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1.
In the branchial mitochondrion-rich (MR) cells of euryhaline teleosts, the Na+/K+/2Cl cotransporter (NKCC) is an important membrane protein that maintains the internal Cl concentration, and the branchial Na+/K+-ATPase (NKA) is crucial for providing the driving force for many other ion-transporting systems. Hence this study used the sailfin molly (Poecilia latipinna), an introduced aquarium fish in Taiwan, to reveal that the potential roles of NKCC and NKA in sailfin molly were correlated to fish survival rates upon salinity challenge. Higher levels of branchial NKCC were found in seawater (SW)-acclimated sailfin molly compared to freshwater (FW)-acclimated individuals. Transfer of the sailfin molly from SW to FW revealed that the expression of the NKCC and NKA proteins in the gills was retained over 7 days in order to maintain hypoosmoregulatory endurance. Meanwhile, their survival rates after transfer to SW varied with the duration of FW-exposure and decreased significantly when the SW-acclimated individuals were acclimated to FW for 21 days. Double immunofluorescence staining showed that in SW-acclimated sailfin molly, NKCC signals were expressed on the basolateral membrane of MR cells, whereas in FW-acclimated molly, they were expressed on the apical membrane. This study illustrated the correlation between the gradual reductions in expression of branchial NKCC and NKA (i.e., the hypoosmoregulatory endurance) and decreasing survival rates after hyperosmotic challenge in sailfin molly.  相似文献   

2.
The study tests the physiological responses of Persian sturgeon, Acipenser persicus, during the abrupt release of juveniles from freshwater (FW) into brackish waters (BW = 11‰) of the Caspian Sea. Fish weight at release was 2‐3 g (2.55 ± 0.41 g; 8.8 ± 0.58 cm TL). Totals of 160 individuals were randomly distributed into four fiber‐glass aerated tanks (volume 60‐L). Two tanks served as controls (FW groups), and two as exposure tanks for BW (Caspian Sea water = CSW). Fish were sampled at 0, 3, 6, 12, 24, 48 and 96 hr after abrupt transfer to CSW. Plasma osmolality, immunolocalization of Na+, K+ ‐ATPase (NKA) and Na+/K+/2Cl (NKCC) Co‐transporter, NKA activity and the NKA α‐subunit mRNA expression were analyzed. Blood osmolality of fish transferred from FW to CSW increased significantly within hours post‐transfer (p < .05) and remained at a high level for up to 96 hr. Immunolocalization of NKCC indicated co‐localization with NKA in the chloride cells in the gill epithelium. A partial sequence of the NKA α‐subunit (632 bp) is described. Its expression levels were up‐regulated at 12 and 48 hr following salinity transfer (p < .05). However, NKA activity sharply increased in CSW specimens by almost 2.8‐fold (p < .05) between 48 and 96 hr after transfer. Gill NKCC co‐transporter abundance increased, coinciding with increased gill NKA activity. The increased activity of NKCC during salt excretion in CSW may lead to an influx of Na+ into the chloride cells. Consequently, NKA activity increases to maintain intracellular Na+ homeostasis.  相似文献   

3.
The sublingual salt gland is the primary site of salt excretion in sea snakes; however, little is known about the mechanisms mediating ion excretion. Na+/K+–ATPase (NKA) and Na+/K+/2Cl cotransporter (NKCC) are two proteins known to regulate membrane potential and drive salt secretion in most vertebrate secretory cells. We hypothesized that NKA and NKCC would localize to the basolateral membranes of the principal cells comprising the tubular epithelia of sea snake salt glands. Although there is evidence of NKA activity in salt glands from several species of sea snake, the localization of NKA and NKCC and other potential ion transporters remains unstudied. Using histology and immunohistochemistry, we localized NKA and NKCC in salt glands from three species of laticaudine sea snake: Laticauda semifasciata, L. laticaudata, and L. colubrina. Antibody specificity was confirmed using Western blots. The compound tubular glands of all three species were found to be composed of serous secretory epithelia, and NKA and NKCC were abundant in the basolateral membranes. These results are consistent with the morphology of secretory epithelia found in the rectal salt glands of marine elasmobranchs, the nasal glands of marine birds and the gills of teleost fishes, suggesting a similar function in regulating ion secretion.  相似文献   

4.
The green sturgeon is a long-lived, highly migratory species with populations that are currently listed as threatened. Their anadromous life history requires that they make osmo- and ionoregulatory adjustments in order to maintain a consistent internal milieu as they move between fresh-, brackish-, and seawater. We acclimated juvenile green sturgeon (121 ± 10.0 g) to 0 (freshwater; FW), 15 (estuarine; EST), and 24 g/l (SF Bay water; BAY) at 18°C for 2 weeks and measured the physiological and biochemical responses with respect to osmo- and ionoregulatory mechanisms. Plasma osmolality in EST- and BAY-acclimated sturgeon was elevated relative to FW-acclimated sturgeon (P < 0.01), but there was no difference in muscle water content or abundance of stress proteins. Branchial Na+, K+-ATPase (NKA) activity was also unchanged, but abundance within mitochondrion-rich cells (MRC) was greater in BAY-acclimated sturgeon (P < 0.01). FW-acclimated sturgeon had the greatest NKA abundance when assessed at the level of the entire tissue (P < 0.01), but there were no differences in v-type H+ATPase (VHA) activity or abundance between salinities. The Na+, K+, 2Cl co-transporter (NKCC) was present in FW-acclimated sturgeon gills, but the overall abundance was lower relative to sturgeon in EST or BAY water (P < 0.01) where this enzyme is crucial to hypoosmoregulation. Branchial caspase 3/7 activity was significantly affected by acclimation salinity (P < 0.05) where the overall trend was for activity to increase with salinity as has been commonly observed in teleosts. Sturgeon of this age/size class were able to survive and acclimate following a salinity transfer with minimal signs of osmotic stress. The presence of the NKCC in FW-acclimated sturgeon may indicate the development of SW-readiness at this age/size.  相似文献   

5.
The ion regulation mechanisms of fishes have been recently studied in zebrafish (Danio rerio), a stenohaline species. However, recent advances using this organism are not necessarily applicable to euryhaline fishes. The euryhaline species medaka (Oryzias latipes), which, like zebrafish, is genetically well categorized and amenable to molecular manipulation, was proposed as an alternative model for studying osmoregulation during acclimation to different salinities. To establish its suitability as an alternative, the present study was conducted to (1) identify different types of ionocytes in the embryonic skin and (2) analyze gene expressions of the transporters during seawater acclimation. Double/triple in situ hybridization and/or immunocytochemistry revealed that freshwater (FW) medaka contain three types of ionocyte: (1) Na+/H+ exchanger 3 (NHE3) cells with apical NHE3 and basolateral Na+-K+-2Cl? cotransporter (NKCC), Na+-K+-ATPase (NKA) and anion exchanger (AE); (2) Na+-Cl? cotransporter (NCC) cells with apical NCC and basolateral H+-ATPase; and (3) epithelial Ca2+ channel (ECaC) cells [presumed accessory (AC) cells] with apical ECaC. On the other hand, seawater (SW) medaka has a single predominant ionocyte type, which possesses apical cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) and NHE3 and basolateral NKCC and NKA and is accompanied by smaller AC cells that express lower levels of basolateral NKA. Reciprocal gene expressions of decreased NHE3, AE, NCC and ECaC and increased CFTR and NKCC in medaka gills during SW were revealed by quantative PCR analysis.  相似文献   

6.
This study examined the osmoregulatory status of the euryhaline elasmobranch Carcharhinus leucas acclimated to freshwater (FW) and seawater (SW). Juvenile C. leucas captured in FW (3 mOsm l–1 kg–1) were acclimated to SW (980–1,000 mOsm l–1 kg–1) over 16 days. A FW group was maintained in captivity over a similar time period. In FW, bull sharks were hyper-osmotic regulators, having a plasma osmolarity of 595 mOsm l–1 kg–1. In SW, bull sharks had significantly higher plasma osmolarities (940 mOsm l–1 kg–1) than FW-acclimated animals and were slightly hypo-osmotic to the environment. Plasma Na+, Cl, K+, Mg2+, Ca2+, urea and trimethylamine oxide (TMAO) concentrations were all significantly higher in bull sharks acclimated to SW, with urea and TMAO showing the greatest increase. Gill, rectal gland, kidney and intestinal tissue were taken from animals acclimated to FW and SW and analysed for maximal Na+/K+-ATPase activity. Na+/K+-ATPase activity in the gills and intestine was less than 1 mmol Pi mg–1 protein h–1 and there was no difference in activity between FW- and SW-acclimated animals. In contrast Na+/K+-ATPase activity in the rectal gland and kidney were significantly higher than gill and intestine and showed significant differences between the FW- and SW-acclimated groups. In FW and SW, rectal gland Na+/K+-ATPase activity was 5.6±0.8 and 9.2±0.6 mmol Pi mg–1 protein h–1, respectively. Na+/K+-ATPase activity in the kidney of FW and SW acclimated animals was 8.4±1.1 and 3.3±1.1 Pi mg–1 protein h–1, respectively. Thus juvenile bull sharks have the osmoregulatory plasticity to acclimate to SW; their preference for the upper reaches of rivers where salinity is low is therefore likely to be for predator avoidance and/or increased food abundance rather than because of a physiological constraint.  相似文献   

7.
The Mozambique tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus) is prone to osmoregulatory disturbances when faced with fluctuating ambient temperatures. To investigate the underlying causes of this phenomenon, freshwater (FW)- and seawater (SW)-acclimated tilapia were transferred to 15, 25, or 35°C for 2 weeks, and along with typically used indicators of osmoregulatory status [plasma osmolality and branchial and intestinal specific Na+, K+-ATPase (NKA) activity], we used tissue microarrays (TMA) and laser-scanning cytometry (LSC) to characterize the effects of temperature acclimation. Tissue microarrays were stained with fluorescently labeled anti-Na+, K+-ATPase antibodies that allowed for the quantification of NKA abundance per unit area within individual branchial mitochondria-rich cells (MRCs) as well as sections of renal tissue. Mitochondria-rich cell counts and estimates of size were carried out for each treatment by the detection of DASPMI fluorescence. The combined analyses showed that SW fish have larger but fewer MRCs that contain more NKA per unit area. After a 2-week acclimation to 15°C tilapia experienced osmotic imbalances in both FW and SW that were likely due to low NKA activity. SW-acclimated fish compensated for the low activity by increasing MRC size and subsequently the concentration of NKA within MRCs. Although there were no signs of osmotic stress in FW-acclimated tilapia at 25°C, there was an increased NKA capacity that was most likely mediated by a higher MRC count. We conclude on the basis of the different responses to temperature acclimation that salinity-induced changes in the NKA concentration of MRCs alter thermal tolerance limits of tilapia.  相似文献   

8.
Evidence of smolting was studied in Danish hatchery-reared brown trout Salmo trutta L. Twenty-four hour seawater (SW) challenge tests (28‰, 10°C) at regular intervals showed that maximal hypo-osmoregulatory ability developed within a 3–4-week period in March and April. The improved ability to regulate plasma osmolality, muscle water content and plasma total [Mg] developed asynchronously, indicating that developmental changes in the gill, the gastrointestinal system and the kidney may not necessarily concur during smolting. Gill Na+, K+-ATPase activity peaked in April at the time of optimal hypo-osmoregulatory ability. Na+, K+-ATPase a -subunit mRNA level in gills was unchanged from January until April, but decreased in May in parallel with a decrease in the activity of the enzyme. In the middle region of the intestine, Na+, K+-ATPase activity increased in February and remained high until April. In the posterior region of the intestine, the activity was stable from January until April after which it decreased. In vitro fluid transport capacitity, Jv, in the middle intestine fluctuated throughout the spring. In the posterior intestine, Jv was low until late March, when it increased fivefold until early May. Drinking rate in fish transferred to SW for 24 h surged during spring. Na+, K+-ATPase activity in the pyloric caeca was elevated from March until May, and increased in response to SW transfer in June, suggesting a hypo-osmoregulatory function of the pyloric caeca. Plasma GH levels surged in FW trout during spring, concurring with the increase in gill Na+, K+-ATPase activity and SW tolerance, but peaked in May when gill Na+, K+-ATPase activity and SW tolerance were regressing. GH levels were generally low in SW-challenged fish, and there was no consistent effect of 24-h SW exposure on GH levels. In wild anadromous trout, gill Na+, K+-ATPase activity varied seasonally as in hatchery-reared fish, but peaked at higher levels suggesting a more intense smolting in fish living in their natural environment.  相似文献   

9.
In this study we assessed changes in the osmoregulatory system of juvenile sub-Antarctic Eleginops maclovinus submitted to different environmental salinities (5, 15, 32 and 45 psu) using two different acclimation trials: (1) an end-point experiment (exposure for 14 days) and (2) a time course experiment (specimens were sampled on days 1, 3, 7 and 14 post-transfer). Plasma osmolality, cortisol and metabolites (glucose, lactate and protein) values as well as Na+, K+-ATPase (NKA) activity were assessed in several osmoregulatory tissues (gills, kidney and intestine). In both trials, acclimation to different environmental salinities for 14 days induced changes in plasma metabolites (glucose, lactate and proteins) as well as cortisol values related to salinity challenges. Plasma osmolality and gill NKA activity presented a direct and positive relationship with respect to environmental salinity, while kidney NKA activity showed a “U-shaped” relationship. Anterior intestinal NKA activity increased in response to environmental salinity and apparently did not change in the middle portion of this organ, while it was enhanced in the posterior portion in environmental salinities different than seawater. Plasma metabolite values increased under hypo- and hypersaline conditions, indicating the importance of these energy substrates in extreme environments. The time course study revealed that specimens of E. maclovinus are able to accommodate their osmotic and metabolic system to respond to osmoregulatory challenges by allostatic changes.  相似文献   

10.
This study investigated the relationships between behavioural responses of Atlantic salmon Salmo salar smolts to saltwater (SW) exposure and physiological characteristics of smolts in laboratory experiments. It concurrently described the behaviour of acoustically tagged smolts with respect to SW and tidal cycles during estuary migration. Salmo salar smolts increased their use of SW relative to fresh water (FW) from April to June in laboratory experiments. Mean preference for SW never exceeded 50% of time in any group. Preference for SW increased throughout the course of smolt development. Maximum continuous time spent in SW was positively related to gill Na+, K+‐ATPase (NKA) activity and osmoregulatory performance in full‐strength SW (measured as change in gill NKA activity and plasma osmolality). Smolts decreased depth upon reaching areas of the Penobscot Estuary where SW was present, and all fish became more surface oriented during passage from head of tide to the ocean. Acoustically tagged, migrating smolts with low gill NKA activity moved faster in FW reaches of the estuary than those with higher gill NKA activity. There was no difference in movement rate through SW reaches of the estuary based on gill NKA activity. Migrating fish moved with tidal flow during the passage of the lower estuary based on the observed patterns in both vertical and horizontal movements. The results indicate that smolts select low‐salinity water during estuary migration and use tidal currents to minimize energetic investment in seaward migration. Seasonal changes in osmoregulatory ability highlight the importance of the timing of stocking and estuary arrival.  相似文献   

11.
Salinity tolerance in wild (Glendale) and hatchery (Quinsam) pink salmon Oncorhynchus gorbuscha (average mass 0·2 g) was assessed by measuring whole body [Na+] and [Cl?] after 24 or 72 h exposures to fresh water (FW) and 33, 66 or 100% sea water (SW). Gill Na+, K+‐ATPase activity was measured following exposure to FW and 100% SW and increased significantly in both populations after a 24 h exposure to 100% SW. Whole body [Na+] and whole body [Cl?] increased significantly in both populations after 24 h in 33, 66 and 100% SW, where whole body [Cl?] differed significantly between Quinsam and Glendale populations. Extending the seawater exposure to 72 h resulted in no further increases in whole body [Na+] and whole body [Cl?] at any salinity, but there was more variability among the responses of the two populations. Per cent whole body water (c. 81%) was maintained in all groups of fish regardless of salinity exposure or population, indicating that the increase in whole body ion levels may have been related to maintaining water balance as no mortality was observed in this study. Thus, both wild and hatchery juvenile O. gorbuscha tolerated abrupt salinity changes, which triggered an increase in gill Na+, K+‐ATPase within 24 h. These results are discussed in terms of the preparedness of emerging O. gorbuscha for the marine phase of their life cycle.  相似文献   

12.
Euryhaline tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus) survived in brackish water (BW; 20‰) but died in seawater (SW; 35‰) within 6 h when transferred directly from fresh water (FW). The purpose of this study was to clarify responses in gills of FW tilapia to various hyperosmotic shocks induced by BW or SW. In FW-acclimated tilapia, scanning electron micrographs of gills revealed three subtypes of MR cell apical surfaces: wavy-convex (subtype I), shallow-basin (subtype II), and deep-hole (subtype III). Density of apical surfaces of mitochondrion-rich (MR) cell in gills of the BW-transfer tilapia decreased significantly within 3 h post-transfer due to disappearance of subtype I cells, but increased from 48 h post-transfer because of increasing density of subtype III cells. SW-transfer individuals, however, showed decreased density of MR cell openings after 1 h post-transfer because subtype I MR cell disappeared. On the other hand, relative branchial Na+/K+-ATPase (NKA) α1-subunit mRNA levels, protein abundance, and NKA activity of the BW-transfer group increased significantly at 6, 12, and 12 h post-transfer, respectively. In the SW-transfer group, relative mRNA and protein abundance of gill NKA α1-subunit did not change while NKA activity declined before dying in 5 h. Upon SW transfer, dramatic increases (nearly 2-fold) of plasma osmolality, [Na+], and [Cl] were found prior to death. For the BW-transfer group, plasma osmolality was eventually controlled by 96 h post-transfer by enhancement of NKA expression and subtype III MR cell. The success or failure of NKA activation from gene to functional protein as well as the development of specific SW subtype in gills were crucial for the survival of euryhaline tilapia to various hyperosmotic shocks.  相似文献   

13.
The kidney is an organ playing an important role in ion regulation in both freshwater (FW) and seawater (SW) fish. The mechanisms of ion regulation in the fish kidney are less well studied than that of their gills, especially at the level of transporter proteins. We have found striking differences in the pattern of Na+/K+/2Cl- cotransporter (NKCC) expression between species. In the killifish kidney, NKCC is apically localized in the distal and collecting tubules and basolaterally localized in the proximal tubules. However, in the SW killifish gill, NKCC is basolaterally co-localized with Na+/K+-ATPase, whereas in FW, NKCC immunoreactivity is primarily apical, although still colocalized within the same mitochondria-rich cell with basolateral Na+/K+-ATPase. Rainbow trout kidney has NKCC only in the apical membrane of the distal and collecting tubules in both environments, with no signal being detected in the proximal tubule. On the other hand, in the trout gill, NKCC is found basolaterally in both FW and SW environments. An important observation is that, in the gills of rainbow trout, the trailing edge of the filament possesses mostly Na+/K+-ATPase-positive but NKCC-negative mitochondria-rich cells, whereas in the region between and at the roots of the gill lamellae, most mitochondria-rich cells exhibit both Na+/K+-ATPase- and NKCC-positive immunoreactivity. These results suggest that the differential localization of transporters between the two species represents differences in function between these two euryhaline fishes with different life histories and strategies. Funding for this research was provided by NSERC Discovery Grants to G.G.G. and W.S.M., an Alberta Ingenuity Fund PDF, and a fellowship from the NSERC Research Capacity Development Grant to F.K.  相似文献   

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The milkfish (Chanos chanos) is an economic species in Southeast Asia. In Taiwan, the milkfish are commercially cultured in environments of various salinities. Na+/K+-ATPase (NKA) is a key enzyme for fish iono- and osmoregulation. When compared with gills, NKA and its potential role were less examined by different approaches in the other osmoregulatory organs (e.g., kidney) of euryhaline teleosts. The objective of this study was to investigate the correlation between osmoregulatory plasticity and renal NKA in this euryhaline species. Muscle water contents (MWC), plasma, and urine osmolality, kidney histology, as well as distribution, expression (mRNA and protein), and specific activity of renal NKA were examined in juvenile milkfish acclimated to fresh water (FW), seawater (SW 35‰), and hypersaline water (HSW 60‰) for at least two weeks before experiments. MWC showed no significant difference among all groups. Plasma osmolality was maintained within the range of physiological homeostasis in milkfish acclimated to different salinities, while, urine osmolality of FW-acclimated fish was evidently lower than SW- and HSW-acclimated individuals. The renal tubules were identified by staining with periodic acid Schiff’s reagent and hematoxylin. Moreover, immunohistochemical staining showed that NKA was distributed in the epithelial cells of proximal tubules, distal tubules, and collecting tubules, but not in glomeruli, of milkfish exposed to different ambient salinities. The highest abundance of relative NKA α subunit mRNA was found in FW-acclimated milkfish rather than SW- and HSW-acclimated individuals. Furthermore, relative protein amounts of renal NKA α and β subunits as well as NKA-specific activity were also found to be higher in the FW group than SW and the HSW groups. This study integrated diverse levels (i.e., histological distribution, gene, protein, and specific activity) of renal NKA expression and illustrated the potential role of NKA in triggering ion reabsorption in kidneys of the marine euryhaline milkfish when acclimated to a hypotonic FW environment.  相似文献   

18.
Global warming is having a significant impact around the world, modifying environmental conditions in many areas, including in zones that have been thermally stable for thousands of years, such as Antarctica. Stenothermal sedentary intertidal fish species may suffer due to warming, notably if this causes water freshening from increased freshwater inputs. Acute decreases in salinity, from 33 down to 5, were used to assess osmotic responses to environmental salinity fluctuations in Antarctic spiny plunderfish Harpagifer antarcticus, in particular to evaluate if H. antarcticus is able to cope with freshening and to describe osmoregulatory responses at different levels (haematological variables, muscle water content, gene expression, NKA activity). H. antarcticus were acclimated to a range of salinities (33 as control, 20, 15, 10 and 5) for 1 week. At 5, plasma osmolality and calcium concentration were both at their lowest, while plasma cortisol and percentage muscle water content were at their highest. At the same salinity, gill and intestine Na+-K+-ATPase (NKA) activities were at their lowest and highest, respectively. In kidney, NKA activity was highest at intermediate salinities (15 and 10). The salinity-dependent NKA mRNA expression patterns differed depending on the tissue. Marked changes were also observed in the expression of genes coding membrane proteins associated with ion and water transport, such as NKCC2, CFTR and AQP8, and in the expression of mRNA for the regulatory hormone prolactin (PRL) and its receptor (PRLr). Our results demonstrate that freshening causes osmotic imbalances in H. antarcticus, apparently due to reduced capacity of both transport and regulatory mechanisms of key organs to maintain homeostasis. This has implications for fish species that have evolved in stable environmental conditions in the Antarctic, now threatened by climate change.  相似文献   

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We assessed the effects of dietary fatty acid composition on sodium–potassium ATPase (Na+/K+-ATPase) activity and isoform expression in the gills of juvenile fall chinook salmon, Oncorhynchus tshawytscha by supplementing diets with either anchovy oil (AO) or AO blended with canola oil (CO) so that CO comprised 0% (0CO), 11% (11CO), 22% (22CO), 33% (33CO), 43% (43CO), or 54% (54CO) of the measured dietary lipid content. The effects of diet were assessed in freshwater (FW) following 104 days of diet manipulation, in response to 24-h seawater (SW) transfer at this time, and following an additional 35 days of SW acclimation. Gill Na+/K+-ATPase activity was not significantly affected by diet at any sampling time, and there were no consistent effects of diet on the expression of the Na+/K+-ATPase α1a isoform. As dietary CO increased, Na+/K+-ATPase α1b mRNA decreased in fish held in FW, with the 43CO and 54CO diet groups having significantly lower levels than fish fed the 0CO and 11CO diets. Twenty-four-hour SW challenge did not affect the expression of the Na+/K+-ATPase α1a isoform in any diet group, but this isoform was down-regulated in all diet groups following 35 days of SW acclimation. Na+/K+-ATPase α1b expression levels increased in response to 24-h SW transfer and SW acclimation only in fish fed the 54CO diet. The effects of the two extreme diets (0CO and 54CO) were also assessed at various time points during 104 days of rearing in FW. Na+/K+-ATPase α1b mRNA levels were greater in fish fed diet 0CO versus those fed diet 54CO at all times during the FW culture period. These data demonstrate that dietary fatty acid composition can influence the gill Na+/K+-ATPase isoform physiology of juvenile fall-run chinook salmon prior to SW transfer.  相似文献   

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