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1.
The hypertrophy nuclear polyhedrosis virus of the armyworm, Pseudaletia unipuncta, causes a unique gradient of infected cells to form on the trachea. The movement and invasion of the virus apparently were not through adjacent intercellular membranes. The enveloped viruses emerged from the initially infected cell into an area between the cell plasma membrane and basal lamina, and then entered the uninfected tracheal cell either by lateral attachment and fusion of the viral envelope and the plasma membrane or by viropexis. The two methods of viral invasion into the cell suggest the presence of at least two phenotypically different enveloped viruses. Viropexis was initiated with an alignment of the peplomer spikes with regularly spaced, short radial striations on the inner coat of the plasma membrane. At a late state in viropexis, the viral envelope fused with the vacuole membrane, and an opening developed below the site of membrane fusion through which the nucleocapsid might enter the cytoplasm. Some nucleocapsids in membrane-lined vesicles resulting from viropexis appeared to be in a state of dissolution. Naked nucleocapsids were found along the nuclear envelope and within the nucleoplasm. No uncoating of the nucleocapsids was observed at the nucleopores, but uncoating seemed to occur in the nucleoplasm. Nucleocapsids were also found in the cytoplasm of nonsusceptible fat body cells, in which virus replication was not observed.  相似文献   

2.
We reinvestigated major steps in the replicative cycle of pseudorabies virus (PrV) by electron microscopy of infected cultured cells. Virions attached to the cell surface were found in two distinct stages, with a distance of 12 to 14 nm or 6 to 8 nm between virion envelope and cell surface, respectively. After fusion of virion envelope and cell membrane, immunogold labeling using a monoclonal antibody against the envelope glycoprotein gE demonstrated a rapid drift of gE from the fusion site, indicating significant lateral movement of viral glycoproteins during or immediately after the fusion event. Naked nucleocapsids in the cytoplasm frequently appeared close to microtubules prior to transport to nuclear pores. At the nuclear pore, nucleocapsids invariably were oriented with one vertex pointing to the central granulum at a distance of about 40 nm and viral DNA appeared to be released via the vertex region into the nucleoplasm. Intranuclear maturation followed the typical herpesvirus nucleocapsid morphogenesis pathway. Regarding egress, our observations indicate that primary envelopment of nucleocapsids occurred at the inner leaflet of the nuclear membrane by budding into the perinuclear cisterna. This nuclear membrane-derived envelope exhibited a smooth surface which contrasts the envelope obtained by putative reenvelopment at tubular vesicles in the Golgi area which is characterized by distinct surface projections. Loss of the primary envelope and release of the nucleocapsid into the cytoplasm appeared to occur by fusion of envelope and outer leaflet of the nuclear membrane. Nucleocapsids were also found engulfed by both lamella of the nuclear membrane. This vesiculation process released nucleocapsids surrounded by two membranes into the cytoplasm. Our data also indicate that fusion between the two membranes then leads to release of naked nucleocapsids in the Golgi area. Egress of virions appeared to occur via transport vesicles containing one or more virus particles by fusion of vesicle and cell membrane. Our data thus support biochemical data and mutant virus studies of (i) two steps of attachment, (ii) the involvement of microtubules in the transport of nucleocapsids to the nuclear pore, and (iii) secondary envelopment in the trans-Golgi area in PrV infection.  相似文献   

3.
Herpesvirus Envelopment   总被引:23,自引:20,他引:3  
The growth and envelopment processes of three representative herpesviruses, equine abortion, pseudorabies, and herpes simplex, were examined in baby hamster kidney (BHK 21/13) cells by bioassay (plaque-forming units) and electron microscopy. The envelopment process was identical for all three viruses. After assembly in the nucleus, the nucleocapsid acquired an envelope by budding from the inner nuclear membrane. This membrane was reduplicated as the enveloped particle was released so that the budding process did not result in disruption of the continuity of the nuclear membrane. That portion of the nuclear membrane which comprised the viral envelope was appreciably thicker than the remainder of the membrane and exhibited numerous projections on its surface. Once enveloped, the viral particles were seen in vesicles and vacuoles in the cell cytoplasm. These appeared to open at the cytoplasmic membrane, releasing the virus from the cell. There was no detectable difference in the size or appearance of enveloped particles in intra- or extracellular locations.  相似文献   

4.
Cells infected with herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) were conventionally embedded or freeze substituted after high-pressure freezing and stained with uranyl acetate. Electron tomograms of capsids attached to or undergoing envelopment at the inner nuclear membrane (INM), capsids within cytoplasmic vesicles near the nuclear membrane, and extracellular virions revealed the following phenomena. (i) Nucleocapsids undergoing envelopment at the INM, or B capsids abutting the INM, were connected to thickened patches of the INM by fibers 8 to 19 nm in length and < or =5 nm in width. The fibers contacted both fivefold symmetrical vertices (pentons) and sixfold symmetrical faces (hexons) of the nucleocapsid, although relative to the respective frequencies of these subunits in the capsid, fibers engaged pentons more frequently than hexons. (ii) Fibers of similar dimensions bridged the virion envelope and surface of the nucleocapsid in perinuclear virions. (iii) The tegument of perinuclear virions was considerably less dense than that of extracellular virions; connecting fibers were observed in the former case but not in the latter. (iv) The prominent external spikes emanating from the envelope of extracellular virions were absent from perinuclear virions. (v) The virion envelope of perinuclear virions appeared denser and thicker than that of extracellular virions. (vi) Vesicles near, but apparently distinct from, the nuclear membrane in single sections were derived from extensions of the perinuclear space as seen in the electron tomograms. These observations suggest very different mechanisms of tegumentation and envelopment in extracellular compared with perinuclear virions and are consistent with application of the final tegument to unenveloped nucleocapsids in a compartment(s) distinct from the perinuclear space.  相似文献   

5.
Morphogenesis of Sindbis virus in cultured Aedes albopictus cells.   总被引:11,自引:11,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Cultured mosquito cells were found to produce Sindbis virus nearly as efficiently as BHK-21 cells at 28 C. In virtually all of the cells observed in the electron microscope, virus morphogenesis was found to occur within complex vesicular structures which developed after viral infection. Viral nucleocapsids were first seen in these vesicles and appeared to be enveloped within these structures. The process of envelopment within these inclusions differed in some respects from the process previously described for the envelopment of nucleocapsids at the plasma membrane of vertebrae cells. Free nucleocapsids were only rarely seen in the cytoplasm of infected mosquito cells, and budding of virus from the cell surface was detected so infrequently that this process of virus production could not account for the amount of virus produced by the infected cells. The vast majority of extracellular virus was produced by the fusion of the virus-containing vesicles with the plasma membrane releasing mature virions and membrane nucleocapsid complexes in various stages of development.  相似文献   

6.
Immunogold electron microscopy and analysis were used to determine the organization of the major structural proteins of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) during virus assembly. We determined that matrix protein (M protein) partitions into plasma membrane microdomains in VSV-infected cells as well as in transfected cells expressing M protein. The sizes of the M-protein-containing microdomains outside the virus budding sites (50 to 100 nm) were smaller than those at sites of virus budding (approximately 560 nm). Glycoprotein (G protein) and M protein microdomains were not colocalized in the plasma membrane outside the virus budding sites, nor was M protein colocalized with microdomains containing the host protein CD4, which efficiently forms pseudotypes with VSV envelopes. These results suggest that separate membrane microdomains containing either viral or host proteins cluster or merge to form virus budding sites. We also determined whether G protein or M protein was colocalized with VSV nucleocapsid protein (N protein) outside the budding sites. Viral nucleocapsids were observed to cluster in regions of the cytoplasm close to the plasma membrane. Membrane-associated N protein was colocalized with G protein in regions of plasma membrane of approximately 600 nm. In contrast to the case for G protein, M protein was not colocalized with these areas of nucleocapsid accumulation. These results suggest a new model of virus assembly in which an interaction of VSV nucleocapsids with G-protein-containing microdomains is a precursor to the formation of viral budding sites.  相似文献   

7.
The development of a nuclear polyhedrosis virus (NPV) in larval midgut cells of the armyworm, Pseudaletia unipuncta, is similar to that of other NPV. In the nucleus, the envelopes around the nucleocapsids seem to be derived de novo or from the inner layer of the nuclear envelope wich forms cisternae, blebs, or infoldings. The nucleocapsids are also enveloped by synhymenosis during passage through the nuclear membrane, the cell membrane, or the endoplasmic reticulum membrane. Both enveloped and unenveloped nucleocapsids may enter the cytoplasm through the nuclear pore or budding through the nuclear membrane. From the cytoplasm the virions may enter the hemocoel through the basal cell and basement membranes or through the endoplasmic reticulum, intercellular space, and the basement membrane.  相似文献   

8.
The late stages of assembly of herpes simplex virus (HSV) and other herpesviruses are not well understood. Acquisition of the final virion envelope apparently involves interactions between viral nucleocapsids coated with tegument proteins and the cytoplasmic domains of membrane glycoproteins. This promotes budding of virus particles into cytoplasmic vesicles derived from the trans-Golgi network or endosomes. The identities of viral membrane glycoproteins and tegument proteins involved in these processes are not well known. Here, we report that HSV mutants lacking two viral glycoproteins, gD and gE, accumulated large numbers of unenveloped nucleocapsids in the cytoplasm. These aggregated capsids were immersed in an electron-dense layer that appeared to be tegument. Few or no enveloped virions were observed. More subtle defects were observed with an HSV unable to express gD and gI. A triple mutant lacking gD, gE, and gI exhibited more severe defects in envelopment. We concluded that HSV gD and the gE/gI heterodimeric complex act in a redundant fashion to anchor the virion envelope onto tegument-coated capsids. In the absence of either one of these HSV glycoproteins, envelopment proceeds; however, without both gD and gE, or gE/gI, there is profound inhibition of cytoplasmic envelopment.  相似文献   

9.
There have been several reports concerned with the replication and morphogenesis of insect baculoviruses during the past decade [1--7]. While there is general agreement as to the assembly of the virus on the basis of electron microscopic studies, there are still questions regarding the details of the replicative mechanisms, such as the acquisition of the virus envelope. Three possible ways have been proposed to describe envelope formation of nuclear polyhedrosis virus: (i) acquisition of budding through the nuclear membrane; (ii) acquisition of budding through the plasma membrane, and (iii) de novo formation within the nucleus. This paper briefly describes the observations made on the acquisition of a virus envelope by the cotton bollworm virus (Heliothis armigera), a nuclear polyhedrosis virus, in primary hemocyte cultures. Swirling hair-like clusters, hitherto unreported, were observed in association with virogenic stroma and nucleocapsids in the nuclei of infected cells. It is postulated that the formation of the hair-like structure may be involved in the process of envelopment of the virus.  相似文献   

10.
Electron Microscopy of Measles Virus Replication   总被引:15,自引:5,他引:10       下载免费PDF全文
Replication of measles virus in HeLa cells was examined by electron microscopy with ultrathin sectioning and phosphotungstic acid negative staining methods. The cytoplasmic inclusion bodies consisted of masses of helical nucleocapsid which was similar in structure to the nucleocapsid found in measles virions. The cytoplasmic helical nucleocapsid appeared to align near the HeLa cell membrane, and the membrane differentiated into the internal membrane of the viral envelope and the outer layer of the short projections. The viral particles were released by a budding process involving incorporation into the viral envelope of membrane which was contiguous to but morphologically altered from the membrane of the HeLa cells. The intranuclear inclusion bodies were composed of tubular structures similar to those found in the cytoplasmic inclusion bodies. These structures aggregated to crystalline arrangement. The relationship between nuclear inclusion body and replication of measles virus was not clear.  相似文献   

11.
The periodic acid-thiocarbohydrazide (SO2)--OsO4 method was used to examine the distribution of glycoproteins in rabbit fibroblast cells infected with Herpes simplex virus type 1. In non-infected cells, a low level of staining was seen over the plasma membrane and the membranes of the Golgi apparatus. At 17 hr post-infection, the intensity of reaction was increased to include not only a relatively heavy staining of the plasma membrane, including the numerous microvilli characteristic of infected cells, and of the newly proliferated Golgi membranes, but also the envelopes of intracytoplasmic and extracellular virions. A very faint but only occasional staining also was associated with the virus-induced reduplications of the inner nuclear membrane and the envelopes of associated enveloping nucleocapsids. We suggest that such differences in the intensity of staining may be related either to the amount of glycoproteins or to the sequential maturation of the viral glycoproteins. We also observed that the structurally modified portions of the Golgi membranes at the position where intracytoplasmic naked nucleocapsids bud into the Golgi cisternae usually exhibit a more intense reaction for glycoproteins than do the adjacent portions of the Golgi membranes. This supports the evidence for an envelopment of nucleocapsids in the cytoplasm, but it does not indicate whether this event obligatorily follows or only occasionally takes the place of the envelopment of nucleocapsids at the inner nuclear membrane. In either event, the envelopes of all mature virions exhibit a prominent reaction to glycoproteins.  相似文献   

12.
The maturation and envelopment of varicella-zoster virus (VZV) was studied in infected human embryonic lung fibroblasts. Transmission electron microscopy confirmed that nucleocapsids acquire an envelope from the inner nuclear membrane as they enter the perinuclear-cisterna-rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER). Tegument is not detectable in these virions; moreover, in contrast to the mature VZV envelope, the envelope of VZV in the RER is not radioautographically labeled in pulse-chase experiments with [3H]mannose, and it lacks gpI immunoreactivity and complex oligosaccharides. This primary envelope fuses with the RER membrane (detected in cells incubated at 20 degrees C), thereby releasing nucleocapsids to the cytosol. Viral glycoproteins, traced by transmission electron microscopy radioautography in pulse-chase experiments with [3H]mannose, are transported to the trans-Golgi network (TGN) by a pathway that runs from the RER through an intermediate compartment and the Golgi stack. At later chase intervals, [3H]mannose labeling becomes associated with enveloped virions in post-Golgi locations (prelysosomes and plasma membrane). Nucleocapsids appear to be enveloped by wrapping in specialized cisternae, identified as the TGN with specific markers. Tegument-like material adheres to the cytosolic face of the concave surface of TGN sacs; nucleocapsids adhere to this protein, which is thus trapped between the nucleocapsid and the TGN-derived membrane that wraps around it. Experiments with brefeldin A suggest that tegument may bind to the cytosolic tails of viral glycoproteins. Fusion and fission convert the TGN-derived wrapping sacs into an inner enveloped virion and an outer transport vesicle that carries newly enveloped virions to cytoplasmic vacuoles. These vacuoles are acidic and were identified as prelysosomes. It is postulated that secreted virions are partially degraded by their exposure to the prelysosomal internal milieu and rendered noninfectious. This process explains the cell-associated nature of VZV in vitro; however, the mechanism by which the virus escapes diversion from the secretory pathway to the lysosomal pathway in vivo remains to be determined.  相似文献   

13.
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a major human pathogen causing about 750,000 deaths per year. The virion consists of a nucleocapsid and an envelope formed by lipids, and three integral membrane proteins. Although we have detailed structural insights into the organization of the HBV core, the arrangement of the envelope in virions and its interaction with the nucleocapsid is elusive. Here we show the ultrastructure of hepatitis B virions purified from patient serum. We identified two morphological phenotypes, which appear as compact and gapped particles with nucleocapsids in distinguishable conformations. The overall structures of these nucleocapsids resemble recombinant cores with two alpha-helical spikes per asymmetric unit. At the charged tips the spikes are contacted by defined protrusions of the envelope proteins, probably via electrostatic interactions. The HBV envelope in the two morphotypes is to some extent variable, but the surface proteins follow a general packing scheme with up to three surface protein dimers per asymmetric unit. The variability in the structure of the envelope indicates that the nucleocapsid does not firmly constrain the arrangement of the surface proteins, but provides a general template for the packing.  相似文献   

14.
Herpesvirus envelopment is a two-step process which includes acquisition of a primary envelope resulting from budding of intranuclear capsids through the inner nuclear membrane. Fusion with the outer leaflet of the nuclear membrane releases nucleocapsids into the cytoplasm, which then gain their final envelope by budding into trans-Golgi vesicles. It has been shown that the UL34 gene product is required for primary envelopment of the alphaherpesvirus pseudorabies virus (PrV) (B. G. Klupp, H. Granzow, and T. C. Mettenleiter, J. Virol. 74:10063-10073, 2000). For secondary envelopment, several virus-encoded PrV proteins are necessary, including glycoproteins E, I, and M (A. R. Brack, J. M. Dijkstra, H. Granzow, B. G. Klupp, and T. C. Mettenleiter, J. Virol. 73:5364-5372, 1999). We show here that the product of the UL37 gene of PrV, which is a constituent of mature virions, is involved in secondary envelopment. Replication of a UL37 deletion mutant, PrV-DeltaUL37, was impaired in normal cells; this defect could be complemented on cells stably expressing UL37. Ultrastructural analysis demonstrated that intranuclear capsid maturation and budding of capsids into and release from the perinuclear space were unimpaired. However, secondary envelopment was drastically reduced. Instead, apparently DNA-filled capsids accumulated in the cytoplasm in large aggregates similar to those observed in the absence of glycoproteins E/I and M but lacking the surrounding electron-dense tegument material. Although displaying an ordered structure, capsids did not contact each other directly. We postulate that the UL37 protein is necessary for correct addition of other tegument proteins, which are required for secondary envelopment. In the absence of the UL37 protein, capsids interact with each other through unknown components but do not acquire the electron-dense tegument which is normally found around wild-type capsids during and after secondary envelopment. Thus, apposition of the UL37 protein to cytoplasmic capsids may be crucial for the addition of other tegument proteins, which in turn are able to interact with viral glycoproteins to mediate secondary envelopment.  相似文献   

15.
Nonoccluded baculovirus-and filamentous virus-like particles were found in nuclei of hemocytes or midgut cells of field-collected spotted cucumber beetles. Each type of particle was associated with a different type of virogenic stroma containing various viral components similar to those referred to as capsid, nucleocapsid, viroplasm, and viral envelope in other known baculovirus infections. Nucleocapsids of the virus which occured only in hemocytes were rod-shaped particles approximately 230 nm long and 52 nm wide and were enveloped singly by a trilaminar unit membrane. Enveloped and partly enveloped particles appeared to be released from the nucleus to the cytoplasm by budding through the nuclear envelope acquiring additional membranes. The nucleocapsids of the virus which occurred only in nuclei of midgut cells were filamentous particles with an average diameter of 25 nm and variable length up to 2 μm. Some extremely long particles were bent almost 360° near the middle, resulting in a hairpin-like configuration. The particles were always enveloped singly. No particles budding through the nuclear envelope were observed.  相似文献   

16.
Chaperones involved in hepatitis B virus morphogenesis   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Little is known about host cell factors necessary for hepatitis B virus (HBV) assembly which involves envelopment of cytosolic nucleocapsids by the S, M and L transmembrane viral envelope proteins and subsequent budding into intraluminal cisternae. Central to virogenesis is the L protein that mediates hepatocyte receptor binding and envelopment of capsids. To serve these topologically conflicting roles, L protein exhibits an unusual dual membrane topology, disposing its N-terminal preS domain inside and outside of the virion lipid envelope. The mixed topology is achieved by posttranslational preS translocation of about half of the L protein molecules across a post-endoplasmic reticulum membrane. Here we identify and characterize a preS-specific sequence that confers the suppression of cotranslational translocation even of a model reporter. This cytosolic anchorage sequence specifically binds the cognate heat shock protein Hsc70, thus indicating chaperone participitation in HBV morphogenesis. Conversely, the M envelope protein needs the assistance of the chaperone calnexin for proper folding and trafficking. Calnexin selectively binds to the N-glycan, specific for M, rather than to the N-glycan, common to all three envelope proteins. As inhibition of the calnexin-M interaction blocks the secretion of viral envelopes, we propose an essential role for calnexin, as well as for Hsc70, in chaperoning HBV assembly.  相似文献   

17.
Many viruses,enveloped or non-enveloped,remodel host membrane structures for their replication,assembly and escape from host cells.Herpesviruses are important human pathogens and cause many diseases.As large enveloped DNA viruses,herpesviruses undergo several complex steps to complete their life cycles and produce infectious progenies.Firstly,herpesvirus assembly initiates in the nucleus,producing nucleocapsids that are too large to cross through the nuclear pores.Nascent nucleocapsids instead bud at the inner nuclear membrane to form primary enveloped virions in the perinuclear space followed by fusion of the primary envelopes with the outer nuclear membrane,to translocate the nucleocapsids into the cytoplasm.Secondly,nucleocapsids obtain a series of tegument proteins in the cytoplasm and bud into vesicles derived from host organelles to acquire viral envelopes.The vesicles are then transported to and fuse with the plasma membrane to release the mature virions to the extracellular space.Therefore,at least two budding and fusion events take place at cellular membrane structures during herpesviruses assembly and egress,which induce membrane deformations.In this review,we describe and discuss how herpesviruses exploit and remodel host membrane structures to assemble and escape from the host cell.  相似文献   

18.
Herpesvirus envelopment is assumed to follow an uneconomical pathway including primary envelopment at the inner nuclear membrane, de-envelopment at the outer nuclear membrane, and reenvelopment at the trans-Golgi network. In contrast to the hypothesis of de-envelopment by fusion of the primary envelope with the outer nuclear membrane, virions were demonstrated to be transported from the perinuclear space to rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) cisternae. Here we show by high-resolution microscopy that herpes simplex virus 1 envelopment follows two diverse pathways. First, nuclear envelopment includes budding of capsids at the inner nuclear membrane into the perinuclear space whereby tegument and a thick electron dense envelope are acquired. The substance responsible for the dense envelope is speculated to enable intraluminal transportation of virions via RER into Golgi cisternae. Within Golgi cisternae, virions are packaged into transport vacuoles containing one or several virions. Second, for cytoplasmic envelopment, capsids gain direct access from the nucleus to the cytoplasm via impaired nuclear pores. Cytoplasmic capsids could bud at the outer nuclear membrane, at membranes of RER, Golgi cisternae, and large vacuoles, and at banana-shaped membranous entities that were found to continue into Golgi membranes. Envelopes originating by budding at the outer nuclear membrane and RER membrane also acquire a dense substance. Budding at Golgi stacks, designated wrapping, results in single virions within small vacuoles that contain electron-dense substances between envelope and vacuolar membranes.  相似文献   

19.
The periodate-thiocarbohydrazide silver proteinate (PA-TCH-SP) method was used to study the envelopment process in varicella-zoster virus-infected human melanoma cells. Viral envelopment could be seen at two sites, the nuclear membrane and at virus-induced intracytoplasmic vacuoles. Virus-associated glycoconjugates were detected by the PA-TCH-SP method at the plasmalemma and on the inner membrane of the intracytoplasmic vacuoles. Virion envelopes acquired at the nuclear membrane were PA-TCH-SP negative, whereas those acquired at intracytoplasmic vacuoles were PA-TCH-SP positive. All virions found inside these vacuoles contained periodate-reactive envelopes. Release of virions into the extracellular space, where virtually all virions were PA-TCH-SP positive, appeared to be via exocytosis. Thus, the PA-TCH-SP method identifies glycoprotein incorporation at specific cytoplasmic vacuoles distinct from nuclear envelope, endoplasmic reticulum, and Golgi lamellae. These results suggest that envelopment within the cytoplasm is a stage in the assembly of the varicella-zoster virion.  相似文献   

20.
Influenza virions bud preferentially from the apical plasma membrane of infected epithelial cells, by enveloping viral nucleocapsids located in the cytosol with its viral integral membrane proteins, i.e., hemagglutinin (HA), neuraminidase (NA), and M2 proteins, located at the plasma membrane. Because individually expressed HA, NA, and M2 proteins are targeted to the apical surface of the cell, guided by apical sorting signals in their transmembrane or cytoplasmic domains, it has been proposed that the polarized budding of influenza virions depends on the interaction of nucleocapsids and matrix proteins with the cytoplasmic domains of HA, NA, and/or M2 proteins. Since HA is the major protein component of the viral envelope, its polarized surface delivery may be a major force that drives polarized viral budding. We investigated this hypothesis by infecting MDCK cells with a transfectant influenza virus carrying a mutant form of HA (C560Y) with a basolateral sorting signal in its cytoplasmic domain. C560Y HA was expressed nonpolarly on the surface of infected MDCK cells. Interestingly, viral budding remained apical in C560Y virus-infected cells, and so did the location of NP and M1 proteins at late times of infection. These results are consistent with a model in which apical viral budding is a shared function of various viral components rather than a role of the major viral envelope glycoprotein HA.  相似文献   

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