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1.
The influence of the precultivation with different carbon sources on the ability of three different bacterial strains (Sphingomonas sp. strain BA2, Gordona sp. strain BP9, Mycobacterium sp. strain VF1) to grow on phenanthrene. anthracene, pyrene or fluoranthene as the sole source of carbon and energy were studied. The strains were found to maintain their ability to grow on two of the four PAH after 30 serial transfers in liquid nutrient broth medium without selective pressure. The ability to grow on these PAH as the sole carbon and energy source was also maintained after curing experiments with acridine orange. The high stability of the PAH-degradation phenotype suggests that the tested strains carry at least parts of the PAH-degradation pathway genes on the chromosome. The PAH-degradation versatility of the strains was also influenced by the carbon source being used for precultivation. Possible reasons for the particularly good impact of the precultivation on hexadecane on the PAH degradation are discussed in this paper.  相似文献   

2.
An environmental Mycobacterium able to degrade phenanthrene, pyrene and fluoranthene was transformed with an IS1096-based transposon marker system. Electroporation and subsequent delivery of the transposon enabled formation of constitutive lacZ transformants, with similar growth rates on pyrene and R2A media to the parental strain. A semi-selective medium was developed to recover and detect colonies of the transformed strain after inoculation into polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon-contaminated soil. Microcosm experiments involving inoculation of the tagged Mycobacterium strain into a historically PAH-contaminated soil indicated survival when an appropriate carbon source was available. The results reported show that transposon systems developed for clinical mycobacterial isolates are also applicable for use in environmental isolates. The results also show that inoculated Mycobacterium strains could survive for at least 100 days at 106–107 cfu g−1 in the PAH-contaminated soil tested here.  相似文献   

3.
The objectives of this work were to isolate the microorganisms responsible for a previously observed degradation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) in soil and to test a method for cleaning a PAH-contaminated soil. An efficient PAH degrader was isolated from an agricultural soil and designated as Mycobacterium LP1. In liquid culture, it degraded phenanthrene (58%), pyrene (24%), anthracene (21%) and benzo(a)pyrene (10%) present in mixture (initial concentration 50 μg ml−1 each) and phenanthrene (92%) and pyrene (94%) as sole carbon sources after 14 days of incubation at 30°C. In soil, Mycobacterium LP1 mineralised 14C-phenanthrene (45%) and 14C-pyrene (65%) after 10 days. The good ability of this Mycobacterium was combined with the benzo(a)pyrene oxidation effect obtained by 1% w/w rapeseed oil in a sequential treatment of a PAH-spiked soil (total PAH concentration 200 mg kg−1). The first step was incubation with the bacterium for 12 days and the second step was the addition of the rapeseed oil after this time and a further incubation of 22 days. Phenanthrene (99%), pyrene (95%) and anthracene (99%) were mainly degraded in the first 12 days and a total of 85% of benzo(a)pyrene was transformed during the whole process. The feasibility of the method is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Microbiological analysis of soils from a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH)-contaminated site resulted in the enrichment of five microbial communities capable of utilizing pyrene as a sole carbon and energy source. Communities 4 and 5 rapidly degraded a number of different PAH compounds. Three pure cultures were isolated from community 5 using a spray plate method with pyrene as the sole carbon source. The cultures were identified as strains of Burkholderia ( Pseudomonas ) cepacia on the basis of biochemical and growth tests. The pure cultures (VUN 10 001, VUN 10 002 and VUN 10 003) were capable of degrading fluorene, phenanthrene and pyrene (100 mg l−1) to undetectable levels within 7–10 d in standard serum bottle cultures. Pyrene degradation was observed at concentrations up to 1000 mg l−1. The three isolates were also able to degrade other PAHs including fluoranthene, benz[ a ]anthracene and dibenz[ a , h ]anthracene as sole carbon and energy sources. Stimulation of dibenz[ a , h ]anthracene and benzo[ a ]pyrene degradation was achieved by the addition of small quantities of phenanthrene to cultures containing these compounds. Substrate utilization tests revealed that these micro-organisms could also grow on n -alkanes, chlorinated- and nitro-aromatic compounds.  相似文献   

5.
Quinones and other oxygenated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (oxy-PAHs) are toxic and/or genotoxic compounds observed to be cocontaminants at PAH-contaminated sites, but their formation and fate in contaminated environmental systems have not been well studied. Anthracene-9,10-dione (anthraquinone) has been found in most PAH-contaminated soils and sediments that have been analyzed for oxy-PAHs. However, little is known about the biodegradation of oxy-PAHs, and no bacterial isolates have been described that are capable of growing on or degrading anthraquinone. PAH-degrading Mycobacterium spp. are the only organisms that have been investigated to date for metabolism of a PAH quinone, 4,5-pyrenequinone. We utilized DNA-based stable-isotope probing (SIP) with [U-13C]anthraquinone to identify bacteria associated with anthraquinone degradation in PAH-contaminated soil from a former manufactured-gas plant site both before and after treatment in a laboratory-scale bioreactor. SIP with [U-13C]anthracene was also performed to assess whether bacteria capable of growing on anthracene are the same as those identified to grow on anthraquinone. Organisms closely related to Sphingomonas were the most predominant among the organisms associated with anthraquinone degradation in bioreactor-treated soil, while organisms in the genus Phenylobacterium comprised the majority of anthraquinone degraders in the untreated soil. Bacteria associated with anthracene degradation differed from those responsible for anthraquinone degradation. These results suggest that Sphingomonas and Phenylobacterium species are associated with anthraquinone degradation and that anthracene-degrading organisms may not possess mechanisms to grow on anthraquinone.  相似文献   

6.
The soil microbial population of a coke oven site was investigated in order to evaluate its potential for bioremediation. The study was carried out in soil samples with distinct polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) contamination levels, comparing the population profiles constituted by total heterotrophic and PAH-utilizing strains. Isolation of degrading strains was performed with phenanthrene or pyrene as sole carbon sources. The ability to degrade other PAHs, such as anthracene, fluorene and fluoranthene was also investigated. The results showed a reduction of 30% in species diversity and microbial density drops one order of magnitude in contaminated samples. Furthermore, the number of PAH-utilizing colonies was higher in the contaminated area and about 20% of the isolates were able to degrade phenanthrene and pyrene, while this value decreased to 0.15% in uncontaminated samples. Three PAH-degrader strains were identified as: CDC gr. IV C-2, Aeromonas sp. and Pseudomonas vesicularis. The ability of these strains to degrade other PAHs was also investigated.  相似文献   

7.
Pyrene and fluoranthene, when supplied as the sole carbon source, were not degraded by Burkholderia sp. VUN10013. However, when added in a mixture with phenanthrene, both pyrene and fluoranthene were degraded in liquid broth and soil. The amounts of pyrene and fluoranthene in liquid media (initial concentrations of 50 mg l−1 each) decreased to 42.1% and 41.1%, respectively, after 21 days. The amounts of pyrene and fluoranthene in soil (initial concentrations of 75 mg kg−1 dry soil each) decreased to 25.8% and 12.1%, respectively, after 60 days. None of the high molecular weight (HMW) polycylic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) tested adversely affected phenanthrene degradation by this bacterial strain and the amount of phenanthrene decreased rapidly within 3 and 15 days of incubation in liquid broth and soil, respectively. Anthracene also stimulated the degradation of pyrene or fluoranthene by Burkholderia sp. VUN10013, but to a lesser extent than phenanthrene. The extent of anthracene degradation decreased in the presence of these HMW PAHs.  相似文献   

8.
Carbon supplementation, soil moisture and soil aeration are believed to enhance in situ bioremediation of PAH-contaminated soils by stimulating the growth of indigenous microorganisms. However, the effects of added carbon and nitrogen together with soil moisture and soil aeration on the dissipation of PAHs and on associated microbial counts have yet to be fully assessed. In this study the effects on bioremediation of carbon source, carbon-to-nitrogen ratio, soil moisture and aeration on an aged PAH-contaminated agricultural soil were studied in microcosms over a 90-day period. Additions of starch, glucose and sodium succinate increased soil bacterial and fungal counts and accelerated the dissipation of phenanthrene and benzo(a)pyrene in soil. Decreases in phenanthrene and benzo(a)pyrene concentrations were effective in soil supplemented with glucose and sodium succinate (both 0.2 g C kg−1 dry soil) and starch (1.0 g C kg−1 dry soil). The bioremediation effect at a C/N ratio of 10:1 was significantly higher (P < 0.05) than at a C/N of either 25:1 or 40:1. Soil microbial counts and PAH dissipation were lower in the submerged soil but soil aeration increased bacterial and fungal counts, enhanced indigenous microbial metabolic activities, and accelerated the natural degradation of phenanthrene and benzo(a)pyrene. The results suggest that optimizing carbon source, C/N ratio, soil moisture and aeration conditions may be a feasible remediation strategy in certain PAH contaminated soils with large active microbial populations.  相似文献   

9.
This study investigated the biodegradation of high-molecular-weight polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in liquid media and soil by bacteria (Stenotrophomonas maltophilia VUN 10,010 and bacterial consortium VUN 10,009) and a fungus (Penicillium janthinellum VUO 10, 201) that were isolated from separate creosote- and manufactured-gas plant-contaminated soils. The bacteria could use pyrene as their sole carbon and energy source in a basal salts medium (BSM) and mineralized significant amounts of benzo[a]pyrene cometabolically when pyrene was also present in BSM. P. janthinellum VUO 10,201 could not utilize any high-molecular-weight PAH as sole carbon and energy source but could partially degrade these if cultured in a nutrient broth. Although small amounts of chrysene, benz[a]anthracene, benzo[a]pyrene, and dibenz[a,h]anthracene were degraded by axenic cultures of these isolates in BSM containing a single PAH, such conditions did not support significant microbial growth or PAH mineralization. However, significant degradation of, and microbial growth on, pyrene, chrysene, benz[a]anthracene, benzo[a]pyrene, and dibenz[a,h]anthracene, each as a single PAH in BSM, occurred when P. janthinellum VUO 10,201 and either bacterial consortium VUN 10,009 or S. maltophilia VUN 10,010 were combined in the one culture, i.e., fungal-bacterial cocultures: 25% of the benzo[a]pyrene was mineralized to CO(2) by these cocultures over 49 days, accompanied by transient accumulation and disappearance of intermediates detected by high-pressure liquid chromatography. Inoculation of fungal-bacterial cocultures into PAH-contaminated soil resulted in significantly improved degradation of high-molecular-weight PAHs, benzo[a]pyrene mineralization (53% of added [(14)C]benzo[a]pyrene was recovered as (14)CO(2) in 100 days), and reduction in the mutagenicity of organic soil extracts, compared with the indigenous microbes and soil amended with only axenic inocula.  相似文献   

10.
Out of a number of white-rot fungal cultures, strains ofIrpex lacteus andPleurotus ostreatus were selected for degradation of 7 three- and four-ring unsubstituted aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) in two contaminated industrial soils. Respective data for removal of PAH in the two industrial soils byI. lacteus were: fluorene (41 and 67%), phenanthrene (20 and 56%), anthracene (29 and 49%), fluoranthene (29 and 57%), pyrene (24 and 42%), chrysene (16 and 32%) and benzo[a]anthracene (13 and 20%). In the same two industrial soilsP. ostreatus degraded the PAH with respective removal figures of fluorene (26 and 35%), phenanthrene (0 and 20%), anthracene (19 and 53%), fluoranthene (29 and 31%), pyrene (22 and 42%), chrysene (0 and 42%) and benzo[a]anthracene (0 and 13%). The degradation of PAH was determined against concentration of PAH in non-treated contaminated soils after 14 weeks of incubation. The fungal degradation of PAH in soil was studied simultaneously with ecotoxicity evaluation of fungal treated and non-treated contaminated soils. Compared to non-treated contaminated soil, fungus-treated soil samples indicated decrease in inhibition of bioluminescence in luminescent bacteria (Vibrio fischerii) and increase in germinated mustard (Brassica alba) seeds. An erratum to this article is available at .  相似文献   

11.
This study investigated the biodegradation of high-molecular-weight polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in liquid media and soil by bacteria (Stenotrophomonas maltophilia VUN 10,010 and bacterial consortium VUN 10,009) and a fungus (Penicillium janthinellum VUO 10,201) that were isolated from separate creosote- and manufactured-gas plant-contaminated soils. The bacteria could use pyrene as their sole carbon and energy source in a basal salts medium (BSM) and mineralized significant amounts of benzo[a]pyrene cometabolically when pyrene was also present in BSM. P. janthinellum VUO 10,201 could not utilize any high-molecular-weight PAH as sole carbon and energy source but could partially degrade these if cultured in a nutrient broth. Although small amounts of chrysene, benz[a]anthracene, benzo[a]pyrene, and dibenz[a,h]anthracene were degraded by axenic cultures of these isolates in BSM containing a single PAH, such conditions did not support significant microbial growth or PAH mineralization. However, significant degradation of, and microbial growth on, pyrene, chrysene, benz[a]anthracene, benzo[a]pyrene, and dibenz[a,h]anthracene, each as a single PAH in BSM, occurred when P. janthinellum VUO 10,201 and either bacterial consortium VUN 10,009 or S. maltophilia VUN 10,010 were combined in the one culture, i.e., fungal-bacterial cocultures: 25% of the benzo[a]pyrene was mineralized to CO2 by these cocultures over 49 days, accompanied by transient accumulation and disappearance of intermediates detected by high-pressure liquid chromatography. Inoculation of fungal-bacterial cocultures into PAH-contaminated soil resulted in significantly improved degradation of high-molecular-weight PAHs, benzo[a]pyrene mineralization (53% of added [14C]benzo[a]pyrene was recovered as 14CO2 in 100 days), and reduction in the mutagenicity of organic soil extracts, compared with the indigenous microbes and soil amended with only axenic inocula.  相似文献   

12.
【背景】真菌和细菌被认为在多环芳烃污染土壤生物修复过程中发挥协同作用,目前在真实土壤体系中开展真菌-细菌协同降解研究较少。【目的】研究真菌和细菌对不同种类多环芳烃降解的差异及对蒽和苯并[a]蒽的生物强化与协同作用。【方法】选用多环芳烃降解真菌和细菌各一株,在液体纯培养体系下分析它们对不同种类多环芳烃降解的差异,在土壤体系中采用放射性同位素示踪技术研究2种微生物对蒽和苯并[a]蒽的生物强化与协同作用。【结果】供试细菌鞘脂菌NS7能够很好地降解低环种类多环芳烃,以蒽作为唯一碳源时可以将其完全降解,在复合污染条件下对菲、蒽、荧蒽、芘等降解效果突出(>90%),对苯并[a]芘降解效果较差(9.76%)。相比而言,供试真菌糙皮侧耳菌对苯并[a]芘具有更好的降解效果(21.18%),对低环多环芳烃降解效果明显不如降解菌NS7。在自然土壤中,蒽和苯并[a]蒽具有明显不同的矿化效率,分别为18.61%和4.28%,在蒽污染土壤中加入鞘脂菌NS7并未显著提高蒽的矿化率(P>0.05),相比而言,苯并[a]蒽污染土壤中加入糙皮侧耳显著提高了污染物矿化效率(2.24倍),表明真菌和细菌在土壤环境...  相似文献   

13.
The microbiological characteristics of the bacterialdegradation of mixtures of five polycyclic aromatichydrocarbons (PAH), phenanthrene, fluorene,anthracene, fluoranthene and pyrene, wereinvestigated. Three pure bacterial strains using oneor several of these PAH as carbon sources wereselected. The interactions between PAH during thedegradation of PAH pairs by each of these strains werestudied and their effects on the kinetics and thebalance of degradation were characterised. Competitionbetween PAH and degradation by cometabolism werefrequently observed. Mixed cultures of two or threestrains, although possessing the global capacity tomineralise the set of five PAH, achieved limiteddegradation of the mixture. In contrast, a consortiumfrom a PAH-contaminated soil readily mineralised thefive-PAH mixture. The results suggested that soilconsortia possessed a wider variety of strains capableto compensate for the competitive inhibition betweenPAH as well as specialised strains that mineralisedpotentially inhibitory PAH metabolites produced bycometabolism.  相似文献   

14.
Although polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) and alkanesare biodegradable at ambient temperature, in some cases low bioavailabilities are thereason for slow biodegradation. Considerably higher mass transfer rates and PAH solubilities and hence bioavailabilities can be obtained at higher temperatures. Mixed and pure cultures of aerobic, extreme thermophilic microorganisms (Bacillus spp., Thermus sp.) were used to degrade PAH compounds and PAH/alkane mixtures at 65 °C. The microorganismsused grew on hydrocarbons as sole carbon and energy source. Optimal growthtemperatures were in the range of 60–70 °C at pH values of 6–7. The conversion of PAH with 3–5 rings (acenaphthene, fluoranthene, pyrene, benzo[e]pyrene) was demonstrated. Efficient PAH biodegradation required a second, degradable liquid phase. Thermus brockii Hamburg metabolized up to 40 mg (l h)-1 pyrene and 1000 mg(1 h)-1 hexadecane at 70 °C. Specific growth rates of 0.43 h-1 were measured for this strain with hexadecane/pyrene mixtures as the sole carbon and energy source in a 2-liter stirred bioreactor. About 0.7 g cell dry weight were formed from 1 g hydrocarbon. The experiments demonstrate the feasibility and efficiency of extreme thermophilic PAH and alkane biodegradation.  相似文献   

15.
Nonexhaustive extraction (propanol, butanol, hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin [HPCD]), persulfate oxidation and biodegradability assays were employed to determine the bioavailability of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in creosote-contaminated soil. After 16 weeks incubation, greater than 89% of three-ring compounds (acenaphthene, anthracene, fluorene, and phenanthrene) and 21% to 79% of four-ring compounds (benz[a]anthracene, chrysene, fluoranthene, and pyrene) were degraded by the indigenous microorganisms under biopile conditions. No significant decrease in five- (benzo[a]pyrene, benzo[b+k]fluoranthene) and six-ring compounds (benz[g,h,i]perylene, indeno[1,2,3-c,d]pyrene) was observed. Desorption of PAHs using propanol or butanol could not predict PAH biodegradability: low-molecular-weight PAH biodegradability was underestimated whereas high-molecular-weight PAH biodegradability was overestimated. Persulfate oxidation and HPCD extraction of creosote-contaminated soil was able to predict three- and four-ring PAH biodegradability; however, the biodegradability of five-ring PAHs was overestimated. These results demonstrate that persulfate oxidation and HPCD extraction are good predictors of PAH biodegradability for compounds with octanol-water partitioning coefficients of < 6.  相似文献   

16.

The present study aims at analyzing the degradation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) at acidic conditions (pH = 2) by acidophilic Stenotrophomonas maltophilia strain AJH1 (KU664513). The strain AJH1 was obtained from an enrichment culture obtained from soil samples of mining area in the presence of PAH as sole sources of carbon and energy. Strain AJH1was able to degrade low (anthracene, phenanthrene, naphthalene, fluorene) and high (pyrene, benzo(e)pyrene and benzo(k)fluoranthene) molecular weight PAHs in acidophilic mineral salt medium at pH 2, with removal rates of up to 95% (LMW PAH) and 80% (HMW PAH), respectively. In addition, strain AJH1 treated petroleum wastewater with 89 ± 1.1% COD removal under acidic condition (pH 2) in a continuously stirred reactor. Acidophilic S. maltophilia strain AJH1, hence holds the promise as an effective degrader for biological treatment of PAHs contaminated wastewater at acidic pH.

  相似文献   

17.
The white-rot fungus Pleurotus ostreatus was able to degrade the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) benzo[a]anthracene, chrysene, benzo[b]fluoranthene, benzo[k]fluoranthene, benzo[a]pyrene, dibenzo[a,h]anthracene, and benzo[ghi]perylene in nonsterile soil both in the presence and in the absence of cadmium and mercury. During 15 weeks of incubation, recovery of individual compounds was 16 to 69% in soil without additional metal. While soil microflora contributed mostly to degradation of pyrene (82%) and benzo[a]anthracene (41%), the fungus enhanced the disappearance of less-soluble polycyclic aromatic compounds containing five or six aromatic rings. Although the heavy metals in the soil affected the activity of ligninolytic enzymes produced by the fungus (laccase and Mn-dependent peroxidase), no decrease in PAH degradation was found in soil containing Cd or Hg at 10 to 100 ppm. In the presence of cadmium at 500 ppm in soil, degradation of PAHs by soil microflora was not affected whereas the contribution of fungus was negligible, probably due to the absence of Mn-dependent peroxidase activity. In the presence of Hg at 50 to 100 ppm or Cd at 100 to 500 ppm, the extent of soil colonization by the fungus was limited.  相似文献   

18.
Bioaugmentation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH)-contaminated soil was investigated using a mixed bacterial culture (community five) isolated from an abandoned industrial site. Community five was inoculated into contaminated soil containing a total PAH (two- to five-ring compounds) concentration of approximately 820 mg/kg soil. PAH degradation by the indigenous microbial population was restricted to the lower molecular weight compounds (naphthalene, acenaphthene, fluorene and phenanthrene) even with yeast extract addition: these compounds decreased by 14 to 37%, in soil hydrated to 50% water capacity, following 91 days of incubation at 24°C. Inoculation of community five into this PAH-contaminated soil resulted in significant decreases in the concentration of all PAHs over the incubation period: greater than 86% of naphthalene, acenaphthene, fluorene, and phenanthrene were degraded after 91 days, while anthracene, fluoranthene, and pyrene were degraded to lesser extents (51.7 to 57.6%). A lag period of 48 to 63 days was observed before the onset of benz[a]anthracene, benzo[a]pyrene, and dibenz[a,h]anthracene removal. However, significant decreases in the concentration of these compounds (32.6, 25.2, and 18.5%, respectively) were observed after 91 days. No significant decrease in the mutagenic potential of organic soil extracts (as measured by the Ames Test) was observed after incubation of the soil with the indigenous microflora; however, the Microtox toxicity of aqueous soil extracts was reduced sevenfold. In contrast, extracts from contaminated soil inoculated with community five underwent a 43% decrease in mutagenic potential and the toxicity was reduced 170-fold after 91 days incubation. These observations suggest that community five could be utilised for the detoxification of PAH-contaminated soil.  相似文献   

19.
Biodegradation of a mixture of PAHs was assessed in forest soil microcosms performed either without or with bioaugmentation using individual fungi and bacterial and a fungal consortia. Respiratory activity, metabolic intermediates and extent of PAH degradation were determined. In all microcosms the low molecular weight PAH’s naphthalene, phenanthrene and anthracene, showed a rapid initial rate of removal. However, bioaugmentation did not significantly affect the biodegradation efficiency for these compounds. Significantly slower degradation rates were demonstrated for the high molecular weight PAH’s pyrene, benz[a]anthracene and benz[a]pyrene. Bioaugmentation did not improve the rate or extent of PAH degradation, except in the case of Aspergillus sp. Respiratory activity was determined by CO2 evolution and correlated roughly with the rate and timing of PAH removal. This indicated that the PAHs were being used as an energy source. The native microbiota responded rapidly to the addition of the PAHs and demonstrated the ability to degrade all of the PAHs added to the soil, indicating their ability to remediate PAH-contaminated soils.  相似文献   

20.
A 2-kg-capacity rotating-drum reactor was used for biological conversion of nearly insoluble organic contaminants in soil. The rotating motion allowed effective operation at a solids content of over 60% by weight. A mixed bacterial culture was used to degrade anthracene that had been impregnated into a representative high-clay soil. The activity of the culture was sustained over a period of months in repeated batch operation, in which fresh soil was inoculated with 20% spent slurry from the previous run. Maximum degradation rates of 100–150 mg anthracene (kg soil)–1 day–1 were achieved throughout the experiments. Evolution of carbon dioxide from the bioreactor showed that degradation and mineralization of anthracene occurred simultaneously, and that 55% of the anthracene was mineralized. When the culture was switched from anthracene as sole carbon source to a mixture of three polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons, the culture was able to degrade each of these in the sequence: anthracene, phenanthrene and finally pyrene.  相似文献   

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