), with mercaptoethanol. The iron was taken up by cytosolic, haem and stromal fractions of the cells in greater amounts than transferrin-iron. The uptake was saturable, with a Km value of approx. 0.2 microM and was competitively inhibited by Co2+, Mn2+, Ni2+ and Zn2+. It ceased when the reticulocytes matured into erythrocytes. The uptake was pH and temperature sensitive, the pH optimum being 6.5 and the activation energy for iron transport into the cytosol being approx. 80 kJ/mol. Ferric iron and Fe(II) prepared in the absence of reducing agents could also be transported into the cytosol. Sodium chloride inhibited Fe(II) uptake in a non-competitive manner. Similar degrees of inhibition was found with other salts, suggesting that this effect was due to the ionic strength of the solution. Iron chelators inhibited Fe(II) uptake by the reticulocytes, but varied in their ability to release 59Fe from the cells after it had been taken up. Several lines of evidence showed that the uptake of Fe(II) was not being mediated by transferrin. It is concluded that the reticulocyte can transport non-transferrin-bound iron into the cytosol by a carrier-mediated process and the question is raised whether the same carrier is utilized by transferrin-iron after its release from the protein.  相似文献   

6.
Paz Y  Shimoni E  Weiss M  Pick U 《Plant physiology》2007,144(3):1407-1415
Uptake of iron in the halotolerant alga Dunaliella salina is mediated by a transferrin-like protein (TTf), which binds and internalizes Fe(3+) ions. Recently, we found that iron deficiency induces a large enhancement of iron binding, which is associated with accumulation of three other plasma membrane proteins that associate with TTf. In this study, we characterized the kinetic properties of iron binding and internalization and identified the site of iron internalization. Iron deficiency induces a 4-fold increase in Fe binding, but only 50% enhancement in the rate of iron uptake and also increases the affinity for iron and bicarbonate, a coligand for iron binding. These results indicate that iron deprivation leads to accumulation and modification of iron-binding sites. Iron uptake in iron-sufficient cells is preceded by an apparent time lag, resulting from prebound iron, which can be eliminated by unloading iron-binding sites. Iron is tightly bound to surface-exposed sites and hardly exchanges with medium iron. All bound iron is subsequently internalized. Accumulation of iron inhibits further iron binding and internalization. The vacuolar inhibitor bafilomycin inhibits iron uptake and internalization. Internalized iron was localized by electron microscopy within vacuolar structures that were identified as acidic vacuoles. Iron internalization is accompanied by endocytosis of surface proteins into these acidic vacuoles. A novel kinetic mechanism for iron uptake is proposed, which includes two pools of bound/compartmentalized iron separated by a rate-limiting internalization stage. The major parameter that is modulated by iron deficiency is the iron-binding capacity. We propose that excessive iron binding in iron-deficient cells serves as a temporary reservoir for iron that is subsequently internalized. This mechanism is particularly suitable for organisms that are exposed to large fluctuations in iron availability.  相似文献   

7.
Iron-nutritional aspects of the ionic balance of plants   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Summary The effect of iron on the ionic balance of several plant species and cultivars was studied. Those plants which normally excrete relatively low amounts of hydroxyl ions respond to iron stress by lowering the pH of the nutrient medium and decreasing anion uptake. These plants may be considered as being Fe efficient. Plants which normally excrete relatively high amounts of hydroxyl ions and which continue to increase the pH of a nutrient medium when under iron stress may be considered as Fe inefficient.Iron deficiency tends to increase carboxylate accumulation and to decrease anion uptake. When cation uptake is depressed by iron deficiency this is mainly a non specific depression of potassium uptake, on the other hand when iron stress stimulates cation uptake this is mainly due to a specific stimulation of the divalent cations Ca and Mg.Additional key words: Iron, efficiency of uptake, ionic balance, hydroxyl and hydrogen ion excretion.  相似文献   

8.
The mechanism of iron transport into erythroid cells was investigated using rabbit reticulocytes and mature erythrocytes incubated with 59Fe-labelled Fe(II) in isotonic sucrose or in solutions in which the sucrose was replaced with varying amounts of isotonic NaCl or KCl. Iron uptake was inhibited at all concentrations of NaCl, in a concentration-dependent manner, but with KCl inhibition occurred only at concentrations up to 10 mM. Higher KCl concentrations stimulated iron uptake to the cytosol of the cells, but inhibited its incorporation into heme. This effect became more marked as the iron concentration was raised. It was found that KCl inhibits iron incorporation into heme and stimulates iron uptake by mature erythrocytes, as well as by reticulocytes. It is concluded that erythroid cells can take up nontransferrin-bound Fe(II) by two mechanisms. One is a high-affinity mechanism that is limited to reticulocytes, saturates at a low iron concentration, and is inhibited by metabolic inhibitors. The other is a low-affinity process that is found in both reticulocytes and erythrocytes, becomes more prominent at higher iron concentrations, and is stimulated by KCl, as well as RbCl, LiCl, CsCl, and choline Cl. The KCl stimulation is inhibited by amiloride, but not by metabolic inhibitors, and its operation is not dependent on changes in cell volume or membrane potential, but it does require the presence of a permeant extracellular anion. Iron uptake by this process appears to occur by facilitated transport and is possibly assoicated with exchange of Na+. A further aspect of this study was a comparison of iron uptake by reticulocytes from Fe(II)-sucrose and Fe(II)-ascorbate using a variety of incubation conditions. No major differences were observed. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
Cell sensitivity to oxidative stress is influenced by ferritin autophagy   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
To test the consequences of lysosomal degradation of differently iron-loaded ferritin molecules and to mimic ferritin autophagy under iron-overload and normal conditions, J774 cells were allowed to endocytose heavily iron loaded ferritin, probably with some adventitious iron (Fe-Ft), or iron-free apo-ferritin (apo-Ft). When cells subsequently were exposed to a bolus dose of hydrogen peroxide, apo-Ft prevented lysosomal membrane permeabilization (LMP), whereas Fe-Ft enhanced LMP. A 4-h pulse of Fe-Ft initially increased oxidative stress-mediated LMP that was reversed after another 3h under standard culture conditions, suggesting that lysosomal iron is rapidly exported from lysosomes, with resulting upregulation of apo-ferritin that supposedly is autophagocytosed, thereby preventing LMP by binding intralysosomal redox-active iron. The obtained data suggest that upregulation of the stress protein ferritin is a rapid adaptive mechanism that counteracts LMP and ensuing apoptosis during oxidative stress. In addition, prolonged iron starvation was found to induce apoptotic cell death that, interestingly, was preceded by LMP, suggesting that LMP is a more general phenomenon in apoptosis than so far recognized. The findings provide new insights into aging and neurodegenerative diseases that are associated with enhanced amounts of cellular iron and show that lysosomal iron loading sensitizes to oxidative stress.  相似文献   

10.
湿地植物根表的铁锰氧化物膜   总被引:44,自引:0,他引:44  
刘文菊  朱永官 《生态学报》2005,25(2):358-363
湿地植物根系具有泌氧能力 ,使其根表及根际微环境呈氧化状态。因而 ,土壤溶液中一些还原性物质被氧化 ,如 Fe2 ,Mn2 ,形成的氧化物呈红色或红棕色胶膜状包裹在根表 ,称为铁锰氧化物膜。铁锰氧化物膜及其根际微环境是湿地植物根系吸收养分和污染物的门户 ,势必会影响这些物质的吸收。主要综述了铁锰氧化物膜的形成和组成 ,以及根表形成的氧化物膜的生态效应 ,也就是氧化物胶膜对植物根系吸收外部介质中的养分及污染物质——重金属离子的影响  相似文献   

11.
SUMMARY

Senescent, or damaged, erythrocytes are removed from the blood stream mainly by the macrophage system. Such cells may acquire and store large quantities of the redox-active transition metal iron that, if released together with superoxide and hydrogen peroxide during an oxidative burst, may induce peroxidative reactions with a variety of surrounding substances, e.g., low-density lipoprotein (LDL). In this study we demonstrate 1. the temporary sequestration of iron within the secondary lysosomal apparatus of both established macrophage-like J-774 cells and human monocyte-derived macrophages secondary to the uptake and degradation of native and photo-oxidized (ultraviolet UV light) erythrocytes; and 2. an ensuing development by these cells of a capacity for iron-exocytosis. The binding and uptake by human macrophages and J-774 cells of artificially aged, UV-irradiated erythrocytes were stimulated compared to that of native erythrocytes. The uptake resulted in lysosomal accumulation of iron in a low-molecular weight form, as shown by autometallography. Cells exposed to ferric chloride were used as positive controls. Ensuing exocytosis of iron to the culture medium was demonstrated by atomic absorption spectroscopy. Our findings suggest that macrophage erythrophagocytosis is a useful model for the study of the sequestration of iron within the macrophage acidic vacuolar apparatus, its subsequent exocytosis, and oxidative effect on extracellular LDL.  相似文献   

12.
The prevailing opinion on lysosomal endurance is that, as long as the cells are still alive, these organelles are generally quite stable and, thus, do not induce cell damage by leaking their numerous powerful hydrolytic enzymes to the cytosol. We suggest that this opinion is basically wrong and consider that many lysosomes are quite vulnerable, especially to oxidative stress. Moreover, we suggest that cellular degeneration, including apoptosis as well as necrosis, follows upon lysosomal disruption. We have found differing stability of lysosomal membranes to oxidative stress, not only among different cell types, but also between cells of the same type and between lysosomes of individual cells. We suggest that cellular resistance to oxidative stress is mainly a function of three parameters: (i) the capacity to degrade hydrogen peroxide before it reaches, and may diffuse into, the acidic vacuolar compartment; (ii) the resistance to reactive oxygen species of lysosomal membranes; and (iii) the intralysosomal amounts of redox-active, low molecular weight iron. Iron-catalysed intralysosomal reactions, if pronounced enough, result in peroxidation and destabilization of the lysosomal membrane. Owing to differences in the cellular synthesis of hydrogen peroxide-degrading enzymes, degree of autophagocytotic degradation of iron-containing metalloproteins, lysosomal localization within the cytoplasm and intralysosomal iron chelation, the above three parameters may vary between both different and similar cells and between lysosomes of individual cells as well, explaining their observed variability with respect to resistance against oxidative stress  相似文献   

13.
Lysosomal membrane permeabilization (LMP) induced by oxidative stress has recently emerged as a prominent mechanism behind TNF cytotoxicity. This pathway relies on diffusion of hydrogen peroxide into lysosomes containing redox-active iron, accumulated by breakdown of iron-containing proteins and subcellular organelles. Upon oxidative lysosomal damage, LMP allows relocation to the cytoplasm of low mass iron and acidic hydrolases that contribute to DNA and mitochondrial damage, resulting in death by apoptosis or necrosis. Here we investigate the role of lysosomes and free iron in death of HTC cells, a rat hepatoma line, exposed to TNF following metallothionein (MT) upregulation. Iron-binding MT does not normally occur in HTC cells in significant amounts. Intracellular iron chelation attenuates TNF and cycloheximide (CHX)-induced LMP and cell death, demonstrating the critical role of this transition metal in mediating cytokine lethality. MT upregulation, combined with starvation-activated MT autophagy almost completely suppresses TNF and CHX toxicity, while impairment of both autophagy and MT upregulation by silencing of Atg7, and Mt1a and/or Mt2a, respectively, abrogates protection. Interestingly, MT upregulation by itself has little effect, while stimulated autophagy alone depresses cytokine toxicity to some degree. These results provide evidence that intralysosomal iron-catalyzed redox reactions play a key role in TNF and CHX-induced LMP and toxicity. The finding that chelation of intralysosomal iron achieved by autophagic delivery of MT, and to some degree probably of other iron-binding proteins as well, into the lysosomal compartment is highly protective provides a putative mechanism to explain autophagy-related suppression of death by TNF and CHX.  相似文献   

14.
Iron acquired by cells is delivered to mitochondria for metabolic processing via pathways comprising undefined chemical forms. In order to assess cytosolic factors that affect those iron delivery pathways, we relied on microscopy and flow-cytometry for monitoring iron traffic in: (a) K562 erythroleukemia cells labeled with fluorescent metal-sensors targeted to either cytosol or mitochondria and responsive to changes in labile iron and (b) permeabilized cells that retained metabolically active mitochondria accessible to test substrates. Iron supplied to intact cells as transferrin-Fe(III) or Fe(II)-salts evoked concurrent metal ingress to cytosol and mitochondria. With either supplementation modality, iron ingress into cytosol was mostly absorbed by preloaded chelators, but ingress into mitochondria was fully inhibited only by some chelators, indicating different cytosol-to-mitochondria delivery mechanisms. Iron ingress into cytosol or mitochondria were essentially unaffected by depletion of cytosolic iron ligands like glutathione or the hypothesized 2,5 dihydroxybenzoate (2,5-DHBA) siderophore/chaperone. These ligands also failed to affect mitochondrial iron ingress in permeabilized K562 cells suspended in cytosol-simulating medium. In such medium, mitochondrial iron uptake was >6-eightfold higher for Fe(II) versus Fe(III), showed saturable properties and submicromolar K(1/2) corresponding to cytosolic labile iron levels. When measured in iron(II)-containing media, ligands like AMP, ADP or ATP, did not affect mitochondrial iron uptake whereas in iron(III)-containing media ADP and ATP reduced it and AMP stimulated it. Thus, cytosolic iron forms demonstrably contribute to mitochondrial iron delivery, are apparently not associated with DHBA analogs or glutathione but rather with resident components of the cytosolic labile iron pool.  相似文献   

15.
BackgroundIron is essential for many types of biological processes. However, excessive iron can be cytotoxic and can lead to many diseases. Since ferroptosis, which is an iron-dependent regulated form of necrosis, was recently discovered, iron and iron-catalysed oxidative stress have attracted much interest because of their sophisticated mechanism of cellular signalling leading to cell death and associated with various diseases.Scope of reviewIn this review, we first focus on how iron catalyses reactive oxygen species (ROS). Next, we discuss the roles of iron in cell death and senescence and, in particular, the downstream signalling pathways of ROS. Finally, we discuss the potential regulation mechanism of iron as a therapeutic target for various iron-related diseases.Major conclusionsBoth labile iron released from organelles upon various stresses and iron incorporated in enzymes produce ROS, including lipid ROS. ROS produced by iron activates various signalling pathways, including mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signalling pathways such as the apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 (ASK1)-p38/JNK pathway. These ROS-activated signalling pathways regulate senescence or cell death and are linked to cancer, ischaemia-reperfusion injury during transplantation and ageing-related neurodegenerative diseases.General significanceIron overload damages cells and causes harmful effects on the body through oxidative stress. Thus, understanding the spatiotemporal availability of iron and the role of iron in generating ROS will provide clues for the suppression of ROS and cytotoxic redox-active iron. Moreover, elucidating the molecular mechanisms and signalling pathways of iron-dependent cytotoxicity will enable us to find novel therapeutic targets for various diseases.  相似文献   

16.
Throughout evolution, all organisms have harnessed the redox properties of copper (Cu) and iron (Fe) as a cofactor or structural determinant of proteins that perform critical functions in biology. At its most sobering stance to Earth's biome, Cu biochemistry allows photosynthetic organisms to harness solar energy and convert it into the organic energy that sustains the existence of all nonphotosynthetic life forms. The conversion of organic energy, in the form of nutrients that include carbohydrates, amino acids and fatty acids, is subsequently released during cellular respiration, itself a Cu-dependent process, and stored as ATP that is used to drive a myriad of critical biological processes such as enzyme-catalyzed biosynthetic processes, transport of cargo around cells and across membranes, and protein degradation. The life-supporting properties of Cu incur a significant challenge to cells that must not only exquisitely balance intracellular Cu concentrations, but also chaperone this redox-active metal from its point of cellular entry to its ultimate destination so as to avert the potential for inappropriate biochemical interactions or generation of damaging reactive oxidative species (ROS). In this review we chart the travels of Cu from the extracellular milieu of fungal and mammalian cells, its path within the cytosol as inferred by the proteins and ligands that escort and deliver Cu to intracellular organelles and protein targets, and its journey throughout the body of mammals. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Cell Biology of Metals.  相似文献   

17.
Iron is required by most organisms, but is potentially toxic due to the low solubility of the stable oxidation state, Fe(III), and to the tendency to potentiate the production of reactive oxygen species, ROS. The reactivity of iron is counteracted by bacteria with the same strategies employed by the host, namely by sequestering the metal into ferritin, the ubiquitous iron storage protein. Ferritins are highly conserved, hollow spheres constructed from 24 subunits that are endowed with ferroxidase activity and can harbour up to 4500 iron atoms as oxy-hydroxide micelles. The release of the metal upon reduction can alter the microorganism-host iron balance and hence permit bacteria to overcome iron limitation. In bacteria, the relevance of the Dps (DNA-binding proteins from starved cells) family in iron storage-detoxification has been recognized recently. The seminal studies on the protein from Listeria innocua demonstrated that Dps proteins have ferritin-like activity and most importantly have the capacity to attenuate the production of ROS. This latter function allows bacterial pathogens that lack catalase, e.g. Porphyromonas gingivalis, to survive in an aerobic environment and resist to peroxide stress.  相似文献   

18.
Cellular degradative processes, which include lysosomal (autophagic) and proteasomal degradation, as well as catabolism of proteins by cytosolic and mitochondrial proteases, provide for a continuous turnover of cellular components, such as damaged or obsolete biomolecules and organelles. Inherent insufficiency of these degradative processes results in progressive accumulation within long-lived postmitotic cells of biological ‘garbage’ (waste material), such as various oxidized proteins, functionally effete mitochondria, and lipofuscin (age pigment), an intralysosomal, polymeric, undegradable material. There is increasing evidence that lipofuscin hampers lysosomal degradative capacity, thus promoting the aggravation of accumulated damage at old age. Being rich in redox-active iron, lipofuscin granules also may exacerbate oxidative stress levels in senescent cells. Thus, increasing the efficiency of cellular degradative pathways and preventing involvement of iron in oxidant-induced lysosomal and cellular damage may be potential strategies for anti-aging interventions.  相似文献   

19.
The prevailing opinion on lysosomal endurance is that, as long as the cells are still alive, these organelles are generally quite stable and, thus, do not induce cell damage by leaking their numerous powerful hydrolytic enzymes to the cytosol. We suggest that this opinion is basically wrong and consider that many lysosomes are quite vulnerable, especially to oxidative stress. Moreover, we suggest that cellular degeneration, including apoptosis as well as necrosis, follows upon lysosomal disruption. We have found differing stability of lysosomal membranes to oxidative stress, not only among different cell types, but also between cells of the same type and between lysosomes of individual cells. We suggest that cellular resistance to oxidative stress is mainly a function of three parameters: (i) the capacity to degrade hydrogen peroxide before it reaches, and may diffuse into, the acidic vacuolar compartment; (ii) the resistance to reactive oxygen species of lysosomal membranes; and (iii) the intralysosomal amounts of redox-active, low molecular weight iron. Iron-catalysed intralysosomal reactions, if pronounced enough, result in peroxidation and destabilization of the lysosomal membrane. Owing to differences in the cellular synthesis of hydrogen peroxide-degrading enzymes, degree of autophagocytotic degradation of iron-containing metalloproteins, lysosomal localization within the cytoplasm and intralysosomal iron chelation, the above three parameters may vary between both different and similar cells and between lysosomes of individual cells as well, explaining their observed variability with respect to resistance against oxidative stress This revised version was published online in November 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

20.
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