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1.
(1) Tentacle retraction in the land slug Ariolimax columbianus can be elicited by stimulation of all nerves and connectives of the ipsi- and contralateral cerebral ganglia. (2) Six neurons in the left cerebral ganglion were classified as tentacle retraction motoneurons because their action potentials are followed one-for-one with constant delay by action potentials in the left tentacle retractor nerve and their depolarization causes retraction of the ipsilateral tentacle. The motoneurons can be identified by size, pattern of pigmentation, position, and physiological characteristics. (3) Each retractor motoneuron discharges at a rather constant rate and has more than one source of excitatory input, but no IPSPs were observed. No synaptic connections between the six retractor motoneurons were found. The nerve action potentials that correspond to each motoneurons are distinguishable by waveform and size rank. (4) Each motoneuron elicits visible contractions in a particular region of the ipsilateral retractor muscle, but the motor fields of some motoneurons overlap. Some motoneurons mediate relatively rapid contractions while others cause slower responses. (5) There is one-for-one correspondence between action potentials of the largest unit recorded extracellularly in the retractor nerve and exciatory junction potentials recorded from the retractor muscle. No evidence of a peripheral neural plexus was found in serial sections of the retractor muscle.  相似文献   

2.
The tentacle withdrawal reflex of the terrestrial snail Helix aspersa was studied in vitro. The reflex is evoked by mechanical stimulation of the nose. Lesion experiments showed that 45% to 75% of the response amplitude is attributable to peripheral pathways alone. The central contribution increases with increasing stimulus intensity.Repeated stimulation produced pure habituation at low stimulus strengths, and habituation mixed with intrinsic sensitization (warm-up effect) at high stimulus strengths. The simultaneous occurrence of habituation and sensitization is consistent with the dual process theory of plasticity. Additional results differentiate the two processes. Habituation can occur without the CNS, whereas intrinsic sensitization requires the CNS. Also, the two processes are differentially effective in their influences on response amplitude and duration: habituation is more effective in determining response amplitude, while sensitization is more effective in determining response duration.Although the establishment of sensitization requires the CNS, 81% of the memory for intrinsic sensitization was localized to the periphery, by lesion experiments. Extrinsic sensitization, caused by stimulation of the medial lip nerve, had similar behavioural effects and a similar memory locus. Both types of sensitization appear to be caused by neuromuscular facilitation mediated by a central pathway.Abbreviations CNS central nervous system - PNS peripheral nervous system - S-R stimulus-response - TRM tentacle retractor muscle  相似文献   

3.
The larval proleg withdrawal reflex of the hawk moth, Manduca sexta, exhibits robust habituation. This reflex is evoked by deflecting one or more mechanosensory planta hairs on a proleg tip. We examined neural correlates of habituation in an isolated proleg preparation consisting of one proleg and its segmental ganglion. Repeated deflection of a single planta hair caused a significant decrease in the number of action potentials evoked in the proleg motor nerve (which carries the axons of proleg retractor motor neurons). Significant response decrement was seen for interstimulus intervals of 10 s, 60 s and 5 min. Response decrement failed to occur in the absence of repetitive stimulation, the decremented response recovered spontaneously following a rest, and electrical stimulation of a body wall nerve facilitated the decremented response (a neural correlate of dishabituation). Adaptation of sensory neuron responses occurred during repeated hair deflections. However, when adaptation was eliminated by direct electrical stimulation of sensory neurons, the response in the proleg motor nerve still decreased significantly. Muscle recordings indicated that the response of an identified proleg retractor motor neuron decreased significantly during habituation training. Thus, habituation of the proleg withdrawal reflex includes a central component that is apparent at the level of a single motor neuron. Accepted: 20 December 1996  相似文献   

4.
Postsynaptic potentials of 93 motoneurons of the masseter muscle evoked by stimulation of different branches of the trigeminal nerve were studied. Stimulation of the most excitable afferent fibers of the motor nerve of the masseter muscle evoked monosynaptic EPSPs with a latent period of 1.2–2.0 msec, changing into action potentials when the strength of stimulation was increased. A further increase in the strength of stimulation produced an antidromic action potential in the motoneurons with a latent period of 0.9 msec. In some motoneurons polysynaptic EPSPs and action potentials developed following stimulation of the motor nerve to the masseter muscle. The ascending phase of synaptic and antidromic action potentials was subdivided into IS and SD components, while the descending phase ended with definite depolarization and hyperpolarization after-potentials. Stimulation of cutaneous branches of the trigeminal nerve, and also of the motor nerve of the antagonist muscle (digastric) evoked IPSPs with a latent period of 2.7–3.5 msec in motoneurons of the masseter muscle. These results indicate the existence of functional connections between motoneurons of the masseter muscle and its proprioceptive afferent fibers, and also with proprioceptive afferent fibers of the antagonist muscle and cutaneous afferent fibers.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 1, No. 3, pp. 262–268, November–December, 1969.  相似文献   

5.
Postsynaptic potentials evoked in accessory nerve motoneurons by stimulation of the ipsilateral and contralateral red nuclei were investigated in acute experiments on cats anesthetized with chloralose and pentobarbital. Polysynaptic EPSPs with latent periods of 5.2 to 16 (mean 9.1 ± 0.7) msec and from 5.5 to 18 (mean 10.3 ± 0.9) msec, respectively, appeared in motoneurons of the accessory nerve in response to stimulation of the contralateral and ipsilateral red nuclei. A minimum of two or three stimuli was necessary to produce EPSPs in these motoneurons. In response to single stimulation of the contralateral and ipsilateral red nuclei EPSPs appeared in four motoneurons of the trapezius muscle with latent periods of 2.5 to 5.0 and 3.0 to 5.2 msec, respectively. An increase in the number of stimuli led to action potential generation by motoneurons. The functional role of such activation is discussed.A. A. Bogomolets Institue of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 14, No. 5, pp. 532–536, September–October, 1982.  相似文献   

6.
Summary In Manduca sexta larvae, sensory neurons innervating planta hairs on the tips of the prolegs make monosynaptic excitatory connections with motoneurons innervating proleg retractor muscles. Tactile stimulation of the hairs evokes reflex retraction of the proleg. In this study we examined activity-dependent changes in the amplitude of the excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) evoked in a proleg motoneuron by stimulation of individual planta hair sensory neurons. Deflection of a planta hair caused a phasic-tonic response in the sensory neuron, with a mean peak instantaneous firing frequency of >300 Hz, and a tonic firing rate of 10–20 Hz. Direct electrical stimulation was used to activate individual sensory neurons to fire at a range of frequencies including those observed during natural stimulation of the hair. At relatively low firing rates (e.g., 1 Hz), EPSP amplitude was stable indefinitely. At higher instantaneous firing frequencies (>10 Hz), EPSPs were initially facilitated, but continuous stimulation led rapidly to synaptic depression. High-frequency activation of a sensory neuron could also produce post-tetanic potentiation, in which EPSP amplitude remained elevated for several min following a stimulus train. Facilitation, depression, and post-tetanic potentiation all appeared to be presynaptic phenomena. These activity-dependent changes in sensory transmission may contribute to the behavioral plasticity of the proleg withdrawal reflex observed in intact insects.Abbreviations ACh acetylcholine - AChE acetylcholine esterase - CNS central nervous system - EPSP excitatory postsynaptic potential - I h injected hyperpolarizing current - LTP long-term potentiation - PPR principal planta retractor motoneuron - PTP post-tetanic potentiation - R in input resistance - V h hyperpolarized potential - V m membrane potential - VN ventral nerve - VNA anterior branch of the ventral nerve - V r resting potential.  相似文献   

7.
Postsynaptic potentials, elicited by stimulation of the sensory pudendal (SPud) and superficial perineal nerves (SPeri) on both sides, were recorded from motoneurons innervating tail muscles in the non-anaesthetized and spinalized cat. The stimulation of SPud and SPeri on both sides predominantly produced excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) in all kinds of tail motoneurons (70-95%). The inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) were often observed in motoneurons innervating ventral tail muscles (30-33%). The means of averaged central latencies of EPSPs and IPSPs ranged from 4.3 to 7.3 ms, and from 4.6 to 8.4 ms, respectively. The findings suggests that polysynaptic neuronal pathways from pudendal nerve to tail motoneurons produce tonic activities of all tail muscles to raise the tail in micturation, defecation and sexual movements which are induced by stimulation of pudendal nerves.  相似文献   

8.
Interneurons of the supratrigeminal nucleus, transmitting effects from the sensory and motor branches of the trigeminal nerve to motoneurons of the muscles of mastication were investigated. Two groups of interneurons with different functional connections were found. The first group (A) contains neurons excited during stimulation of the sensory branches and the motor nerve to the digastric muscle (A1), neurons excited during stimulation of sensory branches and high-threshold afferents of the motor nerve to the masseter muscle (A2), and neurons excited only by low-threshold afferents of the motor nerve to the masseter muscle (A3). Neurons of the second group (B) were activated only by sensory fibers of the trigeminal nerve. It is postulated that interneurons of group A transmit inhibitory effects to motoneurons of antagonist muscles of the lower jaw. Group B interneurons participate in the transmission of excitatory influences to motoneurons of the digastric muscle.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 4, No. 2, pp. 150–157, March–April, 1972.  相似文献   

9.
Hori N  Carp JS  Carpenter DO  Akaike N 《Life sciences》2002,72(4-5):389-396
Cervical spinal cord slices were prepared from adult rats. Intracellular recordings from motoneurons revealed that electrical stimulation of the ventralmost part of the dorsal funiculus (which contains primarily descending corticospinal axons) elicited EPSPs in 75% of the neurons. The latencies of these EPSPs tended to be shorter than those elicited by dorsal horn gray matter stimulation. Pairs of subthreshold dorsal funiculus stimuli were able to elicit action potentials in motoneurons. These data are consistent with previous morphological and electrophysiological studies indicating that cervical motoneurons receive both mono-and polysynaptic corticospinal inputs. In addition, motoneurons were markedly depolarized by iontophoretic application of AMPA or KA (7 out of 7 neurons), but only weakly depolarized by NMDA (1 out of 6 neurons). CNQX (but not AP-5) blocked EPSPs elicited by dorsal funiculus stimulation. Thus, corticospinal transmission to motoneurons is mediated primarily by non-NMDA glutamate receptors.  相似文献   

10.
Synaptic processes in various functional groups of thoracic motoneurons (Th9-Th11) evoked by stimulation of segmental nerves were investigated in anesthetized and decerebrate cats. No reciprocal relations were found between these groups of motoneurons. Only excitatory mono- and polysynaptic responses were recorded in the motoneurons of the principal intercostal nerve following stimulation of the homonymous nerve. Activation of the afferents of the external intercostal muscle and dorsal branches does not cause noticeable synaptic processes in these motoneurons; much more rarely it is accompanied by the development of low-amplitude polysynaptic EPSP's. In motoneurons of the dorsal branches, stimulation of homonymous nerves leads to the appearance of simple, short-latent EPSP's. Late responses of the IPSP or EPSP - IPSP type with a predominance of the inhibitory component were observed in most motoneurons of this type following activation of the afferent fibers of the principal intercostal nerve. In other motoneurons of the dorsal muscles, stimulation of the main intercostal nerve (and nerve of the external intercostal muscle) did not evoke apparent synpatic processes. EPSP's (mono- and polysynaptic) appeared in the motoneurons of the external intercostal muscle following stimulation of the homonymous and main intercostal nerves. Activation of the afferents of the dorsal branches was ineffective. The character of the synaptic responses of the respiratory motoneurons to segmental afferent stimulation, investigated under conditions of spontaneous respiration, was different. The characteristics of synaptic activation of thoracic motoneurons by segmental afferents under conditions of hyperventilation apnea and during spontaneous breathing of the animals are discussed.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 2, No. 3, pp. 279–288, May–June, 1970.  相似文献   

11.
1. Electrical stimulation of the rat's contralateral central amygdaloid (CAm) nucleus or the contralateral frontal cortex markedly augmented the antidromic field potential evoked by stimulation of mylohyoid (Myl) nerve. 2. This facilitation was shown to be due to EPSPs of the mylohyoid-anterior digastric (Myl-Dig) motoneurons. 3. In a few motoneurons, cortical EPSPs had fixed short latencies following high-frequency double stimuli and this is believed to be due to a monosynaptic pathway. 4. The amygdaloid or cortically evoked EPSPs relieved IS-SD blockade in a few motoneurons and also facilitated antidromic discharge in others which did not show any IS or M spike response to the same subthreshold antidromic stimulation. The underlying mechanisms are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of stimulation of the ipsilateral and contralateral red nuclei on motoneurons of the hypoglossal nucleus was studied in cats anesthetized with chloralose and pentobarbital. In 35 (69%) of the 51 motoneurons tested, PSPs were generated in response to stimulation of the red nuclei by series of 3 to 5 stimuli of threshold strength and with a frequency of 500–600/sec. Of this number, 33 motoneurons responded to stimulation by EPSPs, whose latent periods varied from 3.5 to 14.0 msec (mean value for the ipsilateral red nucleus 5.7±0.75, for the contralateral nucleus 6.8±0.8 msec), whereas two motoneurons responded (after 6.2 msec) by IPSPs. Of the 35 motoneurons responding to stimulation of the red nuclei, stimulation of the lingual nerve evoked EPSPs in 31 and IPSPs in 4 (two of them were inhibited by rubrofugal impulses). IPSPs were generated as a result of stimulation of the lingual nerve in 16 motoneurons which did not respond to rubrofugal impulses.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 10, No. 1, pp. 62–66, January–February, 1978.  相似文献   

13.
1. Repetitive stimulation of the rat'se central amygdaloid (CAm) nucleus induced rhythmic masticatory jaw movements or continuous jaw opening. Both types of jaw movements were accompanied by coincidental activities of the mylohyoid (Myl) nerve. 2. The effects of CAm stimulation were examined on activities of bilateral Myl and masseteric (Mass) nerves or their motoneurons (Myl-Dig and Mass, respectively). 3. CAm stimulation induced contralaterally dominant facilitation of the Myl nerve activity as well as Myl-Dig motoneurons. These facilitatory effects were caused by EPSPs seen in Myl-Dig motoneurons. 4. One third of the Mass motoneurons were inhibited or hyperpolarized by contralateral CAm stimulation, while a few were facilitated and the majority unaffected.  相似文献   

14.
Potentials of motoneurons of the lower segments of the spinal cord were recorded with the aid of intracellular microelectrodes in experiments on cats with induced tetanus produced by injection of tetanus toxin (1500–2000 mouse LD50) into the extensor muscles of the left shin. Neither afferent volleys of impulses in cutaneous and muscle nerves, nor antidromic volleys in the corresponding ventral roots, produced IPSPs in motoneurons of the extremity into which toxin was injected. The form both of antidromic peak potentials and of monosynaptic EPSPs in motoneurons in which IPSPs were blocked by tetanus toxin did not differ from the form of corresponding potentials of motoneurons in normal cats. The values of threshold depolarization for peak discharges during synaptic and direct stimulation were equal in tetanus and control motoneurons. Resistance and time constant values of the membrane in "tetanus" motoneurons did not differ from the corresponding values for "control" motoneurons.N. I. Pirogov Second Medical Institute, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 1, No. 1, pp. 25–34, July–August, 1969.  相似文献   

15.
The present study was designed (1) to characterize the subliminal responses of dorsal horn neurons to stimulation of the sural nerve, and (2) to correlate the type of response to this stimulus with the responses to natural mechanical stimulation of the skin. To accomplish this, intracellular and extracellular recordings were carried out in L6 and L7 dorsal horn neurons in the cat. The excitatory responses of each cell to electrical stimulation of the sural nerve and to mechanical stimulation of the skin were noted.

Of 35 dorsal horn cells recorded intracellularly, 11 responded with impulses to sural nerve stimulation, 9 responded with excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) but not impulses, and 15 had no excitatory responses to this stimulus. The type of response to sural nerve stimulation was strongly correlated with receptive field modality. Most cells receiving an input from high-threshold cutaneous mechanoreceptors responded with impulses or gave no excitatory response to sural nerve stimulation, whereas most cells that had only low-threshold mechanoreceptor input responded with EPSPs only or gave no response. In cells with only low-threshold (LT) mechanoreceptive input, response to sural nerve stimulation was highly correlated with receptive field locus. Those LT cells with no excitatory responses to sural nerve stimulation had receptive fields confined to the foot and/or toes, whereas those that gave EPSPs had more proximal receptive fields. The possible significance of these data with reference to changes observed after lesions, such as increased response to sural nerve stimulation, increased receptive field size, and somatotopic reorganization, is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Experiments on cats anesthetized with chloralose showed that repetitive stimulation of the locus coeruleus is accompanied by a decrease in IPSPs evoked by stimulation of flexor reflex afferents in extensor motoneurons. The effect appeared 600 msec after the beginning of stimulation and reached its maximum after 1500–2000 msec. Repetitive stimulation of the locus coeruleus did not change the membrane potential and did not affect EPSPs or IPSPs evoked by stimulation of low-threshold muscle afferents; EPSPs due to activation of high-threshold cutaneous and muscle afferents likewise remained unchanged. Repetitive stimulation of more central regions of the brain stem was accompanied not only by a decrease in IPSPs evoked by stimulation of flexor reflex afferents in extensor motoneurons, but also by a decrease in amplitude of EPSPs arising in response to stimulation of these same afferents in flexor motoneurons. These effects were not connected with activation of monoaminergic structures, for unlike effects arising during stimulation of the locus coeruleus, they were also found in previously reserpinized animals.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 14, No. 1, pp. 51–59, January–February, 1982.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of group II muscle (PBSt, GS) and cutaneous afferent (Sur, SPc, Tib) inputs from the hindlimb on the monosynaptic reflexes of motoneurons innervating tail muscles were studied in lower spinalized cats. Stimulation of the cutaneous nerves at the conditioning-test stimulus interval of about 10-20 ms facilitated and inhibited the monosynaptic reflexes of ipsilateral and contralateral tail muscles, respectively. The effects of the muscle nerve stimulation were not so prominent as those elicited by cutaneous nerve stimulation. The monosynaptic reflex was also inhibited by muscle nerve stimulation at 10-50 ms intervals. The effects of conditioning stimulation of the hindlimb peripheral nerves at short intervals were depressed or blocked by section of the ipsilateral lateral funiculus at S1 spinal segment. These findings show that the neuronal pathway from hindlimb afferents to tail muscle motoneurons passed the lateral funiculus of the spinal cord and modulates the motoneuronal activity of tail muscles.  相似文献   

18.
Neuronal pathways for the lingual reflex in the Japanese toad   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
1. Anuran tongue is controlled by visual stimuli for releasing the prey-catching behavior ('snapping') and also by the intra-oral stimuli for eliciting the lingual reflex. To elucidate the neural mechanisms controlling tongue movements, we analyzed the neuronal pathways from the glossopharyngeal (IX) afferents to the hypoglossal (XII) tongue-muscle motoneurons. 2. Field potentials were recorded from the bulbar dorsal surface over the fasciculus solitarius (fsol) to the electrical stimulation of the ipsilateral IX nerve. They were composed of three successive negative waves: S1, S2 and N wave. The S1 and S2 waves followed successive stimuli applied at short intervals (10 ms or less), whereas the N wave was strongly suppressed at intervals shorter than 500 ms. Furthermore, the S1 wave had lower threshold than the S2 wave. 3. Orthodromic action potentials were intra-axonally recorded from IX afferent fibers in the fsol to the ipsilateral IX nerve stimuli. Two peaks found in the latency distribution histogram of these action potentials well coincided with the negative peaks of the S1 and the S2 waves of the simultaneously recorded field potentials. Therefore, the S1 and S2 waves should represent the compound action potentials of two groups of the IX afferent fibers with different conduction velocities. 4. Ipsilateral IX nerve stimuli elicited excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) in the tongue-protractor motoneurons (PMNs) and the tongue-retractor motoneurons (RMNs). Inhibitory postsynaptic potentials were not observed. 5. The EPSPs recorded in PMNs had mean onset latencies of 6.4 ms measured from the negative peaks of the S1 wave. The EPSPs were facilitated when paired submaximal stimuli were applied at intervals shorter than 20 ms, but were suppressed at intervals longer than 30 ms. Furthermore, the EPSPs were spatially facilitated when peripherally split two bundles of the IX nerve were simultaneously stimulated. 6. On the other hand, the EPSPs recorded in RMNs had shorter onset latencies, averaging 2.5 ms. In 14 of 43 RMNs, early and late EPSP components could be reliably discriminated. The thresholds for the early EPSP components were as low as those for the S1 waves, whereas for the late EPSP components the thresholds were usually higher than those for the S2 waves.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
At pupation in Manduca sexta, accessory planta retractor muscles and their motoneurons degenerate in segment-specific patterns. Accessory planta retractor muscles in abdominal segments 2 and 3 survive in reduced form through the pupal stage and degenerate after adult emergence. Electromyographic and electrophysiological recordings show that these accessory planta retractor muscles participate in a new, rhythmic `pupal motor pattern' in which all four muscles contract synchronously at ∼4 s intervals for extended bouts. Accessory planta retractor muscle contractions are driven by synaptic activation of accessory planta retractor motoneurons and are often accompanied by rhythmic activity in intersegmental muscles and spiracular closer muscles. The pupal motor pattern is influenced by descending neural input although isolated abdominal ganglia can produce a pupal motor pattern-like rhythm. The robust pupal motor pattern first seen after pupal ecdysis weakens during the second half of pupal life. Anemometric recordings indicate that the intersegmental muscle and spiracular closer muscle component of the pupal motor pattern produces ventilation. Accessory planta retractor muscle contractions lift the flexible abdominal floor, to which the developing wings and legs adhere tightly. We hypothesize that, by a bellows-like action, the accessory planta retractor muscle contractions circulate hemolymph in the appendages. Morphometric analysis shows that dendritic regression is similar in accessory planta retractor motoneurons with different pupal fates, and that accessory planta retractor motoneurons begin to participate in the pupal motor pattern while their dendrites are regressed. Accepted: 29 March 1998  相似文献   

20.
Postsynaptic potentials of motoneurons of the masseter and digastric muscles evoked by stimulation of the infraorbital nerve with a strength of between 1 and 10 thresholds were investigated in cats anesthetized with a mixture of chloralose and pentobarbital. Depending on their ability to be activated by low-threshold afferents of this nerve, motoneurons of the masseter were divided into two groups. Stimuli with a strength of 1.2–2.5 times above threshold for the most excitable fibers of the infraorbital nerve evoked short-latency EPSPs in the motoneurons of the first group; a further increase in stimulus strength (3–9 thresholds) led to the appearance of IPSPs with latent periods of 2.8–3.5 msec. Motoneurons of the second group responded to stimulation of the infraorbital nerve with a strength of 3–9 thresholds by IPSPs whose latent periods varied from 6 to 8 msec. Stimuli below 3 thresholds in strength evoked no responses in these motoneurons. Stimulation of the infraorbital nerve with pulses of between 1 and 2 thresholds in strength evoked EPSPs in digastric motoneurons, but an increase in the strength of stimulation led to action potential generation. The presence of many excitatory and inhibitory inputs formed by afferent fibers of different types evidently provides a basis for functional diversity of jaw-opening and jaw-closing reflexes.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 12, No. 6, pp. 596–603, November–December, 1980.  相似文献   

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