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1.
Acetohydroxy acid synthase (AHAS) is an essential enzyme for many organisms as it catalyzes the first step in the biosynthesis of the branched-chain amino acids valine, isoleucine, and leucine. The enzyme is under allosteric control by these amino acids. It is also inhibited by several classes of herbicides, such as the sulfonylureas, imidazolinones and triazolopyrimidines, that are believed to bind to a relic quinone-binding site. In this study, a mutant allele of AHAS3 responsible for sulfonylurea resistance in a Brassica napus cell line was isolated. Sequence analyses predicted a single amino acid change (557 TrpLeu) within a conserved region of AHAS. Expression in transgenic plants conferred strong resistance to the three classes of herbicides, revealing a single site essential for the binding of all the herbicide classes. The mutation did not appear to affect feedback inhibition by the branched-chain amino acids in plants.  相似文献   

2.
A biotype of Sonchus oleraceus L. (Compositae) has developed resistance to herbicides inhibiting acetolactate synthase (ALS) following field selection with chlorsulfuron for 8 consecutive years. The aim of this study was to determine the inheritance and mechanism of resistance in this biotype. Determination of ALS activity and inhibition kinetics revealed that Km and Vmax did not vary greatly between the resistant and susceptible biotypes. ALS extracted from the resistant biotype was resistant to five ALS-inhibiting herbicides in an in vitro assay. ALS activity from the resistant biotype was 14 19, 2, 3 and 3 times more resistant to inhibition by chlorsulfuron, sulfometuron, imazethapyr, imazapyr and flumetsulam, respectively, than the susceptible biotype. Hybrids between the resistant and a susceptible biotype were produced, and inheritance was followed through the F1, F2 and F3 generations. F1 hybrids displayed a uniform intermediate level of resistance between resistant and susceptible parents. Three distinct phenotypes, resistant, intermediate and susceptible, were identified in the F2 generation following chlorsulfuron application. A segregation ratio of 121 was observed, indicative of the action of a single, nuclear, incompletely dominant gene. F3 families, derived from intermediate F2 individuals, segregated in a similar manner. Resistance to herbicides inhibiting ALS in this biotype of S. oleraceus is due to the effect of a single gene coding for a resistant form of the target enzyme, ALS.  相似文献   

3.
Saxena PK  King J 《Plant physiology》1988,86(3):863-867
Cells resistant to the sulfonylurea herbicides chlorsulfuron and sulfometuron methyl were isolated from a predominantly haploid cell suspension culture of Datura innoxia P. Mill. Exponentially growing cell colonies (aggregates of about 40 cells) were mutagenized with ethyl methane sulfonate, subcultured for 10 days to allow growth recovery and plated on a medium containing either chlorsulfuron or sulfometuron methyl at a concentration (10−8 molar) which killed wild type cells. Surviving clones were picked up after 3 to 4 weeks, further proliferated as callus or cell suspension cultures, and tested for their resistance to both the sulfonylureas and imidazolinones, a chemically different class of herbicides. The variants were stable and showed high (100- to 1000-fold) resistance to the sulfonylureas. While some also exhibited cross resistance to imidazolinones, others showed no cross-resistance at all or, as in one case, greater sensitivity than wild type cells to the imidazolinones. Both classes of herbicides tested inhibited acetolactate synthase activity isolated from wild type cells. The acetolactate synthase of the resistant variants, however, was found to be resistant to the sulfonylureas and also to the imidazolinone(s) in those cells showing cross-resistance to the latter. The lack of cross-resistance observed in some cases provides evidence that the two groups of herbicides have slightly different sites on the acetolactate synthase molecule.  相似文献   

4.
Acetolactate synthase (ALS) catalyzes the first common step in the biosynthesis of valine, leucine, and isoleucine. ALS is the target of three classes of herbicides, the sulfonylureas, the imidazolinones, and the triazolopyrimidines. Five mutants (W266F, W439F, W490F, W503F, and W573F) of the ALS gene from Nicotiana tabacum were constructed and expressed in Escherichia coli, and the enzymes were purified. The W490F mutation abolished the binding affinity for cofactor FAD and inactivated the enzyme. The replacement of Trp573 by Phe yielded a mutant ALS resistant to the three classes of herbicides. The other three mutations, W266F, W439F, and W503F, did not significantly affect the enzymatic properties and the sensitivity to the herbicides. These results indicate that the Trp490 residue is essential for the binding of FAD and that Trp573 is located at the herbicide binding site. The data also suggest that the three classes of herbicides bind ALS competitively.  相似文献   

5.
We report in this study, the successful deployment of a double mutant acetolactate synthase gene (ALSdm, containing Pro 197 to Ser and Ser 653 to Asn substitutions) as an efficient in vitro selection marker for the development of transgenic plants in Brassica juncea (oilseed mustard). The ALS enzyme is inhibited by two categories of herbicides, sulfonylureas (e.g. chlorsulfuron) and imidazolinones (e.g. imazethapyr), while the mutant forms are resistant to the same. Three different selection agents (kanamycin, chlorsulfuron and imazethapyr) were tested for in vitro selection efficiency in two B. juncea cultivars, RLM198 and Varuna. For both the cultivars, higher transformation frequencies were obtained using chlorsulfuron (3.8 +/- 0.6% and 4.6 +/- 0.9% for RLM198 and Varuna, respectively) and imazethapyr (10.2 +/- 0.7% for RLM198 and 7.8 +/- 1.2% for Varuna) as compared to that obtained on kanamycin (3.1 +/- 0.2% and 2.8 +/- 0.5% for RLM198 and Varuna, respectively). Additionally, transformation frequencies were higher on imazethapyr than on chlorsulfuron for both the cultivars indicating that imidazolinones are better selective agents than sulfonylureas for the selection of mustard transgenics.  相似文献   

6.
Acetolactate synthase (ALS) catalyzes the first common step in the biosynthesis of valine, leucine, and isoleucine. ALS is the target site for several classes of herbicides, including sulfonylureas, imidazolinones, and triazolopyrimidines. Two forms of ALS (designated ALS I and ALS II) were separated from barley shoots by heparin affinity column chromatography. The molecular masses of native ALS I and ALS II were determined to be 248 kDa and 238 kDa by nondenaturing gel electrophoresis and activity staining. Similar molecular masses of two forms of ALS were confirmed by a Western blot analysis. SDS-PAGE and Western blot analysis showed that the molecular masses of the ALS I and ALS II subunits were identical--65 kDa. The two ALS forms exhibited different properties with respect to the values of K(m), pI and optimum pH, and sensitivity to inhibition by herbicides sulfonylurea and imidazolinone as well as to the feedback regulation by the end-product amino acids Val, Leu, and Ile. These results, therefore, suggest that the two ALS forms are not different polymeric forms of the same enzyme, but isozymes.  相似文献   

7.
Directed excision of a transgene from the plant genome   总被引:40,自引:0,他引:40  
Summary The effectiveness of loxP-Cre directed excision of a transgene was examined using phenotypic and molecular analyses. Two methods of combining the elements of this system, re-transformation and cross pollination, were found to produce different degrees of excision in the resulting plants. Two linked traits, -glucuronidase (GUS) and a gene encoding sulfonylurea-resistant acetolactate synthase (ALSr), were integrated into the genome of tobacco and Arabidopsis. The ALSr gene, bounded by loxP sites, was used as the selectable marker for transformation. The directed loss of the ALST gene through Cre-mediated excision was demonstrated by the loss of resistance to sulfonylurea herbicides and by Southern blot analysis. The -glucuronidase gene remained active. The excision efficiency varied in F1 progeny of different lox and Cre parents and was correlated with the Cre parent. Many of the lox × Cre F1 progeny were chimeric and some F2 progeny retained resistance to sulfonylureas. Re-transformation of lox/ALS/lox/GUS tobacco plants with cre led to much higher efficiency of excision. Lines of tobacco transformants carrying the GUS gene but producing only sulfonylurea-sensitive progeny were obtained using both approaches for introducing cre. Similarly, Arabidopsis lines with GUS activity but no sulfonylurea resistance were generated using cross pollinations.  相似文献   

8.
Acetolactate synthase (ALS) catalyzes the first common step in the biosynthesis of valine, leucine, and isoleucine. The ALS is the target of several classes of herbicides, including the sulfonylureas, the imidazolinones, and the triazolopyrimidines. The roles of three well-conserved lysine residues (K219, K255, K299) in tobacco ALS were determined using site-directed mutagenesis. The mutation of K219Q inactivated the enzyme and abolished the binding affinity for cofactor FAD. However, the secondary structure of the enzyme was not changed significantly by the mutation. Both mutants, K255F and K255Q, showed strong resistance to three classes of herbicides Londax (a sulfonylurea), Cadre (an imidazolinone), and TP (a triazolopyrimidine). In addition, there was no difference in the secondary structures of wALS and K255F. On the other hand, the mutation of K299Q did not show any significant effect on the kinetic properties or any sensitivity to the herbicides. These results suggest that Lys219 is located at the active site and is likely involved in the binding of FAD, and that Lys255 is located at a binding site common for the three herbicides in tobacco ALS.  相似文献   

9.
Four classes of herbicides are known to inhibit plant acetolactate synthase (ALS). In Arabidopsis, ALS is encoded by a single gene, CSR1. The dominant csr1-1 allele encodes an ALS resistant to chlorsulfuron and triazolopyrimidine sulfonamide while the dominant csr1-2 allele encodes an ALS resistant to imazapyr and pyrimidyl-oxy-benzoate. The molecular distance between the point mutations in csr1-1 and csr1-2 is 1369 bp. Here we used multiherbicide resistance as a stringent selection to measure the intragenic recombination frequency between these two point mutations. We found this frequency to be 0.008 ± 0.0028. The recombinant multiherbicide-resistant allele, csr1-4, provides an ideal marker for plant genetic transformation.  相似文献   

10.
K. Wu  G. Mourad  J. King 《Planta》1994,192(2):249-255
A valine-resistant mutant line, VAL-2, ofArabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. was identified by screening M 2 populations of ethylmethane-sulfonate-mutagenized seeds. The resistance was found to be due to a single, dominant, nuclear gene mutation. Assay of acetolactate synthase (ALS) indicated that the valine resistance in this mutant is caused by decreased sensitivity of ALS to the branched-chain amino acids, valine, leucine andisoleucine. A two fold decrease in apparentK m value for pyruvate of the mutant ALS enzyme was detected compared with that of the wild type. The sensitivity of the ALS enzyme to sulfonylurea, imidazolinone and triazolopyrimidine herbicides was not altered in the mutant. At the plant growth level the mutant was also resistant to valine plus leucine, but was sensitive to leucine orisoleucine alone. The mutant gene,var1, maps, or is very closely linked, toCSR1, the gene encoding acetolactate synthase inArabidopsis.Abbreviations ALS acetolactate synthase - BCAA branched-chain amino acid - CS chlorsulfuron - IM imidazolinone - SU sulfonylurea - TP triazolopyrimidine We thank Dr. George W. Haughn for providing Arabidopsis lines MSU12, MSU15, MSU21, MSU22 and MSU23. This work was supported by a Research Grant from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada to J.K., K.W. is grateful for a University of Saskatchewan Graduate Scholarship.  相似文献   

11.
Acetohydroxyacid synthase (AHAS, EC 4.1.3.18) catalyses the first step in branched-chain amino acid biosynthesis and is the target for sulfonylurea and imidazolinone herbicides, which act as potent and specific inhibitors. Mutants of the enzyme have been identified that are resistant to particular herbicides. However, the selectivity of these mutants towards various sulfonylureas and imidazolinones has not been determined systematically. Now that the structure of the yeast enzyme is known, both in the absence and presence of a bound herbicide, a detailed understanding of the molecular interactions between the enzyme and its inhibitors becomes possible. Here we construct 10 active mutants of yeast AHAS, purify the enzymes and determine their sensitivity to six sulfonylureas and three imidazolinones. An additional three active mutants were constructed with a view to increasing imidazolinone sensitivity. These three variants were purified and tested for their sensitivity to the imidazolinones only. Substantial differences are observed in the sensitivity of the 13 mutants to the various inhibitors and these differences are interpreted in terms of the structure of the herbicide-binding site on the enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
The herbicide sulfometuron methyl (SM) inhibited the growth of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC7942, but not of Synechocystis sp. PCC6714. The inhibitory effect was alleviated by the simultaneous addition of valine, leucine and isoleucine. SM resistant mutants were isolated from Synechococcus 7942, two types of which were further analysed. In these mutants, SM3/20 and SM2/32, the activity of acetolactate synthase (ALS) — a key enzyme in the biosynthesis of branched-chain amino acids —appeared 2600- and 300-fold, respectively, more resistant to SM than that of their wild type. Strain SM2/32 also exhibited a low level of ALS activity. Although the growth of the latter mutant was extremely inhibited by valine, the sensitivity of its ALS activity to feed-back inhibition by the amino acid was unaltered. At high concentrations valine inhibited growth of the wild type strains and of the mutant SM3/20. Isoleucine alleviated the valine-induced growth inhibition. Unlike that of Synechococcus 7942, the ALS activity of Synechocystis was found to tolerate high concentrations (100-fold) of the herbicide. The study confirms that the SM mutations are correlated with a cyanobacterial ilv gene.Abbreviations ALS acetolactate synthase; ile, isoleucine - leu leucine - NTG N-methyl-N-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine - SM sulfometuron methyl - SMr sulfometuron methyl resistant - val valine  相似文献   

13.
Summary A reproducible system for gene transfer in lentil through particle bombardment is presented. Lentil cotyledonary nodes excised from germinated seedlings were bombarded with a plasmid containing a mutant acetolactate synthase gene (ALS) from tobacco conferring resistance to sulfonylurea herbicides. Putative transgenic shoots regenerated on Murashige and Skoog medium supplemented with 6-benzylaminopurine (BA) and chlorsulfuron (5 nM for first 4 wk followed by 2.5 nM for the remainder of the culture period) were micrografted and successfully transferred to soil. T0 and selfed progeny plants were screened using metsulfuron herbicide leaflet painting. The non-transformed escapes died and transformed plants survived the test. The surviving plants were phenotypically normal and produced viable seeds. The presence and stable transmission of the transgene into genomic DNA of screened T1 transformants was confirmed by PCR and Southern hybridization. This method for producing transformed plants will allow new opportunities for lentil breeding to produce improved cultivars.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The expression of an acetolactate synthase (ALS) gene isolated from the cruciferous plant Brassica napus was investigated in Salmonella typhimurium. Using an expression plasmid containing the highly active trc (trp-lac) promoter, several plant ALS constructs were made containing successive in-frame truncations from the 5 end of the coding region. Functional complementation by these plant ALS constructs of a S. typhimurium mutant devoid of ALS enzymic activity was assayed on minimal medium. Truncations which eliminated a large portion of the transit peptide coding sequence proved to act as efficient ALS genes in the bacterial host. Truncations close to the putative processing site of the plant protein were inactive in the complementation test. A full length copy of the gene, including the entire transit peptide coding region, was also inactive. The efficiency of the complementation, estimated by comparison to the growth rate of wild-type S. typhimurium, was found to correlate with levels of ALS activity in the transformed bacteria. Specific mutations, known to produce herbicide resistance in plants, were introduced into the truncated ALS coding sequence by site-directed mutagenesis. When expressed in bacteria these constructs conferred a herbicide resistance phenotype on the host. The potential of this system for mutagenesis and enzymological studies of plant proteins is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Selection of kochia (Kochia scoparia) biotypes resistant to the sulfonylurea herbicide chlorsulfuron has occurred through the continued use of this herbicide in monoculture cereal-growing areas in the United States. The apparent sulfonylurea resistance observed in kochia was confirmed in greenhouse tests. Fresh and dry weight accumulation in the resistant kochia was 2- to >350-fold higher in the presence of four sulfonylurea herbicides as compared to the susceptible biotype. Acetolactate synthase (ALS) activity isolated from sulfonylurea-resistant kochia was less sensitive to inhibition by three classes of ALS-inhibiting herbicides, sulfonylureas, imidazolinones, and sulfonanilides. The decrease in ALS sensitivity to inhibition (as measured by the ratio of resistant I50 to susceptible I50) was 5- to 28-fold, 2- to 6-fold, and 20-fold for sulfonylurea herbicides, imidazolinone herbicides, and a sulfonanilide herbicide, respectively. No differences were observed in the ALS-specific activities or the rates of [14C]chlorsulfuron uptake, translocation, and metabolism between susceptible and resistant kochia biotypes. The Km values for pyruvate using ALS from susceptible and resistant kochia were 2.13 and 1.74 mm, respectively. Based on these results, the mechanism of sulfonylurea resistance in this kochia biotype is due solely to a less sulfonylurea-sensitive ALS enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
Mazur BJ  Chui CF  Smith JK 《Plant physiology》1987,85(4):1110-1117
Acetolactate synthase (ALS) is the first common enzyme in the biosynthetic pathways to valine, isoleucine, and leucine. It is the target of two structurally unrelated classes of herbicides, the sulfonylureas and the imidazolinones. Genomic clones encoding ALS have been isolated from the higher plants Arabidopsis thaliana and Nicotiana tabacum, using a yeast ALS gene as a heterologous hybridization probe. Clones were positively identified by the homology of their deduced amino acid sequences with those of yeast and bacterial ALS isozymes. The tobacco and Arabidopsis ALS genes have approximately 70% nucleotide homology, and encode mature proteins which are approximately 85% homologous. Little homology is seen between the amino acid sequences of the presumptive N-terminal chloroplast transit peptides. Both plant genes lack introns. The tobacco ALS gene was isolated from a line of tobacco which is resistant to the sulfonylurea herbicides due to an alteration in ALS. The tobacco gene which was isolated codes for an ALS that is sensitive to the herbicides, as assayed by transformation of the gene into sensitive tobacco cells.  相似文献   

17.
A comparison is made of the kinetic characteristics of acetolactate synthase (EC 4.1.3.18) in extracts from Columbia wild type and four near-isogenic, herbicide-resistant mutants of Arobidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. The mutants used were the chlorsulfuron-resistant GH50 (csr1-1), the imazapyr-resistant GH90 (csr1-2), the triazolopyrimidine-resistant Tzp5 (csr1-3) and the multiherbicide-resistant, double mutant GM4.8 (csr1-4), derived from csr1-1 and csr1-2 by intragenic recombination (G. Mourad et al. 1994, Mol. Gen. Genet. 243, 178–184). and V max values for the substrate pyruvate were unaffected by any of the mutations giving rise to herbicide resistance. Feedback inhibition by L-valine (L-Val), L-leucine (L-Leu) and L-isoleucine (L-Ile) of acetolactate synthase extracted from wild type and mutants fitted a mixed competitive pattern most closely. Ki values for L-Val, L-Leu and L-Ile inhibition were not significantly different from wild type in extracts from csr1-1, csr1-2, and csr1-3. K i values were significantly higher than wild type by two- and five-fold, respectively, for csr1-4 with L-Val and L-Leu but not L-Ile. GM4.8 (csr1-4) plants were also highly resistant in their growth to added L-Val and L-Leu. The data suggest that (i) single mutational changes occurred that affected the binding of herbicides to the acetolactate synthase molecule without influencing the binding of substrates and feedback inhibitors (e.g. csr1-1, csr1-2 and csr1-3) and (ii) bringing two of these single mutations (csr1-1 and csr1-2) together in a double mutant (csr1-4) gave rise to an enzyme with altered characteristics as well as plants with changed growth in response to added L-Val and L-Leu. The implications of these conclusions for genetic transformation using these herbicide-resistant genes are discussed.Abbreviations ALS acetolactate synthase - L-Val L-valine - L-Leu L-leucine - L-Ile L-isoleucine This work was supported in part by a grant-in-aid of research from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada to J.K. and by a research grant award from Purdue University to G.M.  相似文献   

18.
The side effects of sulfonylurea and imidazolinone herbicides on plant-associated bacteria were investigated under pure culture conditions. Eighteen isolates, belonging to the genera Azotobacter, Azospirillum, Bacillus, Enterobacter Pseudomonas and Serratia, were exposed to four active compounds at concentration ranges similar to those in field soil. The sulfonylureas chlorsulfuron and rimsulfuron inhibited the growth of one of two Azospirillum and one of four Pseudomonas strains, while the imidazolinones imazapyr and imazethapyr were effective on two out of five Bacillus isolates. Surfactants in commercial formulation significantly enhanced rimsulfuron toxicity. With the exception of one Azospirillum strain, the differential tolerance of rhizobacteria to these herbicides was related to a differential sensitivity of their target, the activity of the first enzyme in branched-chain amino acid biosynthesis, acetohydroxyacid synthase (AHAS).Greenhouse pot studies were performed to assess the occurrence of inhibitory effects on bacterial growth in field conditions. Maize seedlings were bacterized with the two strains which had shown in vitro sensitivity to sulfonylureas. Following the application to the soil of a commercial formulation of rimsulfuron at rates of 0, 0.2 and 0.5 mol a.i. kg–1, significative differences in the resulting degree of bacterial root colonization were found. Moreover, upon co-inoculation with two strains, one tolerant and one sensitive to the herbicide, the presence of rimsulfuron significantly enhanced root occupancy by resistant bacteria, suggesting that shifts in the microbial community structure of crop rhizosphere could indeed result as a consequence of weed control by AHAS inhibitors.Abbreviations AHAS acetohydroxyacid synthase - CETAB cetyltrimethylammonium bromide - ID50 concentration causing 50% inhibition of enzyme activity - LD50 concentration causing 50% decrease of growth constant value  相似文献   

19.
Roles of conserved methionine residues in tobacco acetolactate synthase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Acetolactate synthase (ALS) catalyzes the first common step in the biosynthesis of valine, leucine, and isoleucine. ALS is the target of several classes of herbicides, including the sulfonylureas, the imidazolinones, and the triazolopyrimidines. The conserved methionine residues of ALS from plants were identified by multiple sequence alignment using ClustalW. The alignment of 17 ALS sequences from plants revealed 149 identical residues, seven of which were methionine residues. The roles of three well-conserved methionine residues (M350, M512, and M569) in tobacco ALS were determined using site-directed mutagenesis. The mutation of M350V, M512V, and M569V inactivated the enzyme and abolished the binding affinity for cofactor FAD. Nevertheless, the secondary structure of each of the mutants determined by CD spectrum was not affected significantly by the mutation. Both M350C and M569C mutants were strongly resistant to three classes of herbicides, Londax (a sulfonylurea), Cadre (an imidazolinone), and TP (a triazolopyrimidine), while M512C mutant did not show a significant resistance to the herbicides. The mutant M350C was more sensitive to pH change, while the mutant M569C showed a profile for pH dependence activity similar to that of wild type. These results suggest that M512 residue is likely located at or near the active site, and that M350 and M569 residues are probably located at the overlapping region between the active site and a common herbicide binding site.  相似文献   

20.
This study investigates mechanisms of multiple resistance to glyphosate, acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase (ACCase) and acetolactate synthase (ALS)-inhibiting herbicides in two Lolium rigidum populations from Australia. When treated with glyphosate, susceptible (S) plants accumulated 4- to 6-fold more shikimic acid than resistant (R) plants. The resistant plants did not have the known glyphosate resistance endowing mutation of 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3 phosphate synthase (EPSPS) at Pro-106, nor was there over-expression of EPSPS in either of the R populations. However, [14C]-glyphosate translocation experiments showed that the R plants in both populations have altered glyphosate translocation patterns compared to the S plants. The R plants showed much less glyphosate translocation to untreated young leaves, but more to the treated leaf tip, than did the S plants. Sequencing of the carboxyl transferase domain of the plastidic ACCase gene revealed no resistance endowing amino acid substitutions in the two R populations, and the ALS in vitro inhibition assay demonstrated herbicide-sensitive ALS in the ALS R population (WALR70). By using the cytochrome P450 inhibitor malathion and amitrole with ALS and ACCase herbicides, respectively, we showed that malathion reverses chlorsulfuron resistance and amitrole reverses diclofop resistance in the R population examined. Therefore, we conclude that multiple glyphosate, ACCase and ALS herbicide resistance in the two R populations is due to the presence of distinct non-target site based resistance mechanisms for each herbicide. Glyphosate resistance is due to reduced rates of glyphosate translocation, and resistance to ACCase and ALS herbicides is likely due to enhanced herbicide metabolism involving different cytochrome P450 enzymes.  相似文献   

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