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1.
The dinoflagellate community present during blooms of the fish killing dinoflagellate Cochlodinium polykrikoides was characterized by DNA melting curve analysis and direct sequencing of the SSU rDNA amplified from environmental sample extracts. PCR amplification of genomic DNA from Gaedo water samples using dinoflagellate-specific SSU rDNA primers yielded 280 clones, which were screened by closed tube PCR-melting curve analysis targeting a region of the SSU rDNA, enabling high throughput analysis. Twenty-eight clones producing distinct melting curve patterns were sequenced, and their phylogenetic information revealed that C. polykrikoides co-occurred with morphologically similar species including Gymnodinium impudicum and Gymnodinium catenatum. Temporal variations of C. polykrikoides and G. impudicum abundances in South Sea were also examined by species-specific real-time TaqMan-based PCR probes developed in this study. C. polykrikoides- and G. impudicum-specific real-time PCR probes were designed targeting the internal transcribed spacer 2 ribosomal DNA region. The probe specificity was confirmed by testing against related dinoflagellates and verified by sequencing PCR products from environmental samples. The real-time PCR assays showed that C. polykrikoides cell densities peaked in August at 16,928 cells mL?1, while G. impudicum was present at low abundances (below 25 cells mL?1). Our amplified rDNA melting curve protocol provides a facile method for the characterization of the dinoflagellate community, and the real-time PCR assay could be an alternative method for rapid and sensitive enumeration of harmful dinoflagellates in the marine environment.  相似文献   

2.
A fragment of the large-subunit ribosomal DNA gene (LSU rDNA) from Chilean Alexandrium catenella clones isolated from two different geographic regions (XI and XII) was amplified by PCR and the products cloned and sequenced. Based on the analysis of the PCR products it is possible to distinguish two strains of A. catenella, denominated strain type 1 (a single PCR product band) and strain type 2 (two PCR product bands). These two strains proliferate in both, the XI and XII regions. Only in the XI region, there is evidence that they bloom simultaneously. The LSU rDNA sequence analysis indicate that the Chilean A. catenella isolated clones are more related to the North American ribotype-Western subribotype.  相似文献   

3.
We have developed a useful method to obtain light and scanning electron micrographs of a single dinoflagellate cell, prior to applying the cell to the single cell PCR technique. This method allows us to record detailed morphological information on any cell used for sequencing, which can be extremely important for the future identification of the organism, because cells used for single cell PCR usually cannot be retained. Furthermore, by applying multiple sets of PCR primers at the same time, we have successfully amplified and sequenced multiple genes (and DNA regions) simultaneously, even from a single cell. In this note, we demonstrate the methods of this technique by using two different types of dinoflagellates, i.e. an armored freshwater species, Peridinium willei Huitfeld‐Kaas, and an unarmored marine species, Akashiwo sanguinea (Hirasaka) Hansen and Moestrup. By rotating the cell, photographs of all aspects of a single cell can be taken even using the SEM. The genes and DNA regions sequenced in these examples include a region of the ribosomal DNA (SSU, ITS1, 5.8S, ITS2, and part of the LSU) as well as part of the mitochondrial DNA‐encoded gene, cox1. This technique can be applied to both photosynthetic and heterotrophic dinoflagellates and will accelerate biodiversity studies.  相似文献   

4.
Cellular morphology and the phylogenetic position of a new unarmored photosynthetic dinoflagellate Cochlodinium fulvescens Iwataki, Kawami et Matsuoka sp. nov. were examined by light microscopy and molecular phylogenetic analyses based on partial large subunit ribosomal DNA (LSU rDNA) and small subunit ribosomal DNA (SSU rDNA) sequences. The cells of C. fulvescens closely resemble C. polykrikoides, one of the most harmful red tide forming dinoflagellates, due to it possessing a cingulum encircling the cell approximately twice, a spherical nucleus positioned in the anterior part of the cell and an eyespot‐like orange pigmented body located in the dorsal side of the epicone, as well as formation of cell‐chains. However, this species is clearly distinguished from C. polykrikoides based on several morphological characteristics, namely, cell size, shape of chloroplasts and the position of narrow sulcus situated in the cell surface. The sulcus of C. fulvescens is located at the intermediate position of the cingulum in the dorsal side, whereas that of C. polykrikoides is situated immediately beneath the cingulum. LSU rDNA phylogenies indicated that C. fulvescens is clearly distinct from, but closely related to C. polykrikoides among dinoflagellates.  相似文献   

5.
The 5.8S ribosomal RNA (rDNA) gene and flanking internal transcribed spacers (ITS1 and ITS2)from 9 isolates of Alexandrium catenella (Whedon and Kofoid) Taylor, 11 isolates of A. tamarense (Lebour) Taylor, and single isolates of A. affine (Inoue et Fukuyo) Balech, A. insuetum Balech, and A. pseudogonyaulax (Biecheler) Horiguchi ex Yuki et Fukuyo comb. nov. from various locations in Japan were amplified using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and subjected to restriction fragment-length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis. PCR products from all strains were approximately 610 bp, inclusive of a limited region of the 18S and 28S rRNA coding regions. RFLP analysis using four restriction enzymes revealed six distinct classes of rDNA (“ITS types”). Restriction patterns of A. catenella were uniform at the intra-specific level and clearly distinguishable from those of A. tamarense. The patterns associated with A. tamarense (“tamarense group”) were also uniform except for one strain, WKS-1. Some restriction fragments from WKS-1 were in common with those of A. catenella or A. tamarense, whereas some were distinct from all Alexandrium species tested. Alexandrium affine, A. insuetum, and A. pseudogonyaulax carry unique ITS types. The ITSs of the “tamarense group” exhibit sequence heterogeneity. In contrast, the ITSs of all other isolates (including WKS-1) appear homogeneous. RFLP analysis of the 5.8S rDNA and flanking ITSs regions from Alexandrium species reveals useful taxonomic and genetic markers at the species and/or population levels.  相似文献   

6.
We present a comprehensive protocol for extracting DNA from egg membranes and other internal debris recovered from the interior of blown museum bird eggs. A variety of commercially available DNA extraction methods were found to be applicable. DNA sequencing of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) products for a 176‐bp fragment of mitochondrial DNA was successful for most egg samples (> 78%) even though the amount of DNA extracted (mean = 14.71 ± 4.55 ng/µL) was significantly less than that obtained for bird skin samples (mean = 67.88 ± 4.77 ng/µL). For PCR and sequencing of snipe (Gallinago) DNA, we provide eight new primers for the ‘DNA barcode’ region of COI mtDNA. In various combinations, the primers target a range of PCR products sized from 72 bp to the full ‘barcode’ of 751 bp. Not all possible combinations were tested with archive snipe DNA, but we found a significantly better success rate of PCR amplification for a shorter 176‐bp target compared with a larger 288‐bp fragment (67% vs. 39%). Finally, we explored the feasibility of whole genome amplification (WGA) for extending the use of archive DNA in PCR and sequencing applications. Of two WGA approaches, a PCR‐based method was found to be able to amplify whole genomic DNA from archive skins and eggs from museum bird collections. After WGA, significantly more archive egg samples produced visible PCR products on agarose (56.9% before WGA vs. 79.0% after WGA). However, overall sequencing success did not improve significantly (78.8% compared with 83.0%).  相似文献   

7.
The armoured dinoflagellate Peridinium is widely distributed in freshwater environments worldwide and contains a large number of species. Their identity, however, has remained elusive, since the small cells tend to be morphologically similar. To help resolve this, a sequence-based diagnostics for uncultured Peridinium cells from field samples was applied, using single-cell PCR and direct DNA sequencing of the PCR products. Single cells were isolated randomly from field samples, and PCR successfully amplified the target rDNA regions from the crude lysates. Phylogenetic trees showed that all the cells were strongly grouped into the same clade (> 99% bootstrap value), including the previously identified P. bipes f. occultatum, and apparently separated from relatives such as P. cinctum, P. volzii and P. willei. All 17 isolates were genotypically identified as P. bipes f. occultatum, based on over than 99% of sequence similarities, and the organism was responsible for water blooms at different seasons in Korean waters. The sequence-based typing could clearly resolve P. bipes f. occultatum from the various Peridinium cells, and that the method is accurate and more labor-saving than the conventional method to monitor Peridinium species. This protocol may be useful for the application of molecular tools to uncultured Peridinium cells.  相似文献   

8.
Alexandrium catenella (Whedon et Kofoid) Balech, a toxic dinoflagellate, is a bloom-forming planktonic species in cold water coastal regions. It produces strong paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) toxins which are transmitted via tainted shellfish. These toxins can affect humans, other mammals, fish and birds. In this study, polyclonal antiserum against A. catenella was produced, and a competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (cELISA) was developed to detect A. catenella. The antiserum against A. catenella showed good specificity, the linear detection range was relatively large, between 38 and 600,000 cells. In addition, specific probes were designed to target the small subunit ribosomal RNA (SSU rRNA) of A. catenella, and quantitative sandwich hybridization integrated with a nuclease protection assay (NPA-SH) was established in order to identify and quantify A. catenella. The NPA-SH assay did not show good specificity as well as cELISA, by which A. catenella and A. tamarense could not be distinguished. Samples in different cell growth phases were analyzed with cELISA and NPA-SH. The results showed that the cell concentration calculated by cELISA was very similar with microscopy, while that of NPA-SH was sometimes higher than that of microscopy, especially in log phase. Comparing the two methods, both assays allow rapid identification of A. catenella without time-consuming microscopy when multiple sites need to be considered in routine monitoring. Meanwhile, cELISA was more specific and accurate in detection of A. catenella than NPA-SH.  相似文献   

9.
Although the molecular data currently used for identifying dinoflagellates are generally limited to nuclear ribosomal RNA genes, some dinoflagellates cannot be identified by their gene sequence or morphotype, suggesting that additional effective molecular makers are required. We report here a novel species-specific marker on the mitochondrial (mt) genome of dinoflagellates belonging to six Alexandrium spp., namely, A. tamarense, A. catenella, A. tamiyavanichii, A. affine, A. hiranoi, and A. pseudogonyaulax. This new mt marker was able to clearly differentiate these six species. PCR analysis using a primer set for the A. tamarense-specific sequence confirmed that this sequence is conserved in A. tamarense strains but not in other dinoflagellate species. We also sequenced the mt genome containing the developed molecular marker using a single cell from a field sample, which suggests that this marker is a powerful tool for identifying unculturable dinoflagellates. The sequenced molecular region was also used to identify Alexandrium-like cells isolated from environmental seawater as A. tamarense and A. affine.  相似文献   

10.
A Real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay was designed and evaluated for rapid detection and quantification of the toxic dinoflagellates Alexandrium catenella and A. tamarense, which cause paralytic shellfish poisoning. Two sets of PCR primers and fluorogenic probes targeting these two species were derived from the sequence of 28S ribosomal DNA. PCR specificity was examined in closely related Alexandrium spp. and many other microalgae. A. catenellaspecific primers and probe detected the PCR amplification only from A. catenella strains, and nonspecific signals were not detected from any microalgae. Also, A. tamarensespecific primers and probe also detected the targeted species, suggesting the strict species specificity of each PCR. This assay could detect one cell of each species, showing its high sensitivity. Moreover, using the developed standard curves, A. tamarense and A. catenella could be quantified in agreement with the quantification by optical microscopy. The performance characteristics of species specificity, sensitivity, and rapidity suggest that this method is applicable to the monitoring of the toxic A. tamarense and A. catenella.  相似文献   

11.
The 5.8S ribosomal RNA gene (rDNA) and flanking internal transcribed spacers 1 and 2 (ITS1 and ITS2) from 7 isolates of Alexandrium catenella (Wedon et Kofoid) Taylor, 13 isolates of A. tamarense (Lebour) Balech, 2 isolates of A. affine (Fukuyo et Inoue) Balech, and single isolates of A. fundyense Balech, A. insuetum Balech, and A. pseudogonyaulax (Biecheler) Horiguchi ex Yuki et Fukuyo comb. nov. from Japan, Thailand, and the United States were amplified using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR), sequenced, and subjected to phylogenetic analysis. The sequences ranged from 518 to 535 base pairs (bp) exclusive of the 18S and 28S rDNA coding regions. Sequence comparisons revealed seven divergent “ITS types” designated as follows: 1) catenella type, 2) tamarense type, 3) WKS-1 type, 4) Thai type, 5) affine type, 6) insuetum type, and 7) pseudogonyaulax type. Isolates of the tamarense type from various locations in Japan and the United States and of A. fundyense from the United States were closely related to each other and were clearly divergent from isolates of A. tamarense WKS-1 (WKS-I type) or A. tamarense CU-15 (Thai type). These latter two strains carried unique ITS types, although they were not distinguishable from isolates of the tamarense type by morphological criteria. Distance values between isolates of the tamarense type and the WKS-1 or Thai type were quite high (about 0.21 and 0.39, respectively). Seven isolates of A. catenella from Japan (catenella type) clearly diverged from the other ITS types already mentioned. Distance values between isolates of the catenella type were extremely low (<0.01), whereas distance values of ITS between the catenella type and the tamarense, WKS-1, or Thai type were 0.17, 0.18, and 0.40, respectively. Isolates of A. affine, A. insuetum, and A. pseudogonyaulax all carried unique ITS types. The ITSs of the tamarense type exhibited two distinct ITS sets, the “A gene” and the “B gene.” The two sequences occurred in a 1:1 ratio in PCR products. In contrast, the ITSs of all other isolates appeared homogeneous. Sequence comparisons also showed that the variations in the 3′ end of ITS1 (150-177 bp) were low within each ITS type but extremely high between ITS types. The number of different nucleotides among the seven Alexandrium types in this 28-bp region is more than 10. High diversity of this region may facilitate the design of DNA probes specific for each ITS type/species of Alexandrium.  相似文献   

12.
In a previous study large-subunit ribosomal RNA gene (LSU rDNA) sequences from the marine dinoflagellates Alexandrium tamarense (Lebour) Balech, A. catenella (Whedon et Kofoid) Balech, A. fundyense Balech, A. affine (Fukuyo et Inoue) Balech, A. minutum Halim, A. lusitanicum Balech, and A. andersoni Balech were compared to assess inter- and intraspecific relationships. Many cultures compared in that study contained more than one class of LSU rDNA. Sequencing pooled clones of rDNA from single cultures revealed length heterogeneities and sequence ambiguities. This complicated sequence comparisons because multiple rDNA clones from a single culture had to be sequenced individually to document the different classes of molecules present in that culture. A further complication remained as to whether or not the observed intraculture sequence variations were reliable genetic markers or were instead artifacts of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification, cloning, and/or sequencing methods employed. The goals of the present study were to test the accuracy of Alexandrium LSU rDNA sequences using restriction fragment-length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis and to devise RFLP-based assays for discriminating among representatives of that group. Computer-assisted examination of the sequences allowed us to identify a set of restriction enzymes that were predicted to reveal species, strain, and intraculture LSU rDNA heterogeneities. All groups identified by sequencing were revealed independently and repeatedly by RFLP analysis of PCR-amplified material. Five ambiguities and one length heterogeneity, each of which ascribes a unique group of Alexandrium species or strains, were confirmed by restriction digests. Observed intraculture LSU rDNA heterogeneities were not artifacts of cloning and sequencing but were instead a good representation of the spectrum of molecules amplified during PCR reactions. Intraculture LSU rDNA heterogeneities thus serve as unique genetic markers for particular strains of Alexandrium, particularly those of A. tamarense, A. catenella, and A. fundyense. However, some of these “signature heterogeneities” represented a smaller portion of PCR product than was expected given acquired sequences. Other deviations from predicted RFLP patterns included incomplete digestions and appearance of spurious products. These observations indicate that the diversity of sequences in PCR product pools were greater than that observed by cloning and sequencing. The RFLP tests described here are useful tools for characterizing Alexandrium LSU rDNA to define the evolutionary lineage of cultures and are applicable at a fraction of the time, cost, and labor required for sequencing.  相似文献   

13.
Saprophytic bacteria in cultures of the marine dinoflagellate Alexandrium catenella were removed to assess their effect on growth and paralytic shellfish poisoning toxin production of this dinoflagellate. The actual axenic status was demonstrated by the lack of observable bacteria both immediately after treatment and following extended incubation in the absence of antibiotics. Bacteria were measured by counting CFU and also by epifluorescence microscopy and PCR amplification of bacterial 16S-23S spacer ribosomal DNA to detect noncultivable bacteria. Removal of bacteria did not have any effect on the growth of the dinoflagellate except for the inhibition of A. catenella disintegration after reaching the stationary phase. Toxicity was determined in dinoflagellate cell extracts by different methods: high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC); an electrophysiological test called the Electrotest, which measures the inhibition of saxitoxin-sensitive Na+ channels expressed in a cell line; and a mouse bioassay, which measures the toxic effect on the whole mammal neuromuscular system. A lower toxicity of the dinoflagellates in axenic culture was observed by these three methods, though the difference was significant only by the mouse bioassay and HPLC methods. Altogether the results indicate that axenic cultures of A. catenella are able to produce toxin, though the total toxicity is probably diminished to about one-fifth of that in nonaxenic cultures.  相似文献   

14.
The biodiversity of protistan assemblages present in microhabitats of the Ross Sea, Antarctica, was examined using molecular biological methods to obtain a greater understanding of the genetic diversity present. Sequencing of 18S clone libraries indicated genetically diverse collections of organisms in the water column, ice, and meltwater layer (slush), but a single small subunit ribosomal DNA (srDNA) sequence type dominated clone libraries (>30%) from seawater and slush samples taken within the ice pack of this ecosystem. The BLAST searches indicated that this dominant clone was derived from a dinoflagellate, and that it shared sequence similarity (97.6%–98.3%) with both Karenia and Karlodinium species. Phylogenetic analyses based on small subunit ribosomal gene sequences supported its placement as a sister group to these taxa, and suggested that it represented a novel genus. The dinoflagellate was successfully recovered in culture, and morphological analyses have shown that it contains chloroplasts, is gymnodinoid, appears not to have thecal plates, and has an apical groove and sulcal structure that confirm its placement as a relative of the Karenia/Karlodinium group. The abundance of this phylotype in natural samples was confirmed by quantitative PCR analyses of water and slush communities, and suggests that this dinoflagellate can be a major constituent of the protistan assemblages of some Antarctic microhabitats of the Ross Sea.  相似文献   

15.
Species-specific primers were constructed for Scrippsiella trochoidea, Protoceratium reticulatum and Lingulodinium polyedrum, which all are common cosmopolitan cyst forming dinoflagellates. The designed primers amplified a product of expected size from cultured planktonic cells of the three species, and did not yield any product with a wide range of other algal species used as negative controls. The PCR method for detection and identification of dinoflagellate cysts from the three species was applied on field samples. Undisturbed surface sediment was collected along the southwest coast of India and the west coast of Sweden. DNA extract from sediment including DNA from dinoflagellate cysts could be obtained after repeated grinding with mortar and pestle under liquid nitrogen followed by microwave boiling. All sediment samples that contained any of the target species as confirmed by microscopy, were also positive for PCR. Field samples negative for any of the target species by microscopy, were also negative by PCR. Restriction enzyme digestion and/or DNA sequencing confirmed the specificity of all the PCR products from field samples. The yield of DNA from sediment extraction was low, and therefore nested PCR was necessary for accurate species-specific detection of the three species in most of the field samples.  相似文献   

16.
The extraction of high-quality genomic DNA for PCR amplification from sunflower (Helianthus annuus) and cotton (Gossypium spp.) is challenging because of the presence of polysaccharides, secondary metabolites, and polyphenolics in the tissues. A high-throughput DNA extraction protocol was needed in our laboratory for simple sequence repeats (SSR)-marker screening and other molecular analyses that do not require organic extraction steps of phenol or chloroform. Here we describe 2 improved highthroughput protocols for DNA extraction and in-PCR modification that result in successful PCR amplification of sunflower and cotton. While the sunflower DNA extraction protocol uses reducing agents such as sodium metabisulfite and dithiothreitol (DTT), the cotton protocol uses polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) in PCR reactions and reducing agents in the DNA extraction procedure.  相似文献   

17.
Taq DNA聚合酶具有反应速度快、温度作用范围广及良好的续进性等特点,可视为一种理想的DNA顺序分析酶。本文首先对非对称性PCR扩增过程中单、双链DNA产物的积累情况进行了分析,然后采用标记延伸二步法,对Taq DNA聚合酶的性质及影响因素进行分析。为进一步改进Taq DNA聚合酶测序的方法,本反应建立了“Klenow-型”的直接掺入标记同位素测序法,即在反应液中加入与标记核苷酸相应的一定浓度的冷dNTP。此法不但解决了二步法中引物后部分DNA顺序无法读出的缺点,而且简化了反应步骤,亦能得到令人满意的顺序分析结果,每次可读出至少400碱基的序列。  相似文献   

18.
Phylogenetic relationships among chain-forming Cochlodinium species, including the harmful red tide forming dinoflagellate Cochlodinium polykrikoides, were investigated using specimens collected from coastal waters of Canada, Hong Kong, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, México, Philippines, Puerto Rico, and USA. The phylogenetic tree inferred from partial (D1–D6 regions) large subunit ribosomal RNA gene (LSU rDNA) sequences clearly differentiated between C. polykrikoides and a recently described species, Cochlodinium fulvescens. Two samples collected from the Pacific coasts of North America (British Columbia, Canada and California, USA) having typical morphological characters of C. fulvescens such as the sulcus located in the intermediate region of the cingulum, were closely related to C. fulvescens from western Japan in the phylogenetic tree. Cochlodinium polykrikoides formed a monophyletic group positioned as a sister group of the C. fulvescens clade with three well-supported sub-clades. These three clades were composed of (1) East Asian, including specimens collected from Hong Kong, western Japan, and southern Korea, (2) Philippines, from Manila Bay, Philippines and Omura Bay, Japan, and (3) American/Malaysian, from the Atlantic coasts of USA, the Pacific coast of México, Puerto Rico, and Borneo Island, Malaysia. Each of these clades is considered to be a so-called “ribotype” representing the population inhabiting each region, which is distinguished based on ribosomal RNA gene sequences in the species despite similarities in their morphological characters.  相似文献   

19.
Peridinin‐containing dinoflagellates have small circular DNA molecules called minicircle DNAs, each of which encodes one, or occasionally a few, plastid proteins or ribosomal RNA. Dinoflagellate minicircle DNA is composed of two parts: a gene‐coding sequence and a non‐coding sequence that consists of several variable and core regions. The core regions are identical among the minicircle DNAs with different genes within a species or strain. Because such structure is very different from those of well known plastid DNAs, many functional and evolutionary questions have been raised for the minicircle DNAs, and several studies that focus on answering those questions are underway. However, the localization of minicircle DNA is still controversial: several lines of indirect evidence have implied plastid localization, whereas the nuclear localization of minicircle DNA has also been suggested in a species. In order to understand the evolution and function of minicircle DNA, it is important to know its precise localization. In this study, we sequenced two typical minicircle DNAs, one encodes psbA and the other encodes 23S rRNA genes, from an Amphidinium massartii strain (TM16). To determine the subcellular localization of these minicircle DNAs, we performed DNA‐targeted whole cell fluorescence in situ hybridization with A. massartii minicircle DNA‐specific probes and demonstrated that minicircle DNAs were present in plastids. This study provides the first direct evidence for the plastid localization of dinoflagellate minicircle DNAs.  相似文献   

20.
Predators influence the phenotype of prey through both natural selection and induction. We investigated the effects of grazers and nutrients on chain formation in a dinoflagellate, Cochlodinium polykrikoides, which forms dense blooms and has deleterious effects on marine ecosystems around the world. Field populations of C. polykrikoides formed longer chains than laboratory cultures without grazers. In the field, chain length of C. polykrikoides was positively correlated with the abundance of the copepod Acartia tonsa. Chain length of C. polykrikoides increased when exposed to live females of A. tonsa or its fresh (<24 h post-isolation) exudates for 48 h. These results suggest that dissolved chemical cues released by A. tonsa induce chain formation in C. polykrikoides. Ingestion rate of A. tonsa on four-cell chains of C. polykrikoides was lower than on single cells, suggesting that chain formation may be an effective anti-grazing defense. Finally, nutrient amendment experiments demonstrated that vitamins (B1, B7, and B12) increased the chain length of C. polykrikoides both singly and collectively, while trace metals and inorganic nutrients did not, showing that vitamins may also influence chain formation in this species.  相似文献   

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