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1.
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from sporangiophores of Phycomyces blakesleeanus NRRL 1555 (-) was partially purified. The enzyme showed a molecular weight of 85 700 as determined by gel-filtration. NADP+ protected the enzyme from inactivation. Magnesium ions did not affect the enzyme activity. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase was specific for NADP+ as coenzyme. The reaction rates were hyperbolic functions of substrate and coenzyme concentrations. The Km values for NADP+ and glucose 6-phosphate were 39.8 and 154.4 microM, respectively. The kinetic patterns, with respect to coenzyme and substrate, indicated a sequential mechanism. NADPH was a competitive inhibitor with respect to NADP+ (Ki = 45.5 microM) and a non-competitive inhibitor with respect to glucose 6-phosphate. ATP inhibited the activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. The inhibition was of the linear-mixed type with respect to NADP+, the dissociation constant of the enzyme-ATP complex being 2.6 mM, and the enzyme-NADP+-ATP dissociation constant 12.8 mM.  相似文献   

2.
Michaelis-Menten kinetics are observed in studies of highly purified bovine adrenal glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase at pH8.0 in 0.1 M bicine. The Km for NADP+ is 3.8 muM and for glucose-6-phosphate, 61 muM. At pH 6.9 Km for NADP+ increases to 6.5 muM. The enzyme is inhibited by NADPH both at pH 6.8 and at 8.0 with a Kip of 2.36 muM at pH 8.0. Inhibition is competitive with respect to both substrates implying that addition of substrates is random ordered. The data are also interpreted in terms of "reducing charge", the mole fraction of coenzyme in the reduced form. This appears to be the major mechanism for regulation of the pentose shunt. D-glucose, oxidized by the enzyme at a very slow rate, is also a competitive inhibitor for the natural substrate with a Ki of 0.29 M. Phosphate is a competitive inhibitor for glucose-6-phosphate oxidation but both phosphate and sulfate accelerate glucose oxidation suggesting a common binding site for the two anions and the phosphate of the natural substrate. While binding of ACTH to our enzyme preparations has been observed, we have not been able, in spite of repeated attempts, to demonstrate augmentation of the activity of the enzyme by the addition of ACTH.  相似文献   

3.
The inactivation of cytoplasmic malate dehydrogenase (L-malate: NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.37) from porcine heart and the specific modification of arginyl residues have been found to occur when the enzyme is inhibited with the reagent butanedione in sodium borate buffer. The inactivation of the enzyme was found to follow pseudo-first order kinetics. This loss of enzymatic activity was concomitant with the modification of 4 arginyl residues per molecule of enzyme. All 4 residues could be made inaccessible to modification when a malate dehydrogenase-NADH-hydroxymalonate ternary complex was formed. Only 2 of the residues were protected by NADH alone and appear to be essential. Studies of the butanedione inactivation in sodium phosphate buffer and of reactivation of enzymatic activity, upon the removal of excess butanedione and borate, support the role of borate ion stabilization in the inactivation mechanism previously reported by Riordan (Riordan, J.F. (1970) Fed. Proc. 29, Abstr. 462; Riordan, J.F. (1973) Biochemistry 12, 3915-3923). Protection from inactivation was also provided by the competitive inhibitor AMP, while nicotinamide exhibited no effect. Such results suggest that the AMP moiety of the NADH molecule is of major importance in the ability of NADH to protect the enzyme. When fluorescence titrations were used to monitor the ability of cytoplasmic malate dehydrogenase to form a binary complex with NADH and to form a ternary complex with NADH and hydroxymalonate, only the formation of ternary complex seemed to be effected by arginine modification.  相似文献   

4.
6-Phosphogluconate dehydrogenase has been purified from human brain to a specific activity of 22.8 U/mg protein. The molecular weight was 90,000. At low ionic strengths enzyme activity increased, due to an increase in Vmax and a decrease in Km for 6-phosphogluconate, and activity subsequently decreased as the ionic strength was increased (above 0.12). Both 6-phosphogluconate and NADP+ provided good protection against thermal inactivation, with 6-phosphogluconate also providing considerable protection against loss of activity caused by p-chloromercuribenzoate and iodoacetamide. Initial velocity studies indicated the enzyme mechanism was sequential. NADPH was a competitive inhibitor with respect to NADP+, and the Ki values for this inhibition were dependent on the concentration of 6-phosphogluconate. Product inhibition by NADPH was noncompetitive when 6-phosphogluconate was the variable substrate, whereas inhibition by the products CO2 and ribulose 5-phosphogluconate and NADP+ were varied. In totality these data suggest that binding of substrates to the enzyme is random. CO2 and ribulose 5-phosphate are released from the enzyme in random order with NADPH as the last product released.  相似文献   

5.
The activities of enzymes of pentose phosphate pathway (PPP) viz. glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase and carbon metabolism viz. phosphoenol pyruvate carboxylase, NADP- isocitrate dehydrogenase and NADP-malic enzyme were measured in the plant and bacteroid fractions of mungbean (ureide exporter) and lentil (amide exporter) nodules along with the developing roots for comparison. The enzymes of pentose phosphate pathway in legume cytosol had higher activities at a stage of maximum nitrogenase activity and higher sucrose metabolism. However, bacteroids had only limited capacity for this pathway. The specific activities of these enzymes were greater in ureide than in amide exporter. CO2 fixation via higher activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase in the plant part of the nodules in lentil might have been due to the greater synthesis of four carbon amino acids for amide export. The peak of NADP-isocitrate dehydrogenase in both legumes coincided with the pentose phosphate pathway enzymes at the time of high rates of sucrose metabolism and nitrogen fixation. Higher activities of NADP-malic enzyme were obtained in mungbean than in the lentil nodules. These findings are consistent with the role of these enzymes in providing reductant (NADPH) and substrates for energy yielding metabolism of bacteroids and carbon skeletons for ammonia assimilation.  相似文献   

6.
Subcellular distribution of pentose-phosphate cycle enzymes in rat liver was investigated, using differential and isopycnic centrifugation. The activities of the NADP+-dependent dehydrogenases of the pentose-phosphate pathway (glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and phosphogluconate dehydrogenase) were detected in the purified peroxisomal fraction as well as in the cytosol. Both dehydrogenases were localized in the peroxisomal matrix. Chronic administration of the hypolipidemic drug clofibrate (ethyl-alpha-p-chlorophenoxyisobutyrate) caused a 1.5-2.5-fold increase in the amount of glucose-6-phosphate and phosphogluconate dehydrogenases in the purified peroxisomes. Clofibrate decreased the phosphogluconate dehydrogenase, but did not alter glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity in the cytosolic fraction. The results obtained indicate that the enzymes of the non-oxidative segment of the pentose cycle (transketolase, transaldolase, triosephosphate isomerase and glucose-phosphate isomerase) are present only in a soluble form in the cytosol, but not in the peroxisomes or other particles, and that ionogenic interaction of the enzymes with the mitochondrial and other membranes takes place during homogenization of the tissue in 0.25 M sucrose. Similar to catalase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and phosphogluconate dehydrogenase are present in the intact peroxisomes in a latent form. The enzymes have Km values for their substrates in the millimolar range (0.2 mM for glucose-6-phosphate and 0.10-0.12 mM for 6-phosphogluconate). NADP+, but not NAD+, serves as a coenzyme for both enzymes. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase was inhibited by palmitoyl-CoA, and to a lesser extent by NADPH. Peroxisomal glucose-6-phosphate and phosphogluconate dehydrogenases have molecular mass of 280 kDa and 96 kDa, respectively. The putative functional role of pentose-phosphate cycle dehydrogenases in rat liver peroxisomes is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
S A Adediran 《Biochimie》1991,73(9):1211-1218
The steady-state kinetics of normal human erythrocyte glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (D-glucose-6-phosphate: NADP+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.49) dimers were studied as a function of pH and temperature. Inhibition studies using glucosamine 6-phosphate, NADPH and p-hydroxymercuribenzoate (P-OHMB) were also carried out at pH 8.0. The existence of two binding sites on the enzyme with a transition from low to high affinity for NADP+ when NADP+ concentration is increased is indicated by the nonlinear Lineweaver-Burk plots and sigmoid kinetic patterns. NADPH inhibition was found to be competitive with respect to NADP+ and non-competitive with respect to glucose-6-phosphate. Logarithmic plot of Vmax against pH and inactivation by P-OHMB indicate the participation in the reaction mechanism of imidazolium group of histidine and sulhydryl groups. The initial velocity and product inhibition data gave results which are consistent with the dimeric enzyme following an ordered sequential mechanism. A possible random mechanism is ruled out by the inhibition results of glucosamine 6-phosphate.  相似文献   

8.
The topology of phosphogluconate dehydrogenases in rat liver microsomes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Rat liver microsomes are known to contain a 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase which differs from the 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase in the soluble fraction. Microsomes which were washed once bind the soluble phosphogluconate dehydrogenase more tightly than they do glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. Microsomes washed three times in 0.15 M Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, contain only the microsomal 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase. Two observations show that this dehydrogenase is located in the cisternae. First, this dehydrogenase is inactive in intact, three times washed microsomes. Second, proteolytic inactivation of 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase like that of the cisternal enzyme glucose-6-phosphatase requires disruption of the membrane. Under the conditions used, detergent did not affect the proteolytic inactivation of NADPH-cytochrome c reductase, an enzyme located on the external surface. The excellent correspondence between the activations of hexose phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase in microsomes at various stages of disruption of the microsomal membrane produced by detergent supports the earlier contention that these two dehydrogenases are reducing NADP in the same region of the microsomes. A similar experiment which shows an exact correspondence between the activations of 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase and mannose-6-phosphatase with increasing concentrations of detergent indicates that the activation of the dehydrogenase can be explained solely by the penetration of the substrates to the active dehydrogenase within the microsomes and strongly suggests that the dehydrogenase is catalytically active in the cisternae.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Liver glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase and phosphogluconate dehydrogenase activities were significantly decreased in both diabetic and fasted rats. Treatment of diabetic rats with insulin resulted in liver glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase and phosphogluconate dehydrogenase activities that were significantly greater than controls. Insulin promoted an increase in food consumption that was blocked by adrenaline. Insulin, when administered together with adrenaline, restored hepatic glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase and phosphogluconate dehydrogenas activities of diabetic animals to control values, without altering food consumption. Brain glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase and phosphogluconate dehydrogenase activities were not significantly altered by either dietary restriction, diabetes or insulin treatment. These results demonstrate a dissociation between the action of insulin on hepatic glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity and its action to increase food intake.Abbreviations NADP+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.49 Glucose 6-P dehydrogenase, GPD, D-glucose-6-phosphate - NADP+ 2-oxidoreductase (decarboxylating), EC 1.1.1.44 phosphogluconate dehydrogenase, PGD, 6-phospho-D-gluconate  相似文献   

10.
Modification of two SH-groups in the molecule of formate dehydrogenase by dithiobisnitrobenzoate or to dacetamide results in the enzyme inactivation. Coenzymes, but not the substrate, protect the enzyme against the inactivation. NAD in the presence of potassium azide completely preserves the enzyme activity. Two SH-groups per enzyme molecule are protected from modification. The Km values for partially inactivated formate dehydrogenase remain constant for both substrates. The enzyme with modified SH-groups does not bind conezymes. The pH-dependence of the inactivation rate reveals the ionizable group with pK 9.6 (25 degrees C). The involvement of essential SH-groups in coenzyme binding is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
1. The inactivation of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate in phosphate buffer, pH8, at 10 degrees C was investigated. Activity declines to a minimum value determined by the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate concentration. The maximum inactivation in a single treatment is 75%. This limit appears to be set by the ratio of the first-order rate constants for interconversion of inactive covalently modified enzyme and a readily dissociable non-covalent enzyme-modifier complex. 2. Reactivation was virtually complete on 150-fold dilution: first-order analysis yielded an estimate of the rate constant (0.164min-1), which was then used in the kinetic analysis of the forward inactivation reaction. This provided estimates for the rate constant for conversion of non-covalent complex into inactive enzyme (0.465 min-1) and the dissociation constant of the non-covalent complex (2.8 mM). From the two first-order constants, the minimum attainable activity in a single cycle of treatment may be calculated as 24.5%, very close to the observed value. 3. Successive cycles of modification followed by reduction with NaBH4 each decreased activity by the same fraction, so that three cycles with 3.6 mM-pyridoxal 5'-phosphate decreased specific activity to about 1% of the original value. The absorption spectrum of the enzyme thus treated indicated incorporation of 2-3 mol of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate per mol of subunit, covalently bonded to lysine residues. 4. NAD+ and NADH protected the enzyme completely against inactivation by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, but ethanol and acetaldehyde were without effect. 5. Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate used as an inhibitor in steady-state experiments, rather than as an inactivator, was non-competitive with respect to both NADH and acetaldehyde. 6. The partially modified enzyme (74% inactive) showed unaltered apparent Km values for NAD+ and ethanol, indicating that modified enzyme is completely inactive, and that the residual activity is due to enzyme that has not been covalently modified. 7. Activation by methylation with formaldehyde was confirmed, but this treatment does not prevent subsequent inactivation with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. Presumably different lysine residues are involved. 8. It is likely that the essential lysine residue modified by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate is involved either in binding the coenzymes or in the catalytic step. 9. Less detailed studies of yeast alcohol dehydrogenase suggest that this enzyme also possesses an essential lysine residue.  相似文献   

12.
The steady-state kinetics of human erythrocyte glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (D-glucose-6-phosphate: NADP+ 1-oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.49) dimers were studied by initial rate measurement. These experiments gave intersecting double-reciprocal plots suggesting a ternary complex mechanism with a Km for NADP and glucose 6-phosphate of 11 microM and 43 microM, respectively. These studies were combined with rate measurements in the presence of one product (NADPH), dead-end inhibitors, as well as alternative substrates. The inhibition by NADPH was found to be competitive with respect to both substrates. Alternate substrates experiments gave linear double-reciprocal plots over a wide range of substrate concentrations. The results suggest that the dimeric enzyme follows either a random or a Theorell-Chance mechanism.  相似文献   

13.
Dihydrodiol dehydrogenase from pig liver was inactivated by diethylpyrocarbonate (DEP) and by rose bengal-sensitized photooxidation. The DEP inactivation was reversed by hydroxylamine and the absorption spectrum of the inactivated enzyme indicated that both histidine and tyrosine residues were carbethoxylated. The rates of inactivation by DEP and by photooxidation were dependent on pH, showing the involvement of a group with a pKa of 6.4. The kinetics of inactivation and spectrophotometric quantification of the modified residues suggested that complete inactivation was caused by modification of one histidine residue per active site. The inactivation by the two modifications was partially prevented by either NADP(H) or the combination of NADP+ and substrate, and completely prevented in the presence of both NADP+ and a competitive inhibitor which binds to the enzyme-NADP+ binary complex. The DEP-modified enzyme caused the same blue shift and enhancement of NADPH fluorescence as did the native enzyme, suggesting that the modified histidine is not in the coenzyme-binding site of the enzyme. The results suggest the presence of essential histidine residues in the catalytic region of the active site of pig liver dihydrodiol dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

14.
F Thomé  D B Pho  A Olomucki 《Biochimie》1985,67(2):249-252
Bromopyruvate, an analogue of pyruvate, one of the substrates of octopine dehydrogenase, was tested as an inhibitor of the enzyme. Provided both the coenzyme and the second substrate, arginine, were present, bromopyruvate rapidly inactivated the enzyme. This inactivation was irreversible, obeyed pseudo-first order kinetics and exhibited a rate saturation effect. Pyruvate protected the enzyme against inactivation by bromopyruvate and these compounds competed for the same site. Bromopyruvate also behaved as a true substrate for the enzyme. This reagent thus exhibits the kinetic characteristics of a good affinity label for octopine dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

15.
Rabbit muscle glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GPD) and myokinase (MK) were rapidly inactivated by a reactive AMP analog, N6-(p-bromoacetaminobenzyl)-AMP, under mild conditions. Complete inactivation was observed when 4 and 0.3 mol of the reagent with respect to enzyme were reacted with GPD and MK, respectively. The inactivation of both enzymes were favored at higher pH and the enzymes were protected by addition of adenine nucleotide substrate. Modified GPD or MK had no affinity for AMP-Sepharose, in contrast to the native enzymes. From these results, the inactivation of GPD and MK by the reactive AMP analog can be regarded as an affinity labeling. The posibility that the present AMP analog may be used as a general affinity labeling reagent for various adenine nucleotide-related enzymes is discussed based on the results obtained.  相似文献   

16.
The ontogeny of phosphogluconate dehydrogenase in Japanese quails and chicken-quail hybrids was determined by vertical starch gel electrophoresis of pooled early embryos. The enzyme of maternal origin was found to be present at all stages of development. Paternal phosphogluconate dehydrogenase in pure quails was detected as early as the fourth hour of incubation, whereas that in chicken-quail hybrids was not observed until the eighth hour. Since embryonic development up to the day of hatching was generally retarded in chicken-quail hybrids when compared to pure quails, it was concluded that the embryonic gene coding for phosphogluconate dehydrogenase was expressed at the same stage of development in both quails and hybrids. The ontogeny of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase in chicken-quail hybrids was compared to that of phosphogluconate dehydrogenase. The paternal form of both enzymes first appeared at the eighth hour of incubation, indicating that these two functionally related genes coding for the corresponding enzymes were probably activated at the same time in development.  相似文献   

17.
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides is irreversibly inactivated by the 2,3'-dialdehyde of NADP+ (oNADP+) in the absence of substrate. The inactivation is first order with respect to NADP+ concentration and follows saturation kinetics, indicating that the enzyme initially forms a reversible complex with the inhibitor followed by covalent modification (KI = 1.8 mM). NADP+ and NAD+ protect the enzyme from inactivation by oNADP+. The pK of inactivation is 8.1. oNADP+ is an effective coenzyme in assays of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (Km = 200 microM). Kinetic evidence and binding studies with [14C] oNADP+ indicate that one molecule of oNADP+ binds per subunit of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase when the enzyme is completely inactivated. The interaction between oNADP+ and the enzyme does not generate a Schiff's base, or a conjugated Schiff's base, but the data are consistent with the formation of a dihydroxymorpholino derivative.  相似文献   

18.
A protease from Tetrahymena pyriformis inactivated eight of nine commercially available enzymes tested, including lactate deyhdrogenase, isocitrate dehydrogenase (TPN-specific), glucose-6 phosphate dehydrogenase, D-amino acid oxidase, fumarase, pyruvate kinase, hexokinase, and citrate synthase. Urate oxidase was not inactivated. Inactivation occurred at neutral pH, was prevented by inhibitors of the protease, and followed first order kinetics. In those cases tested, inactivation was enhanced by mercaptoethanol. Most of the enzyme-inactivating activity was due to a protease of molecular weight 25,000 that eluted from DEAE-Sephadex at 0.3 M KCl. A second protease of this molecular weight, which was not retained by the gel, inactivated only isocitrate dehydrogenase and D-amino acid oxidase. These two proteases could also be distinguished by temperature and inhibitor sensitivity. Two other protease peaks obtained by DEAE-Sephadex chromatography had little or no no enzyme inactivating activity, while another attacked only D-amino acid oxidase. At least six of the enzymes could be protected from proteolytic inactivation by various ligands. Isocitrates dehydrogenase was protected by isocitrate, TPN, or TPNH, glucose-6-dehydrogenase by glucose-6-P or TPN, pyruvate kinase by phosphoenolypyruvate or ADP, hexokinase by glucose, and fumarase by a mixture of fumarate and malate. Lactate dehdrogenase was not protected by either of its substrates of coenzymes. Citrate synthase was probably protected by oxalacetate. Our data suggest that the protease or proteases discussed here may participate in the inactivation or degradation of a least some enzymes in Tetrahymena. Since the inactivation occurs at neutral pH, this process could be regulated by variations in the cellular levels of substrates, coenzymes, or allosteric regulators resulting form changes in growth conditions or growth state. Such a mechanism would permit the selective retention of enzymes of metabolically active pathways.  相似文献   

19.
Rat ovarian 20 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase plays a pivotal role in leuteolysis and parturition by catalysing the reduction of progesterone to give the progestationally inactive steroid 20 alpha-hydroxyprogesterone. Putative mechanism based inhibitors of this enzyme were synthesized as potential progestational maintaining agents, including the epimeric allylic alcohol pair 3 beta-hydroxy-alpha-vinyl-5 alpha-androstane-17 beta-methanol and the related vinyl ketone 1-(3 beta-hydroxy-5 alpha-androstan-17 beta-yl)-2-propen-1-one. The vinyl ketone inactivates rat ovarian 20 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, semi-purified by poly(L-lysine)-agarose column chromatography, in a rapid time-dependent manner. Analysis of the pseudo-first-order inactivation plots gave a Ki of 2.0 microM for the inhibitor and a t1/2 for the enzyme of 20 s at saturation. These data indicate that the vinyl ketone is a potent and efficient inactivator of the ovarian dehydrogenase. Neither dialysis in the presence or absence of a competing nucleophile nor gel filtration reserves the inactivation, suggesting that a stable covalent bond is formed between the enzyme and steroid ligand. Both substrates (20 alpha-hydroxyprogesterone and NADP+) protect the enzyme from inactivation; moreover, initial velocity measurements in the presence of saturating concentrations of both substrates indicate that the vinyl ketone can behave as a competitive inhibitor, yielding a Ki value identical with that obtained in the inactivation experiments. Our results imply that the vinyl ketone is an active-site directed alkylating agent. By contrast the allylic alcohol pair 3 beta-hydroxy-alpha-vinyl-5 alpha-androstane-17 beta-methanol are neither substrates nor inhibitors of the ovarian enzyme and appear to be excluded from the catalytic site. The rapid inactivation observed with the vinyl ketone suggests that this compound may be useful as a progestational maintaining agent.  相似文献   

20.
Cell free extracts of Pseudomonas MS previously have been shown to carry out the synthesis of a novel amino acid, N-methylalanine (Kung, H.F., and Wagner, C. (1970) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 201, 513-516). An enzyme has been isolated from this organism which is responsible for the synthesis of N-methylalanine. The stoichiometry of the reaction catalyzed by this enzyme leads to the following formulation: Methylamine + pyruvate + NADPH + H-+ yields N-methylalanine + NADP-+ + H2O. This enzyme has been physically separated from alanine dehydrogenase, which is also present in these extracts. This new enzyme has been named N-methylalanine dehydrogenase. It has been purified to near homogeneity as judged by disc gel electrophoresis. Gel filtration chromatography showed that N-methylalanine dehydrogenase has an apparent molecular weight of 77,000, while electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate gave rise to a single band with a molecular weight of approximately 36,500. The enzyme is optimally active in the pH range between 8.2 and 8.6. The apparent K-m values for pyruvate, NADPH, and methylamine, respectively, are 1-5 times 10 minus 2 M, 3-5 times 10 minus 5 M, and 7.5 times 10 minus 2 M.  相似文献   

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