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1.
delta-Aminolevulinic acid dehydratase (5-aminolevulinic acid hydro-lyase (adding 5-aminolevulinic acid and cyclizing), EC 4.2.1.24 purified from bovine liver in the presence of both SH-reducing reagent and zinc during the purification contained one zinc atom and eight SH groups/subunit. This preparation showed the full enzymatic activity even in the absence of thiol activator. It was found that two cysteine residues, one zinc atom and two histidine residues were involved in the active site. The enzyme was fullly active as long as two SH groups in the active site remained in the reduced form even in the absence of zinc. However, the enzymatic activity was completely lost, with a concomitant loss of bound zinc, upon oxidation of the SH groups to a disulfide bond, modification of SH groups with chemical reagents, or mercaptide formation by heavy metals. Thus, it is apparent that the activity depends on the essential SH groups. The zinc is not absolutely essential for the activity but may be required to prevent the essential SH groups from autooxidation by coordination. Binding experiments indicated that there was one binding site of zinc/subunit. Photooxidation of histidine residues diminished both enzymatic activity and bound zinc, suggesting that the histidine residues not only constituted the active site but also served as a possible ligand to zinc.  相似文献   

2.
Dimeric rat liver acid phosphatase P1 of Mr 92,000 is inactivated by p-chloromercuribenzoate and fluorescein mercuriacetate (FMA). The enzyme is protected against the mercurials by the substrate analogue Pi. The reaction with FMA is accompanied by changes in absorbance at 495 nm and in fluorescence emission at 520 nm that are characteristic of reaction of this compound with thiol groups. Titration of P1 with FMA monitored by spectrophotometry or by fluorimetry indicated that equivalence is reached at an FMA/P1 ratio of 3. Since FMA can act as a bifunctional reagent, it is likely that P1 contains either 3 or 6 reactive thiol groups per molecule. Analysis of FMA inactivation/modification data by a statistical method suggests that of 6 reactive thiol groups, 2 are essential so that there are probably 3 thiol groups per subunit, one of which is located at the active site. If the total thiol number is 3, analysis suggests 1 essential thiol per subunit.  相似文献   

3.
J W Ogilvie 《Biochemistry》1983,22(25):5915-5921
The reaction of the fluorescent affinity label 5'-[p-(fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl]-1,N6-ethenoadenosine with rabbit skeletal muscle phosphofructokinase results in an inactivation of the enzyme and in the covalent incorporation of up to one label/monomer. The substrates, MgATP and fructose 6-phosphate, each protect against inactivation of the enzyme, but neither diminishes the extent of covalent incorporation of the label, indicating that the inactivation is not the result of covalent incorporation of the label. Dithiothreitol reactivates the inactivated enzyme but does not reduce the extent of incorporation of the label. A determination of the number of free sulfhydryl groups on the enzyme as a function of the extent of inactivation by the reagent suggests that the inactivation is associated with the loss of two free sulfhydryl groups per phosphofructokinase monomer. The inactivation reaction appears to involve the reversible formation of an enzyme-reagent complex (Kd = 1.11 mM) prior to the conversion of the complex to inactive enzyme (k1 = 0.98 min-1). In view of the protection afforded by either substrate and the evidence suggesting the formation of an enzyme-reagent complex prior to inactivation, it would appear that the inactivation results from a reagent-mediated formation of a disulfide bond between two cysteinyl residues in close proximity, possibly in or near the catalytic site of the enzyme. The site of covalent attachment of the label appears to be the binding site specific for the activating adenine nucleotides cAMP, AMP, and ADP. The extent of covalent incorporation of the label at this site is diminished in the presence of cAMP, and phosphofructokinase modified at this site by this affinity label is no longer subject to activation by cAMP.  相似文献   

4.
Phosphoribosylpyrophosphate synthetase from Salmonella typhimurium contains four cysteine residues per subunit. Three of these react readily with 5, 5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB), forming an active derivative with kinetic and physical properties similar to the native enzyme, but one reacts only under denaturing conditions. Stoichiometric amounts of KMnO4 inactivate the DTNB-treated enzyme. The loss of activity is correlated with the oxidation of the remaining cysteinyl group to cysteic acid by KMnO4. Amino acid analysis indicates that no other residues are altered. The rate of inactivation of the enzyme is decreased 30-fold by saturatin g concentrations of the substrate ATP. Inorganic phosphate also protects substantially against KMnO4. Titration of the native enzyme with limiting amounts of KMnO4 shows that the sulfhydryl group essential for activity competes effectively with the other sulfhydryl groups for KMnO4. These results suggest that the essential sulfhydryl group is near the active site, and that KMnO4, a phosphate analogue, can act as an active site-directed reagent at the ATP binding site of the enzyme. The KMnO4-oxidized enzyme is more highly aggregated than untreated enzyme and fails to bind ATP appreciably.  相似文献   

5.
Rat liver glycine methyltransferase is inactivated by 5'-p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyladenosine (FSBA) in a pseudo-first order fashion at pH 7.5. The addition of dithiothreitol (20 mM) to the reaction mixture results in partial restoration of enzyme activity. A semilog plot of residual activity after dithiothreitol reactivation versus time is also linear, indicating that at least two essential residues are present on the enzyme and the modification of either of which causes total loss of activity. The inactivation is accompanied by incorporation of the radiolabel from adenine-labeled FSBA, but the amount of radioactivity fixed is not altered upon treatment with dithiothreitol. From this fact and the stoichiometry between the loss of dithiothreitol-sensitive activity and the number of sulfhydryl groups disappeared, it is suggested that the dithiothreitol-sensitive inactivation is the consequence of the FSBA-mediated formation of a disulfide between two sulfhydryl groups in close proximity. Although 4 mol of reagent are covalently bound per enzyme subunit, the kinetics of modification and inactivation show that the reaction at 1 residue, which is identified as tyrosine, is responsible for the dithiothreitol-insensitive inactivation. The substrate S-adenosylmethionine provides complete protection against both types of inactivation, but the dithiothreitol-insensitive inactivation is protected much more effectively with a Kd value comparable to the Km value. This suggests that the tyrosine is located at or near the active site of the methyltransferase.  相似文献   

6.
C T Grubmeyer  W R Gray 《Biochemistry》1986,25(17):4778-4784
Salmonella typhimurium L-histidinol dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.23), a four-electron dehydrogenase, was inactivated by an active-site-directed modification reagent, 7-chloro-4-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazole (NBD-Cl). The inactivation followed pseudo-first-order kinetics and was prevented by low concentrations of the substrate L-histidinol or by the competitive inhibitors histamine and imidazole. The observed rate saturation kinetics for inactivation suggest that NBD-Cl binds to the enzyme noncovalently before covalent inactivation occurs. The UV spectrum of the inactivated enzyme showed a peak at 420 nm, indicative of sulfhydryl modification. Stoichiometry experiments indicated that full inactivation was correlated with modification of 1.5 sulfhydryl groups per subunit of enzyme. By use of a substrate protection scheme, it was shown that 0.5 sulfhydryl per enzyme subunit was neither protected against NBD-Cl modification by L-histidinol nor essential for activity. Modification of the additional 1.0 sulfhydryl caused complete loss of enzyme activity and was prevented by L-histidinol. Pepsin digestion of NBD-modified enzyme was used to prepare labeled peptides under conditions that prevented migration of the NBD group. HPLC purification of the peptides was monitored at 420 nm, which is highly selective for NBD-labeled cysteine residues. By amino acid sequencing of the major peptides, it was shown that the reagent modified primarily Cys-116 and Cys-377 and that the presence of L-histidinol gave significant protection of Cys-116. The presence of a cysteine residue in the histidinol binding site is consistent with models in which formation and subsequent oxidation of a thiohemiacetal occurs as an intermediate step in the overall reaction.  相似文献   

7.
Ribulose-5-phosphate kinase from spinach was rapidly inactivated by N-bromoacetylethanolamine phosphate in a bimolecular fashion with a k2 of 2.0 M-1 S-1 at 2 degrees C and pH 8.0. Ribulose 5-phosphate had little effect on the rate of inactivation, whereas complete protection was afforded by ADP or ATP. The extent of incorporation as determined with 14C-labeled reagent was about 1 molar equivalent per subunit in the presence of ATP with full retention of enzymatic activity, and about 2 molar equivalents per subunit in the completely inactivated enzyme. Amino acid analyses of enzyme derivatized with 14C-labeled reagent reveal that all of the covalently incorporated reagent was associated with cysteinyl residues. Hence two sulfhydryls are reactive, but the inactivation correlates with alkylation of one cysteinyl residue at or near the enzyme's nucleotide binding site. The kinase was also extremely sensitive to the sulfhydryl reagents 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) and N-ethyl-maleimide. The reactive sulfhydryl groups are likely those generated by reduction of a disulfide during activation.  相似文献   

8.
N-Bromoacetylethanolamine phosphate rapidly and irreversibly inactivates rabbit muscle phosphoglycerate mutase. At high molar ratios of reagent to enzyme, loss of activity (both mutase and phosphatase) approximates pseudo-first order kinetics. A rate-saturation effect is observed with half-maximal rate of inactivation occurring at 0.32 mM reagent, a value close to the Km for 3-phosphoglyceric acid. This datum and the dissociation constant of the 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate-enzyme complex, as determined from inactivation kinetics in the presence of the bisphosphate, suggest that the reagent reacts at the substrate binding site. Inactivation results from the covalent incorporation of about 0.8 mol of reagent/mol of catalytic subunit as determined with 14C-labeled reagent. Incorporation is negligible in the presence of substrate and is reduced 8-fold in the presence of 6 M urea. From amino acid analyses on acid hydrolysates of the inactivated enzyme, we have identified a sulfhydryl group as the site of alkylation. A peptide containing the essential sulfhydryl group has been isolated from a tryptic digest of the enzyme inactivated with labeled reagent; its amino acid composition is Trp1, Lys1,-Cys(Cm)1, Asp1, Ser1, Glu2, Gly1, Ala1, Leu1, Phe2.  相似文献   

9.
Interaction of pantetheinase with sulfhydryl reagents and disulfides   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The effect of many thiol reagents and disulfides on pantetheinase (E.C. 3.5.1.-; pantetheine hydrolase) was studied in the presence or absence of S-pantetheine-3-pyruvate as substrate. Iodoacetamide, iodoacetate, bromopyruvate and N-ethylmaleimide irreversibly inactivate the enzyme at very different rates. Inactivation constants, corrected for the different reactivity of halogeno derivatives with non-protein thiols, suggest the presence of an essential sulfhydryl group in the enzyme and a negatively charged environment near this group. p-Chloromercuribenzoate is the most effective inhibitor; 2-nitro-5-thiocyanobenzoate, o-iodosobenzoate and hydrogen peroxide give a biphasic inhibition pattern, indicating the existence of two sulfhydryl groups whose modification affects activity. Organic arsenicals decrease activity to about 50%. Neutral and positively charged disulfides are effective inhibitors. Substrate protects the enzyme from inactivation, except in the case of negatively charged disulfides, where the presence of substrate enhances the inhibitory effect. Titration with Ellman's reagent or 4,4'-dithiodipyridine under various experimental conditions demonstrated the existence of two sulfhydryls and three disulfides in the fully active enzyme. Pantetheinase may become inactive during purification with concomitant loss of one titrable sulfhydryl group.  相似文献   

10.
Treatment of homogenous human prostatic acid phosphatase (orthophosphoric-monoester phosphohydrolase (acid optimum), EC 3.1.3.2) with low concentrations of Woodward's reagent K (N-ethyl-5-phenylisoxazolium-3'-sulfonate) leads to a rapid loss of enzymic activity. The rate of inactivation of the enzyme is reduced in the presence of the competitive inhibitors phosphate and L-(+)-tartrate, but not in the presence of non-inhibitory D-tartrate. Measurement of the ethylamine produced upon hydrolysis of enzyme modified in the presence of D- and of L-tartrate permitted the quantitative estimation of the number of carboxylic acid residues at the active site. The data indicate that two carboxyl groups per (dimeric) enzyme molecule are essential for catalytic activity. It is proposed that one function of the active site carboxyl group may be to protonate the leaving alcohol or phenol portion of the phosphomonoester substrate during the formation of the covalent phosphoenzyme intermediate.  相似文献   

11.
We have studied the inactivation of membrane-bound and solubilized UDP-glucose:ceramide glucosyltransferase from Golgi membranes by various types of sulfhydryl reagents. The strong inhibition of the membrane-bound form by the non-penetrant mercurial-type reagents clearly corroborated the fact that in sealed and right-side-out Golgi vesicles the ceramide glucosyltransferase is located on the cytoplasmic face. No significant differences in the susceptibility to the various sulfhydryl reagents were noted when solubilized enzyme was assayed, showing that solubilization does not reveal other critical SH groups. The different results obtained must be interpreted with regard to several thiol groups, essential for enzyme activity. No protection by the substrate UDP-glucose against mercurial-type reagents was obtained indicating that these thiol groups were not located in the nucleotide sugar binding domain. A more thorough investigation of the thiol inactivation mechanism was undertaken with NEM (N-ethylmaleimide), an irreversible reagent. The time dependent inactivation followed first order kinetics and provided evidence for the binding of 1 mol NEM per mol of enzyme. UDP-Glucose protected partially against NEM inactivation, indicating that the thiol groups may be situated in or near the substrate binding domain. Inactivation experiments with disulfide reagents showed that increased hydrophobicity led to more internal essential SH groups which are not obviously protected by the substrate UDP-glucose, thus not implicated in the substrate binding domain, but rather related to conformational changes of the enzyme during the catalytic process.Abbreviations Chaps 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio] 1-propanesulfonate - Mops 4-morpholinepropanesulfonic acid - PC phosphatidylcholine - NEM N-ethylmaleimide - CPDS carboxypyridine disulfide (dithio-6,6-dinicotinic acid) - DTNB 5,5-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) - DTP dithiodipyridine - p-HMB para-hydroxymercuribenzoate - DTT dithiothreitol - BAL British anti-Lewisite (dimercaptopropanol) - Zw 3–14 Zwittergent 3–14  相似文献   

12.
Treatment of chicken liver fatty acid synthetase with the arginine-specific reagent phenylglyoxal resulted in the pseudo-first-order loss of synthetase, beta-ketoacyl reductase and enoyl reductase activities. The sum of the second-order rate constants for the two reductase reactions equalled that for the synthetase reaction, suggesting that inactivation of either reductase was responsible for the loss of fatty acid synthetase activity. Double-log plots of pseudo-first-order rate constant versus reagent concentration yielded straight lines with slopes of unity for all three activities tested, suggesting the reaction of one reagent molecule in the inactivation process. In parallel experiments, complete inactivation of synthetase activity was accompanied by the incorporation of 4.5 [14C]phenylglyoxal, and the loss of 2.3 arginine residues per subunit. Reaction of essential sulfhydryl groups was not involved, since inactivation by phenylglyoxal was unaffected by reversible protection of these groups with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid). Inactivation of all three activities by phenylglyoxal was prevented by saturating amounts of the coenzyme NADPH, or its analogs 2',5'-ADP and 2'-AMP, but not by the corresponding nucleotides containing only the 5'-phosphate. Conversely, the ability of this enzyme to bind NADPH was abolished upon inactivation. These results are consistent with the presence of an essential arginine residue at the binding site for the 2'-phosphate group of NADPH at each of the two reductase domains of the multifunctional fatty acid synthetase subunit.  相似文献   

13.
5-Aminolevulinic acid dehydratase (ALAD), an early enzyme of the tetrapyrrole biosynthesis pathway, catalyzes the dimerization of 5-aminolevulinic acid to form the pyrrole, porphobilinogen. ALAD from Escherichia coli is shown to form a homo-octameric structure with 422 symmetry in which each subunit adopts the TIM barrel fold with a 30-residue N-terminal arm. Pairs of monomers associate with their arms wrapped around each other. Four of these dimers interact, principally via their arm regions, to form octamers in which each active site is located on the surface. The active site contains two lysine residues (195 and 247), one of which (Lys 247) forms a Schiff base link with the bound substrate analogue, levulinic acid. Of the two substrate binding sites (referred to as A and P), our analysis defines the residues forming the P-site, which is where the first ALA molecule to associate with the enzyme binds. The carboxyl group of the levulinic acid moiety forms hydrogen bonds with the side chains of Ser 273 and Tyr 312. In proximity to the levulinic acid is a zinc binding site formed by three cysteines (Cys 120, 122, and 130) and a solvent molecule. We infer that the second substrate binding site (or A-site) is located between the triple-cysteine zinc site and the bound levulinic acid moiety. Two invariant arginine residues in a loop covering the active site (Arg 205 and Arg 216) appear to be appropriately placed to bind the carboxylate of the A-site substrate. Another metal binding site, close to the active site flap, in which a putative zinc ion is coordinated by a carboxyl and five solvent molecules may account for the activating properties of magnesium ions.  相似文献   

14.
Pyridoxal 5′-phosphate strongly and reversibly inhibited maize leaf 5-amino levulinic acid dehydratase. The inhibition was linearly competitive with respect to the substrate 5-aminolevulinic acid at pH values between 7 to 9.0. Pyridoxal was also effective as an inhibitor of the enzyme but pyridoxamine phosphate was not inhibitory. The results suggest that pyridoxal 5′-phosphate may be interacting with the enzyme either close to or at the 5-aminolevulinic acid binding site. This conclusion was further corroborated by the detection of a Schiff base between the enzyme and the substrate, 5-aminolevulinic acid and by reduction of pyridoxal phosphate and substrate complexes with sodium borohydride  相似文献   

15.
Exposed thiol groups of rabbit muscle aldolase A were modified by 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic) acid with concomittant loss of enzyme activity. When 5-thio-2-nitrobenzoate residues bound to enzyme SH groups were replaced by small and uncharged cyanide residues the enzyme activity was restored by more than 50%. The removal of a bulky C-terminal tyrosine residue from the active site of aldolase A resulted in enzyme which was inhibited by 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic) acid only by 50% and its activity was nearly unchanged after modification of its thiol groups with cyanide. The results obtained show directly that rabbit muscle aldolase A does not possess functional cysteine residues and that the inactivation of the enzyme caused by sulfhydryl group modification reported previously can be attributed most likely to steric hindrance of a catalytic site by modifying agents.  相似文献   

16.
An extramitochondrial acetyl-CoA hydrolase (EC 3.1.2.1) purified from rat liver was inactivated by heavy metal cations (Hg2+, Cu2+, Cd2+ and Zn2+), which are known to be highly reactive with sulfhydryl groups. Their order of potency for enzyme inactivation was Hg2+ greater than Cu2+ greater than Cd2+ greater than Zn2+. This enzyme was also inactivated by various sulfhydryl-blocking reagents such as p-hydroxymercuribenzoate (PHMB), N-ethylmaleimide (NEM), 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB), and iodoacetate (IAA). DL-Dithiothreitol (DTT) reversed the inactivation of this enzyme by DTNB markedly, and that by PHMB slightly, but did not reverse the inactivations by NEM, DTNB and IAA. Benzoyl-CoA (a substrate-like competitive inhibitor) and ATP (an activator) greatly protected acetyl-CoA hydrolase from inactivation by PHMB, NEM, DTNB and IAA. These results suggest that the essential sulfhydryl groups are on or near the substrate binding site and nucleotide binding site. The enzyme contained about four sulfhydryl groups per mol of monomer, as estimated with DTNB. When the enzyme was denatured by 4 M guanidine-HCl, about seven sulfhydryl groups per mol of monomer reacted with DTNB. Two of the four sulfhydryl groups of the subunit of the native enzyme reacted with DTNB first without any significant inactivation of the enzyme, but its subsequent reaction with the other two sulfhydryl groups seemed to be involved in the inactivation process.  相似文献   

17.
Modification of maize δ-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase (ALAD) by diethylpyrocarbonate (DEP) caused rapid and complete inactivation of the enzyme. The inactivation showed saturation kinetics with a half inactivation time at saturating DEP equal to 0.3 min and KDEP  0.3 mM. Substrate δ-aminolevulinic acid (ALA) and competitive inhibitor levulinic acid protected against inactivation, thereby indicating that DEP modifies the active site. The modified enzyme showed an increase in absorbance at 240 nm which was lost upon treatment with 0.8 M hydroxylamine. Most of the activity lost by DEP treatment could be restored after treatment with 0.8 M hydroxylamine. The results suggest that DEP modifies 7.4 residues/mole of the enzyme. These histidine residues are essential for catalysis by ALAD.  相似文献   

18.
The kinetic theory of the substrate reaction during modification of enzyme activity previously described by Tsou [Tsou (1988),Adv. Enzymol. Relat. Areas Mol. Biol. 61, 381–436] has been applied to a study of the kinetics of the course of inactivation of the mitochondrial succinate-ubiquinone reductase by 5,5′-dithiobis-(2-nitro-benzoic acid) (DTNB). The results show that the inactivation of this enzyme by DTNB is a conformation-change-type inhibition which involves a conformational change of the enzyme before inactivation. The microscopic rate constants were determined for the reaction of the inactivator with the enzyme. The presence of the substrate provides marked protection of this enzyme against inactivation by DTNB. The modification reaction of the enzyme using DTNB was shown to follow a triphasic course by following the absorption at 412 nm. Among these reactive thiol groups, the fast-reaction thiol group is essential for the enzyme activity. The results suggest that the essential thiol group is situated at the succinate-binding site of the mitochondrial succinate-ubiquinone reductase.  相似文献   

19.
beta-Ketoacyl-CoA thiolase (acyl-CoA:acetyl-CoA C-acyltransferase, EC 2.3.1.16) is known to possess sulfhydryl groups of cysteines at the active site that are essential for its catalytic activity. Other groups at the active site that participate in the catalytic process were identified by using anhydride reagents which covalently modify the protein by specifically reacting with any amino groups potentially present at the active site. Since these reagents may also react with thiol groups, the enzyme's amino groups were modified after masking the cysteine thiols present by an alkylalkane thiosulfonate-type reagent, methyl methanethiol-sulfonate (MMTS), that selectively formed a disulfide bridge, thus generating an inactive thiolmethylated enzyme. When this procedure was followed, the enzyme could be undoubtedly modified at its amino by the anhydride reagent, leading to a doubly modified protein. The thiomethyl group could then be removed by reduction with dithiothreitol, yielding an enzyme modified solely on the amino residues. The amino group could be unblocked in turn by exposure to acidic pH. The different anhydrides inactivated thiolase, but only acetoacetyl coenzyme A (AcAcCoA) provided any protection against inactivation. When thiolmethylcitraconyl thiolase was reduced with dithiothreitol the enzyme remained inactive, but when the doubly modified enzyme was exposed to pH 5 then the reduction led to formation of an active enzyme. These results are interpreted as demonstrating a role for an amino group at the enzyme active site. A catalytic mechanism is proposed for the enzyme which involves the amino group.  相似文献   

20.
Since 1938 mammalian succinate dehydrogenase has been thought to contain thiol groups at the active site. This hypothesis was questioned recently, because irreversible inhibition by bromopyruvate and N-ethylmaleimide appeared not to satisfy the requisite criteria for reaction at the active site. These recent observations of incomplete inactivation of succinate dehydrogenase by N-ethylmaleimide and incomplete protection by substrates can, however, be explained adequately by the presence of oxalacetate and other strong competitors of the inactivation process in the enzyme used in these studies. Substrates, competitive inhibitors, and anions which activate succinate dehydrogenase protect the enzyme from inhibition by N-ethylmaleimide. Inhibition of succinate dehydrogenase by N-ethylmaleimide involves at least two second order reactions which are pH dependent, with pKa values of 8.0 to 8.2. This pH dependence, the known reactivity of N-ethylmaleimide toward thiols, and the protection by substrate and competitive inhibitors indicate that sulfhydryl residues are required for catalytic activity and perform an essential, not secondary, role in the catalysis. Just as the presence of tightly bound oxalacetate prevents inhibition by N-ethylmaleimide, alkylation of the sulfhydryl residue(s) at the active site prevents the binding of [14C]oxalacetate. Thus, these thiol groups at the active site also may be the site of tight binding of oxalacetate during the activation-deactivation cycle.  相似文献   

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