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1.
Research on photosynthetic electron transfer closely parallels that of other electron transfer pathways and in many cases they overlap. Thus, the first bacterial cytochrome to be characterized, called cytochrome c 2, is commonly found in non-sulfur purple photosynthetic bacteria and is a close homolog of mitochondrial cytochrome c. The cytochrome bc 1 complex is an integral part of photosynthetic electron transfer yet, like cytochrome c 2, was first recognized as a respiratory component. Cytochromes c 2 mediate electron transfer between the cytochrome bc 1 complex and photosynthetic reaction centers and cytochrome a-type oxidases. Not all photosynthetic bacteria contain cytochrome c 2; instead it is thought that HiPIP, auracyanin, Halorhodospira cytochrome c551, Chlorobium cytochrome c555, and cytochrome c 8 may function in a similar manner as photosynthetic electron carriers between the cytochrome bc 1 complex and reaction centers. More often than not, the soluble or periplasmic mediators do not interact directly with the reaction center bacteriochlorophyll, but require the presence of membrane-bound intermediates: a tetraheme cytochrome c in purple bacteria and a monoheme cytochrome c in green bacteria. Cyclic electron transfer in photosynthesis requires that the redox potential of the system be delicately poised for optimum efficiency. In fact, lack of redox poise may be one of the defects in the aerobic phototrophic bacteria. Thus, large concentrations of cytochromes c 2 and c′ may additionally poise the redox potential of the cyclic photosystem of purple bacteria. Other cytochromes, such as flavocytochrome c (FCSD or SoxEF) and cytochrome c551 (SoxA), may feed electrons from sulfide, sulfur, and thiosulfate into the photosynthetic pathways via the same soluble carriers as are part of the cyclic system. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

2.
Fast reaction kinetic experiments on the electron transfer reaction between azurin and cytochrome c551 isolated from Pseudomonas aeruginosa confirmed the existence of two redox forms of reduced azurin previously reported. The pH dependence of the amplitudes of the relaxation processes observed in temperature jump experiments indicate that these two redox forms are in pH dependent equilibrium. The pH independence of the overall equilibrium constant indicates that redox active and inactive forms of cytochrome c551 may also exist. Evidence that reduced cytochrome c551 undergoes a pH transition is given by optical spectrophotometry. The nature of the transition is discussed in the context of recent nmr studies and in terms of the Marcus theory of electron transfer. The metabolic consequences of these transitions are also discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Kinetics of electron transfer from soluble cytochrome c2 to the tetraheme cytochrome c have been measured in isolated reaction centers and in membrane fragments of the photosynthetic purple bacterium Rhodopseudomonas viridis by time-resolved flash absorption spectroscopy. Absorbance changes kinetics in the region of cytochrome -bands (540–560 nm) were measured at 21 °C under redox conditions where the two high-potential hemes (c-559 and c-556) of the tetraheme cytochrome were chemically reduced. After flash excitation, the heme c-559 donates an electron to the special pair of bacteriochlorophylls and is then re-reduced by heme c-556. The data show that oxidized heme c-556 is subsequently re-reduced by electron transfer from reduced cytochrome c2 present in the solution. The rate of this reaction has a non-linear dependence on the concentration of cytochrome c2, suggesting a (minimal) two-step mechanism involving the f ormation of a complex between cytochrome c2 and the reaction center, followed by intracomplex electron transfer. To explain the monophasic character of the reaction kinetics, we propose a collisional mechanism where the lifetime of the temporary complex is short compared to electron transfer. The limit of the halftime of the bimolecular process when extrapolated to high concentrations of cytochrome c2 is 60 ± 20 s. There is a large ionic strength effect on the kinetics of electron transfer from cytochrome c2 to heme c-556. The pseudofirst-order rate constant decreases from 1.1 × 107 M-1 s-1 to 1.3 × 106 M-1 s-1 when the ionic strength is increased from 1 to 1000 mM. The maximum rate (1.1 × 107 M-1 s-1) was obtained at about 1 mM ionic strength. This dependence of the rate on ionic strength s uggests that attractive electrostatic interactions contribute to the binding of cytochrome c2 with the tetraheme cytochrome. On the basis of our data and of previous molecular modelling, it is proposed that cytochrome c2 docks close to the low-potential heme c-554 and reduces heme c-556 via c-554.  相似文献   

4.
 Reduction of the haems in tetrahaem cytochromes c 3 is a cooperative process, i.e., reduction of each of the haems depends on the redox states of the other haems. Furthermore, electron transfer is coupled to proton transfer (redox-Bohr effect). Two of its haems and a strictly conserved nearby phenylalanine residue, F20, in Desulfovibrio vulgaris (Hildenborough) cytochrome c 3 form a structural motif that is present in all cytochromes c 3 and also in cytochrome c oxidase. A putative role for this phenylalanine residue in the cooperativity of haem reduction was investigated. Therefore, this phenylalanine was replaced, with genetic techniques, by isoleucine and tyrosine in D. vulgaris (Hildenborough) cytochrome c 3. Cyclic voltammetry studies revealed a small increase (30 mV) in one of the macroscopic redox potentials in the mutated cytochromes. EPR showed that the main alterations occurred in the vicinity of haem I, the haem closest to residue 20 and one of the haems responsible for positive cooperativities in electron transfer of D. vulgaris cytochrome c 3. NMR studies of F20I cytochrome c 3 demonstrated that the haem core architecture is maintained and that the more affected haem proton groups are those near the mutation site. NMR redox titrations of this mutated protein gave evidence for only small changes in the relative redox potentials of the haems. However, electron/electron and proton/electron cooperativity are maintained, indicating that this aromatic residue has no essential role in these processes. Furthermore, chemical modification of the N-terminal amino group of cytochrome c 3 backbone, which is also very close to haem I, had no effect on the network of cooperativities. Received: 25 June 1996 / Accepted: 26 August 1996  相似文献   

5.
Cyclic voltammetry has been used to study the effects of interactions between horse cytochrome c and solid-supported planar lipid membranes, comprised of either egg phosphatidylcholine (PC) or PC plus 20 mol.% cardiolipin (CL), on the redox potential and the electrochemical electron transfer rate between the protein and a semiconductor electrode. Experiments were performed over a wide range of cytochrome c concentrations (0–440 M) at low (20 mM) and medium (160 mM) ionic strengths. Three types of electrochemical behavior were observed, which varied as a function of the experimental conditions. At very low cytochrome c concentration (0.1 M), and under conditions where electrostatic forces dominated the protein–lipid membrane interaction (i.e., low ionic strength with membranes containing CL), a redox potential (265 mV) and an electrochemical electron transfer rate constant (0.09s –1)were obtained which compare well with those measured in other laboratories using a variety of different chemical modifications of the working electrode. Two other electrochemical signals (not reported with chemically modified electrodes) were also observed to occur at higher cytochrome c concentrations with this membrane system, as well as with two other systems (membranes containing CL under medium ionic strength conditions, and PC only at low ionic strength). These involved positive shifts of the cytochrome c redox potential (by 40 and 60 mV) and large decreases in the electron transfer rate (to 0.03 and 0.003 s–1). The observations can be rationalized in terms of a structural model of the cytochrome c–membrane interaction, in which association involves both electrostatic and hydrophobic forces and results in varying degrees of insertion of the protein into the hydrophobic interior of the membrane.  相似文献   

6.
Cytochrome c is a heme protein involved in electron transfer, cell apoptosis, and diseases associated with oxidative stress. Here we expressed human cytochrome c in E. coli and purified it to homogeneity with a yield of 10–15 mg/L. The redox potential of recombinant human cytochrome c was 0.246 V which was measured by cyclic voltammetry. This is similar to that of horse cytochrome c with a value of 0.249 V. The sequential assignment and structural analysis of recombinant human ferrocytochrome c were obtained using multidimensional NMR spectroscopy. On the basis of our NMR studies, the recombinant human cytochrome c produced in E. coli exhibits the same tertiary fold as horse cytochrome c. These results provide evidence that human cytochrome c expressed in E. coli possesses a similar function and structure to that of the horse protein. It is known that cytochrome c plays a role in many human diseases. This study serves as the basis for gaining insight into human diseases by exploring structure and function relationships of cytochrome c to its interacting proteins.  相似文献   

7.
Soluble cytochrome c-554 (M r 10 kDa) is purified from the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium tepidum. Its midpoint redox potential is determined to be +148 mV from redox titration at pH 7.0. The kinetics of cytochrome c-554 oxidation by a purified reaction center complex from the same organism were studied by flash absorption spectroscopy at room temperature, and the results indicate that the reaction partner of cytochrome c-554 is cytochrome c-551 bound to the reaction center rather than the primary donor P840. The second-order rate constant for the electron donation from cytochrome c-554 to cytochrome c-551 was estimated to be 1.7×107 M–1 s–1. The reaction rate was not significantly influenced by the ionic strength of the reaction medium.This revised version was published online in October 2005 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

8.
Cytochrome c delicately tilts the balance between cell life (respiration) and cell death (apoptosis). Whereas cell life is governed by transient electron transfer interactions of cytochrome c inside the mitochondria, the cytoplasmic adducts of cytochrome c that lead to cell death are amazingly stable. Interestingly, the contacts of cytochrome c with its counterparts shift from the area surrounding the heme crevice for the redox complexes to the opposite molecule side when the electron flow is not necessary. The cytochrome c signalosome shows a higher level of regulation by post-translational modifications—nitration and phosphorylation—of the hemeprotein. Understanding protein interfaces, as well as protein modifications, would puzzle the mitochondrial cytochrome c-controlled pathways out and enable the design of novel drugs to silence the action of pro-survival and pro-apoptotic partners of cytochrome c.  相似文献   

9.
Spectroscopically, the modification of horse heart ferricytochrome c with N-chloro-4-toluolsul-fonamide (Chloramine-T, CT) occurs through a two-step process, the disruption of the methionine-80 sulfur-iron linkage and a reagent-independent change, an intramolecular rearrangement. Chromatographic purification of the preparation at a 2.5:1 reagent-to-protein ratio, pH 8.0–8.5, yields two major products, the FII and FIII CT-cytochromes c. Both products contain modification of only the methionines, 80 and 65, to sulfoxides; both are monomeric, reduced by ascorbate, and the ferrous forms are oxidized by molecular oxygen and bind carbon monoxide. The redox potentials of FII and FIII are 135 and 175±15 mV. The FIII is indistinguishable from the native protein in its binding and the electron donor property toward mammalian cytochrome c oxidase. It also binds nearly as effectively as the native protein to yeast cytochrome c peroxidase, but is a less efficient donor. It is, however, a poor electron acceptor from both mammalian cytochrome c reductase and chicken liver sulfite oxidase. FII lacks cytochrome c oxidase activity and is also a poorer substrate for the other three enzymes. Both the derivatives are consistently better electron donors than acceptors. It is concluded that the binding of cytochrome c to cytochrome c oxidase and to cytochrome c peroxidase does not require the integrity of the methionine-80 sulfur linkage and that the complexation process has a finite degree of freedom with regard to the state of the heme crevice opening. The alterations of the oxidoreduction function have been analyzed in light of both prevailing models of cytochrome c function, the two-site model (one site for oxidizing and the other for reducing enzymes) and the single-site model (the same site for the oxidizing and reducing enzymes). These observations can be accommodated by either model, given the latitude that the binding domains for the oxidizing and the reducing enzymes have finite overlapping and nonoverlapping regions.To whom all correspondence related to the functional studies with cytochrome c peroxidase and sulfite oxidase is to be directed.  相似文献   

10.
Photosynthetic electron transfer has been examined in whole cells, isolated membranes and in partially purified reaction centers (RCs) of Roseicyclus mahoneyensis, strain ML6 and Porphyrobacter meromictius, strain ML31, two species of obligate aerobic anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria. Photochemical activity in strain ML31 was observed aerobically, but the photosynthetic apparatus was not functional under anaerobic conditions. In strain ML6 low levels of photochemistry were measured anaerobically, possibly due to incomplete reduction of the primary electron acceptor (QA) prior to light excitation, however, electron transfer occurred optimally under low oxygen conditions. Photoinduced electron transfer involves a soluble cytochrome c in both strains, and an additional reaction center (RC)-bound cytochrome c in ML6. The redox properties of the primary electron donor (P) and QA of ML31 are similar to those previously determined for other aerobic phototrophs, with midpoint redox potentials of +463 mV and −25 mV, respectively. Strain ML6 showed a very narrow range of ambient redox potentials appropriate for photosynthesis, with midpoint redox potentials of +415 mV for P and +94 mV for QA. Cytoplasm soluble and photosynthetic complex bound cytochromes were characterized in terms of apparent molecular mass. Fluorescence excitation spectra revealed that abundant carotenoids not intimately associated with the RC are not involved in photosynthetic energy conservation.  相似文献   

11.
A detailed analysis of the periplasmic electron carriers of the photosynthetic bacterium Ectothiorhodospira sp. has been performed. Two low mid-point redox potential electron carriers, cytochrome c′ and cytochrome c, are detected. A high potential iron–sulfur protein is the only high mid-point redox potential electron transfer component present in the periplasm. Analysis of light-induced absorption changes shows that this high potential iron–sulfur protein acts in vivo as efficient electron donor to the photo-oxidized high potential heme of the Ectothiorhodospira sp. reaction center. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The respiratory chain of mitochondria and bacteria is made up of a set of membrane‐associated enzyme complexes which catalyse sequential, stepwise transfer of reducing equivalents from substrates to oxygen and convert redox energy into a transmembrane protonmotive force (PMF) by proton translocation from a negative (N) to a positive (P) aqueous phase separated by the coupling membrane. There are three basic mechanisms by which a membrane‐associated redox enzyme can generate a PMF. These are membrane anisotropic arrangement of the primary redox catalysis with: (i) vectorial electron transfer by redox metal centres from the P to the N side of the membrane; (ii) hydrogen transfer by movement of quinones across the membrane, from a reduction site at the N side to an oxidation site at the P side; (iii) a different type of mechanism based on co‐operative allosteric linkage between electron transfer at the metal redox centres and transmembrane electrogenic proton translocation by apoproteins. The results of advanced experimental and theoretical analyses and in particular X‐ray crystallography show that these three mechanisms contribute differently to the protonmotive activity of cytochrome c oxidase, ubiquinone‐cytochrome c oxidoreductase and NADH‐ubiquinone oxidoreductase of the respiratory chain. This review considers the main features, recent experimental advances and still unresolved problems in the molecular/atomic mechanism of coupling between the transfer of reducing equivalents and proton translocation in these three protonmotive redox complexes.  相似文献   

14.
The kinetics of electron transfer from cytochrome c2 to the primary donor (P) of the reaction center from the photosynthetic purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides have been investigated by time-resolved absorption spectroscopy. Rereduction of P+ induced by a laser pulse has been measured at temperatures from 300 K to 220 K in a series of specifically mutated reaction centers characterized by altered midpoint redox potentials of P+/P varying from 410 mV to 765 mV (as compared to 505 mV for wild type). Rate constants for first-order electron donation within preformed reaction center–cytochrome c2 complexes and for the bimolecular oxidation of free cytochrome c2 have been obtained by multiexponential deconvolution of the kinetics. At all temperatures the rate of the fastest intracomplex electron transfer increases by more than two orders of magnitude as the driving force −ΔG° is varied over a range of 350 meV. The temperature and ΔG° dependences of the rate constant fit the Marcus equation well. Global analysis yields a reorganization energy λ = 0.96 ± 0.07 eV and a set of electronic matrix elements, specific for each mutant, ranging from 1.2 10−4 eV to 2.5 10−4 eV. Analysis in terms of the Jortner equation indicates that the best fit is obtained in the classical limit and restricts the range of coupled vibrational modes to frequencies lower than ∼200 cm−1. An additional slower kinetic component of P+ reduction, attributed to electron transfer from cyt c2 docked in a nonoptimal configuration of the complex, displays a Marcus type dependence of the rate constant upon ΔG°, characterized by a similar value of λ (0.8 ± 0.1 eV) and by an average electronic matrix element smaller by more than one order of magnitude. In all of the mutants, as the temperature is decreased below 260 K, both intracomplex reactions are abruptly inhibited, their rate being negligible at 220 K. The free energy dependence of the second-order rate constant for oxidation of cyt c2 in solution suggests that the collisional reaction is partially diffusion controlled, reaching the diffusion limit at exothermicities between 150 and 250 meV over the temperature range investigated.  相似文献   

15.
The effects of nitric oxide (NO) on electron transfer were studied with a photodenitrifier, Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides forma sp. denitrificans. NO inhibited the oxidation of cytochrome c induced by continuous illumination in intact cells. NO inhibited the re-reduction of cytochrome c, the slow phase of the carotenoid bandshift, and the oxidation of cytochrome b after a flash illumination, suggesting that NO inhibited the photosynthetic cyclic electron transfer through the cytochrome b-c 1 region. NO also inhibited the nitrite (NO 2 - ) and NO reductions with succinate as the electron donor in intact cells, but did not inhibit the NO 2 - and NO reductions in chromatophore membranes with ascorbate and phenazine methosulfate as the electron donors. NO reversibly inhibited the ubiquinol: cytochrome c oxidoreductase of the membranes, suggesting that NO inhibited the electron transfer through the cytochrome b-c 1 region and that the cytochrome b-c 1 complex also was involved in the electron transport in both NO 2 - and NO reductions. The catalytic site of NO reduction was distinct from the inhibitory site of NO.Abbreviations UHDBT 5-undecyl-6-hydroxy-4,7-dioxobenzothiazole - UHNQ 3-undecyl-2-hydroxy-1,4-naphthoquinone - MOPS 3-(N-morpholino)propane-sulfonic acid - PMS phenazine methosulfate - DCIP 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol - DDC diethyl-dithiocarbamate  相似文献   

16.
The photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs) classified as the group II possess a peripheral cytochrome (Cyt) subunit, which serves as the electron mediator to the special-pair. In the cycle of the photosynthetic electron transfer reactions, the Cyt subunit accepts electrons from soluble electron carrier proteins, and re-reduces the photo-oxidized special-pair of the bacteriochlorophyll. Physiologically, high-potential cytochromes such as the cytochrome c2 and the high-potential iron–sulfur protein (HiPIP) function as the electron donors to the Cyt subunit. Most of the Cyt subunits possess four heme c groups, and it was unclear which heme group first accepts the electron from the electron donor. The most distal heme to the special-pair, the heme-1, has a lower redox potential than the electron donors, which makes it difficult to understand the electron transfer mechanism mediated by the Cyt subunit. Extensive mutagenesis combined with kinetic studies has made a great contribution to our understanding of the molecular interaction mechanisms, and has demonstrated the importance of the region close to the heme-1 in the electron transfer. Moreover, crystallographic studies have elucidated two high-resolution three-dimensional structures for the RCs containing the Cyt subunit, the Blastochloris viridis and Thermochromatium tepidum RCs, as well as the structures of their electron donors. An examination of the structural data also suggested that the binding sites for both the cytochrome c2 and the HiPIP are located adjacent to the solvent-accessible edge of the heme-1. In addition, it is also indicated by the structural and biochemical data that the cytochrome c2 and the HiPIP dock with the Cyt subunit by different mechanisms although the two electron donors utilize the same region for the interactions; cytochrome c2 is recognized through electrostatic interactions while hydrophobic interactions are important in the HiPIP docking.  相似文献   

17.
The reduction kinetics of two differently charged cytochromes c, horse cytochrome c and Rhodosprillum rubrum cytochrome c2, by ferrous EDTA2? were studied as a function of ionic strength. Since both proteins have nearly the same heme edge region, but have very different overall surface charge, this comparative study served as a direct test of the utility of small nonbinding non-physiological redox agents in the study of the charge of electron transfer sites of redox proteins. Calculations based on the ionic strength-kinetic data yielded protein charges of +10 and +2.3 for cytochrome c and cytochrome c2 respectively and compared well with values of +9 and +3 for the overall charge of the proteins based on acidic and basic amino acid residues. It is concluded that ionic strength effects upon the redox kinetics with such nonbinding nonphysiological redox agents reflect the influence of the overall protein charge and not the localized charge of the presumed site of electron transfer.  相似文献   

18.
Microbial theophylline oxidase (ThOx) is a redox enzyme catalysing 8-hydroxylation of theophylline to form 1,3-dimethyluric acid. In this work, ThOx has been characterized as a fragile haem-containing protein complex composed of several non-covalently bound dynamic domains with molecular weights of around 60 and 210 kDa, and capable of formation of 1.5 MDa assemblies as well. The rate of theophylline oxidation by ThOx with the non-physiological electron acceptor ferricyanide was 0.17 s?1, approaching that with cytochrome c, 0.33 s?1. The apparent catalytic constant depended on the electron acceptor concentration. At concentrations lower than 0.2 mM the reaction did not fit the Michaelis–Menten scheme, and some non-catalytic processes dominated in the overall reaction. The kinetics of ThOx catalysis were also studied at electrodes modified with self-assembled monolayers (SAM) of hydroxyl- and amine-terminated alkanethiols. Different compositions of the SAM provide different orientations of ThOx on these layers. Depending on the orientation of ThOx onto the SAM-modified electrodes, the heterogeneous electron transfer (ET) constant, ks, which characterizes the ET reaction between the electrodes and the haem of ThOx (Eo/ of 87 mV (NHE)) was 0.4 s?1 and 3.2 s?1. Only the low-ET-rate orientation appeared to be productive for the electrocatalytic function of ThOx, giving a reaction similar to that with ferricyanide and cytochrome c. The apparent efficiency of ThOx bioelectrocatalysis in the absence of mediators was substantially lower than that mediated by ferricyanide or cytochrome c. This lower efficiency is consistent with a correspondingly lower amount of ThOx being in direct ET contact with the electrodes and thus involved in electrocatalysis.  相似文献   

19.
The rapid transfer of electrons in the photosynthetic redox chain is achieved by the formation of short-lived complexes of cytochrome b6f with the electron transfer proteins plastocyanin and cytochrome c6. A balance must exist between fast intermolecular electron transfer and rapid dissociation, which requires the formation of a complex that has limited specificity. The interaction of the soluble fragment of cytochrome f and cytochrome c6 from the cyanobacterium Nostoc sp. PCC 7119 was studied using NMR spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction. The crystal structures of wild type, M58H and M58C cytochrome c6 were determined. The M58C variant is an excellent low potential mimic of the wild type protein and was used in chemical shift perturbation and paramagnetic relaxation NMR experiments to characterize the complex with cytochrome f. The interaction is highly dynamic and can be described as a pure encounter complex, with no dominant stereospecific complex. Ensemble docking calculations and Monte-Carlo simulations suggest a model in which charge–charge interactions pre-orient cytochrome c6 with its haem edge toward cytochrome f to form an ensemble of orientations with extensive contacts between the hydrophobic patches on both cytochromes, bringing the two haem groups sufficiently close to allow for rapid electron transfer. This model of complex formation allows for a gradual increase and decrease of the hydrophobic interactions during association and dissociation, thus avoiding a high transition state barrier that would slow down the dissociation process.  相似文献   

20.
Plastocyanin and cytochrome c 6 are two soluble metalloproteins that act as alternative electron carriers between the membrane-embedded complexes cytochromes b 6 f and Photosystem I. Despite plastocyanin and cytochrome c 6 differing in the nature of their redox center (one is a copper protein, the other is a heme protein) and folding pattern (one is a β-barrel, the other consists of α-helices), they are exchangeable in green algae and cyanobacteria. In fact, the two proteins share a number of structural similarities that allow them to interact with the same membrane complexes in a similar way. The kinetic and thermodynamic analysis of Photosystem I reduction by plastocyanin and cytochrome c 6 reveals that the same factors govern the reaction mechanism within the same organism, but differ from one another. In cyanobacteria, in particular, the electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions between Photosystem I and its electron donors have been analyzed using the wild-type protein species and site-directed mutants. A number of residues similarly conserved in the two proteins have been shown to be critical for the electron transfer reaction. Cytochrome c 6 does contain two functional areas that are equivalent to those previously described in plastocyanin: one is a hydrophobic patch for electron transfer (site 1), and the other is an electrically charged area for complex formation (site 2). Each cyanobacterial protein contains just one arginyl residue, similarly located between sites 1 and 2, that is essential for the redox interaction with Photosystem I. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

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