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1.
Tumor promoting phorbol esters, such as 12-0-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate (TPA), stimulate colony formation in vitro by murine granulocyte-macrophage progenitors (GM-CFC) without added colony stimulating factors (CSF). To determine whether TPA induces CSF production in vitro, marrow cells were cultured for 1 to 7 days in liquid medium with or without TPA. No CSF was detected in any sample by a double antibody radioimmunoassay (sensitivity = 2 units/0.1 ml), however, colony-stimulating activity was detected in supernatant fluid from all TPA containing cultures by bioassay. This activity appeared to result from a direct effect of TPA rather than from production of CSF, as equivalent activity was found in TPA-containing medium incubated in the absence of marrow cells. Rabbit antiserum to purified L-cell CSF inhibited colony formation stimulated by L-cell CSF and WEHI-3 CSF, but had no effect on colony formation induced by TPA. Cells from long-term marrow cultures responded to TPA with colony formation, despite culture conditions and cell fractionation procedures that reduced the frequency of CSF-producing macrophages to less than 1.0%. TPA inhibited binding of radioiodinated L-cell CSF to marrow cells, especially if the cells were first exposed to TPA. These results do not support induction of CSF production as the major mechanism of phorbol ester stimulation of myelopoiesis. Phorbol esters may directly stimulate GM-CFC and/or enhance their response to CSF by a mechanism involving CSF binding sites.  相似文献   

2.
The adherent stromal layer in long-term bone marrow cultures (LTBMC) provides the cellular environment necessary for the in vitro proliferation and differentiation of pluripotential hematopoietic stem cells. The role of humoral hematopoietic growth factors, colony-stimulating factors (CSF) in the regulation of hematopoietic cell production in this system is poorly understood. We have recently isolated and cloned an adherent cell line, D2XRII, derived from murine LTBMC. Plateau phase 25 cm2 cultures of 2 X 10(6) D2XRII cells in 8.0 ml produced CSF-1 (M-CSF) at around 100-150 units/0.1 ml medium. Following X-irradiation there was a dose-dependent decrease in the production of CSF-1 to a plateau of 50% of control levels at 10,000 rad. Higher doses did not produce a further decrease. The X-ray dose reducing CSF-1 production to 50% was 100-fold above the lethal dose as measured by clonagenic survival following trypsinization and replating. Trypsinized replated viable adherent but nondividing X-irradiated D2XRII cells were maintained for up to 8 weeks after irradiation and demonstrated continuous production of CSF-1. The data indicate significant divergence of two biologic effects of X-irradiation on plateau-phase marrow stromal cells: physiologic function of adherence and CSF-1 production, versus proliferative integrity. This divergence of effects may be very relevant to understanding the mechanism of X-irradiation-associated marrow suppression and leukemogenesis.  相似文献   

3.
The proliferation and maturation of granulocytic-monocytic stem cells appears to be controlled by a series of closely related glycoproteins termed “colony-stimulating factors” (CSFs). Recently, we devised a 6-step scheme for the purification of murine fibroblast (L-cell)-derived CSF. Ten liter pools of conditioned media were concentrated by ultrafiltration, precipitated by ethanol, and separated on DEAE cellulose, Con-A Sepharose, and Sephadex G 150. The CSF was separated from trace contaminants, including endotoxin, by density gradient centrifugation. The purified material was radioiodinated and used to define the serum half-life and in vivo distribution. Following IV injection there was a biphasic serum clearance with a t½ of 24–40 min and 2–2½ hours in the first and second phases. Approximately 25% of the tracer was excreted in the urine at 6 h; however, urinary radioactivity was due to low molecular weight peptides. Simultaneous studies by radioimmunoassay showed a similar rapid serum clearance of unlabeled CSF but virtually no urinary CSF activity. Thus, assays for urinary CSF may not provide useful measures of in vivo CSF activity. Further in vitro studies have defined the interaction of CSF with responsive cells in the marrow. Varying doses of CSF were incubated with 107 marrow cells for intervals of 24–48 h. The major increment in cell-associated radioactivity occurred between 6 and 16 h. The reaction was saturable with 1–2 ng/ml CSF. Binding was prevented by cold CSF, but not by other proteins. Irradiation yielded only a minimal reduction in CSF binding. The interaction of CSF with marrow cells appeared to require new protein synthesis, as binding was completely inhibited by cycloheximide and puromycin. Irradiated mice injected with antibodies to CSF showed an inhibition of granulopoiesis by marrow cells in peritoneal diffusion chambers; however, granulopoiesis in the intact bone marrow was unaffected. Granulpoiesis in long-term marrow cultures was also unaffected by anti-CSF. These different responses may be due to accelerated clearance of injected CSF in nonirradiated mice or to extensive stromal interactions that modulate and perhaps control granulocytic differentiation in the intact bone marrow microenvironment.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of hydrocortisone (HC) on colony-stimulating activity (CSA) production from mouse bone marrow adherent cells, spleen cells and peritoneal macrophages with or without bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) stimulation was studied. CSA in the supernatant from bone marrow adherent cells incubated with HC was found to be five times higher than CSA from cultures without LPS stimulation. In contrast, the CSA production by spleen cells and peritoneal macrophages were significantly suppressed by HC in both LPS-stimulated and non-stimulated cultures. These studies suggest that the effect of HC on CSA production was quite different depending on the target cells.  相似文献   

5.
125I-labeled colony-stimulating factor (CSF) binds to granulocytic and monocytic cells in the bone marrow in an irreversible manner. Addition of a 1000-fold excess of unlabeled CSF does not displace the bound material. The present studies showed that brief exposures to pH 2.7-5.0 caused a marked release of the bound material. Such treatments were nontoxic to the marrow cells as judged by trypan blue dye exclusion, assay of colony-forming cells, and by analysis of rebinding of fresh 125I-CSF to the acid-treated cells. The CSF released from marrow cells by low pH revealed two peaks of radioactivity on SDS-acrylamide gel. The first peak (67,500 Da) corresponded to native CSF; a second peak of 53,500 Da was observed. Despite this apparent mild degradation of CSF, the released material showed greater binding to marrow and greater precipitation by anti-CSF than the native 125I-CSF. Further studies showed that acid treatment of marrow cells led to stabilization of the CSF receptors. Pretreatment at pH 4.0 led to retention of binding sites after conversion of marrow cultures to pH 7.5 and incubation at 22-37 degrees C. In contrast, cells that were not exposed to low pH lost receptors rapidly at these temperatures. The extent of preservation of the binding sites was related to the duration of acid exposure. These studies indicate that CSF is retained on the cell surface after binding at 0 degree C and that the CSF can be eluted by acid conditions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Highly purified mouse colony-stimulating factors (CSF) were tested for their effect on neutrophil cytotoxic function in a homologous antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) assay in which TNP-coupled mouse thymoma cells coated with mouse anti-TNP antibodies were used as targets, and purified normal mouse bone marrow neutrophils or induced peritoneal neutrophils were used as effector cells. Biochemically pure granulocyte-macrophage (GM)- and granulocyte (G)-CSF enhanced the cytotoxic activity of neutrophils obtained from both sources, allowing them to kill target cells at low antibody concentrations. Furthermore, GM- and G-CSF showed an additive effect, suggesting either the presence of separate receptors for GM- and G-CSF or of separate subsets of neutrophils. Induced peritoneal neutrophils showed a higher level of basal cytotoxic activity than did bone marrow neutrophils, suggesting neutrophil activation in vivo, but both reached similar levels of cytotoxicity upon maximal stimulation with CSF. In addition, CSF was found to be cross-reactive between mouse and human species in their enhancement of neutrophil cytotoxicity. By testing purified mouse CSF on human neutrophils, it could be shown that G-CSF and GM-CSF are functionally distinct molecules, because only G-CSF enhanced ADCC by human neutrophils. These experiments show that the purified factors that control the production of neutrophils by progenitor cells in vitro also activate differentiated neutrophils to carry out their cytotoxic activity in a more effective manner.  相似文献   

7.
The capacity of macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF) to enhance respiratory burst activity in peritoneal macrophages was measured. Macrophages incubated for 48 hr or more with concentrated L cell-conditioned medium as a source of M-CSF released two to three times as much O2- in response to PMA as did unexposed macrophages. Stimulation was noted at concentrations of colony-stimulating activity from 0.1 to 2000 U/ml and was maximal at 10 to 100 U/ml. Purified, endotoxin-free CSF enhanced secretion to a similar degree as unpurified L cell-conditioned medium. Release of O2- by M-CSF macrophages occurred over 60 min and was triggered by opsonized zymosan as well as PMA. H2O2 release was also enhanced in macrophages exposed to both unpurified and purified M-CSF. These data indicate that M-CSF enhances the capacity of mature macrophages to release oxygen reduction products, and they are consistent with reports that CSF can stimulate the release of other secretory products.  相似文献   

8.
IL-1 inhibits B cell differentiation in long term bone marrow cultures   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
There is evidence that stromal cells are responsive to changes in their external milieu and that this can affect their function. IL-1 has been identified as one mediator that can affect stromal cells by increasing their secretion of CSF. The monokine has also been reported to be a B cell differentiation factor. The purpose of this study was to test the effects of IL-1 on the pattern of hemopoietic cell differentiation by adding IL-1 alpha to myeloid long term bone marrow cultures (MBMC) at the time of their transfer to lymphoid bone marrow culture conditions. This usually results in the cessation of myelopoiesis and the induction of B lymphopoiesis. The addition of 50 U/ml of rIL-1 alpha, but not 10 U/ml, to MBMC at the time of their transfer to lymphoid conditions resulted in a complete inhibition of B cell differentiation and sustained myelopoiesis. To determine whether adherent layer cells contributed to this effect, conditioned medium (CM) was collected from adherent layers treated previously with the antibiotic mycophenolic acid. This depletes the hemopoietic cells from the cultures and retains a purified population of stromal cells. CM from mycophenolic acid- treated adherent layers exposed for 24 h to 50 U/ml of IL-1 was added at volume concentrations of 5, 10, and 25% to MBMC at the time of transfer to lymphoid bone marrow culture conditions and at each feeding thereafter. Expression of the B lineage associated 14.8 Ag and IgM was inhibited on a dose dependent basis, and myelopoiesis was sustained in cultures to which 25% CM had been added. Induction of B lymphopoiesis occurred in cultures to which adherent cell CM not exposed to IL-1 had been added. The CM from the IL-1-treated adherent cells contained CSF, because it promoted the growth of myeloid colonies from fresh marrow or MBMC cells and stimulated the granulocyte-macrophage-CSF sensitive FDC-P1 cell line to proliferate. IL-3 was not present in the CM, because stimulation of the IL-3 sensitive 32D cell line was not observed. The CM from the IL-1-treated adherent cells stimulated thymocytes to proliferate in the presence of PHA. This raised the possibility that the induced CSF may have required IL-1 to mediate their effects in the cultures. However, B lymphopoiesis was inhibited and myelopoiesis maintained upon addition of recombinant granulocyte-, macrophage-, and granulocyte-macrophage-CSF to cultures, indicating that IL-1 or other non-CSF molecules induced by it need not be present.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Transforming growth factor (TGF) type beta, a potent growth modulator, has recently been shown to inhibit the proliferation and function of several types of immune cells. This report investigates the effect of human platelet purified TGF-beta on CSF-1-induced proliferation in liquid cultures. We used two cell types to study TGF-beta effects, bone marrow precursors and a c-myc partially transformed CSF-1-dependent macrophage cell line designated BMM-8. We found that CSF-1-dependent proliferation of both cell types was strongly inhibited by TGF-beta in a dose-dependent manner. Approximately 1.6 and 8 pM TGF-beta inhibited 50% of CSF-1 proliferation of the bone marrow precursors and BMM-8, respectively. Inhibition appeared to be reversible, as bone marrow and BMM-8 cells proliferated in response to CSF-1 after preincubation of the cells in TGF-beta. Interestingly, inhibition of hematopoietic cells was observed only after a lag period of 24 to 48 h after onset of cultures. TGF-beta inhibition was partially diminished when increasing amounts of CSF-1 were added to the cultures. TGF-beta inhibition did not involve secondary inhibitory factors such as IFN or PG, both of which have been previously shown to suppress CSF responsiveness. Finally, flow cytometric analysis of the cell cycle indicated that within 48 h, TGF-beta-treated BMM-8 cells were prevented from entering S phase. These results suggest that TGF-beta may play an important role in the negative regulation of macrophage production.  相似文献   

10.
Purified recombinant human (rhu) IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta were evaluated for their effects on the proliferation and survival of granulocyte-macrophage (CFU-GM) and erythroid (BFU-E) progenitor cells from normal human bone marrow (BM). Using nonadherent low density T lymphocyte depleted (NALT-) BM cells cultured in the presence or absence of IL-1, CSF-deprivation studies demonstrated that IL-1 alpha or IL-1 beta by itself did not enhance the proliferation of CFU-GM or BFU-E. They did, however, promote the survival of progenitors responding to the delayed addition of media conditioned by the 5637 cell line (5637 conditioned medium), rhu GM-CSF and erythropoietin. The survival promoting effects of IL-1 alpha on CFU-GM and BFU-E were neutralized by anti-IL-1 alpha mAb added to the cultures. The survival promoting effect of IL-1 alpha did not appear to be mediated by CSF, because neither CSF nor erythroid burst promoting activity were detectable in cultures in which NALT- cells were incubated with rhuIL-1 alpha. In addition, suboptimal concentrations of rhu macrophage CSF (CSF-1), G-CSF, GM-CSF, and IL-3, which were just below the levels that would stimulate colony formation, did not enhance progenitor cell survival. Survival of CFU-GM and BFU-E in low density (LD) bone marrow cells did not decrease as drastically as that in NALT- BM cells, and exogenously added IL-1 did not enhance progenitor cell survival of CFU-GM and BFU-E in LD BM cells. However, addition of anti-IL-1 beta decreased survival of CFU-GM and BFU-E in LD BM cells. These results implicate IL-1 in the prolonged survival of human CFU-GM and BFU-E.  相似文献   

11.
Human fetal bone marrow (FBM) cells were examined for the ability to form colonies in the absence of exogenous colony-stimulating factor (CSF) in double layer agar, methylcellulose (MC), and in agar-MC (agar underlayer, MC overlayer) culture systems. Without exogenous CSF, macrophage colonies (M-CFC) were formed in a combined culture of agar and MC. Aggregates of 5-40 cells were observed on day 7. Gradually, large compact colonies which survived for 10-12 weeks of cultivation, were formed. They were composed of mononuclear monocytes and multinucleated cells. M-CFC progenitors were nonadherent, but their progeny became adherent during differentiation within the colony. Colony formation was cell-dose-dependent. Depletion of monocytes increased the number of colonies in agar-MC cultures and stimulated the development of some macrophage colonies in MC. Survival of monocyte progenitors was not dependent on CSF. Neither was their proliferation nor partial differentiation in agar-MC cultures. CSF increased M-CFC colony efficiency, however, if it was present when cultures were initiated. Addition of CSF to M-CFC growing for 2-5 weeks in CSF-deprived medium stimulated monocytes proliferation and transformation into macrophages. Epithelioid cells, an increase in the number of giant multinucleated cells, and granulocyte multiplication were also observed. The absolute dependence of macrophage colony formation on CSF described by others might be a result of inadequate culture conditions due to agar rather than an intrinsic physiological requirement.  相似文献   

12.
The radiosensitivity of populations of colony-forming cells (CFC) in murine bone marrow was investigated using different recombinant colony-stimulating factors (CSFs; murine IL-3 and granulocyte-macrophage CSF and human granulocyte CSF), or purified murine macrophage CSF. With unfractionated normal bone marrow the CFC increased in radiosensitivity as they progressed through the granulocyte lineage. The D0 values ranged from 129 +/- 12 cGy for CFC stimulated with GM-CSF down to 42 +/- 2 cGy after stimulation with G-CSF. IL-3 stimulated a CFC population which gave the only survival curve with a shoulder (n = 1.9 +/- 0.3). With semipurified populations of primitive or bipotential CFC, D0 values were generally lower with respect to the equivalent values for unpurified bone marrow (range 62 +/- 7 cGy to 135 +/- 7 cGy). Changes in cluster/colony ratio and colony morphology together possibly with products of accessory cells influence the interpretation of the radiosensitivity parameters.  相似文献   

13.
A monoclonal antibody specifically reactive with MLR-activated T cells (MLR2) was added to light density normal marrow cells, depleted of adherent cells and T lymphocytes, and plated in soft agar for granulocyte macrophage colony formation. Colonies from MLR2-treated marrow cells were reduced to less than 10% of expected growth. The inhibition was not complement dependent, did not require the continuous presence of MLR2 in culture, and could not be detected also when human placenta-conditioned medium was used in the place of leukocyte feeder layers as a source of colony-stimulating factor (CSF). Co-culture experiments with MLR2 treated and untreated marrow cells further excluded the possibility of an indirect effect of MLR2 on CFU-c via auxiliary cells. The results of this study suggest that myeloid progenitor cells express a lymphoid antigen that is absent on resting or activated B cells and on resting T cells, but is expressed on activated T cells.  相似文献   

14.
V G Lebedev 《Radiobiologiia》1991,31(4):510-514
Prodigiozan injected to long-term cultures of mouse bone marrow 24 h before irradiation increased CFUs and CFU-GM number and colony-stimulating factor (CSF) level by the time of delivery of ionizing radiation. As early as 60 min following irradiation of bone marrow structures with a dose of 2 Gy the number of CFUs and CFU-GM decreased considerably, and from day 3 on after irradiation the indices under study were gradually restored. By day 14 the cultures preinjected with prodigiozan exhibited higher recovery levels. The decrease in the number of precursor cells 60 min after irradiation was accompanied by a drastic increase in the CSF content of cultures; the CSF release in cultures protected with prodigiozan was more moderate than in the irradiated controls.  相似文献   

15.
In unidirectional mixed lymphocyte cultures containing (as responders, stimulators, or regulators) spleen cells from mice infected with Trypanosoma cruzi, alloantigen responses were less than in cultures containing normal spleen cells only. Depletion of plastic adherent cells from infected spleen cells (stimulators or regulators) reversed their inhibitory effect on normal spleen cells (responders); removal of adherent responder cells and/or B lymphocytes did not alter the low alloantigen responses of normal spleen cells (stimulated by infected spleen cells) or infected spleen cells (stimulated by normal spleen cells). Infected spleen cells were effective in regulating mixed lymphocyte cultures only when added at the initiation of the culture. Serum from infected mice suppressed mixed lymphocyte cultures containing responder spleen cells syngeneic to the serum donor if added up to 24 hr after initiation of cultures, whereas the “suppressor serum” had to be present at the initiation of cultures when responder cells were allogeneic to the serum donor. Cultures of infected spleen cells (whole or macrophage enriched) produced a factor which was suppressive when added to mixed lymphocyte cultures containing syngeneic responder cells at initiation. It is proposed that the serum suppressor substance regulates cell-mediated immune responses directly by suppressing the response-potential of cells and indirectly by triggering the release of a factor from adherent splenic cells which induces a hyporesponsive state in T lymphocytes.  相似文献   

16.
Serum-free conditioned medium prepared from an established line of human pancreatic carcinoma (MIA PaCa-2) provides a rich source of colony-stimulating factor (CSF). Two activities distinctly separable by isoelectrofocusing have been identified: a high molecular weight CSF exhibiting greater activity in mouse bone marrow and a low molecular weight CSF more active in human bone marrow. The high molecular weight CSF has been purified 1000-fold to apparent homogeneity by a two-step procedure including isoelectrofocusing and gel filtration chromatography. The purified CSF has a molecular weight of 50,000 and an isoelectric point of 3.7 to 4.6. It is a glycoprotein as shown by periodic acid-Schiff stain and exhibits greater activity in mouse marrow than in human marrow.  相似文献   

17.
A colony-stimulating factor (CSF) has been purified to homogeneity from the serum-free medium conditioned by one of the human CSF-producing tumor cell lines, CHU-2. The molecule was a hydrophobic glycoprotein (mol. wt 19,000, pI = 6.1 as asialo form) with possible O-linked glycosides. Amino acid sequence determination of the molecule gave a single NH2-terminal sequence which had no homology to the corresponding sequence of the other CSFs previously reported. The biological activity was apparently specific for a neutrophilic granulocyte-lineage of both human and mouse bone marrow cells with a specific activity of 2.7 X 10(8) colonies/10(5) non-adherent human bone marrow cells/mg protein. The purified CSF can be regarded as a G-CSF of human origin and will become a useful material for investigation of regulatory mechanisms of human granulopoiesis.  相似文献   

18.
Macrophage CSF (M-CSF) induces responsive bone marrow precursors into rapid growth and differentiation to mature macrophages. Available cell lines that depend on M-CSF for growth are well differentiated and rather adherent. We investigated the effects of M-CSF on immature myeloid cell lines as models of the marrow precursors. The murine line NFS-60 requires IL-3 for growth and also responds to granulocyte-CSF and granulocyte-macrophage-CSF. Cultures of one NFS-60 subline, when switched from IL-3 to 10% L cell conditioned media, a source of M-CSF, or purified M-CSF, frequently acquired large, adherent cells. The adherent cells grew slowly in the presence of M-CSF, in contrast to the majority population of small, round, rapidly growing cells. The large cells had properties of differentiated macrophages that were absent in the nonadherent cells. Cells with macrophage phenotype were not observed in IL-3-supported cultures over many passages. A subline was derived from NFS-60 that grew rapidly and continuously in human or murine M-CSF as round, nonadherent cells. The line, called M-NFS-60, responded well to M-CSF and IL-3, weakly to granulocyte-CSF and not at all to murine granulocyte-macrophage-CSF, IL-4, or human IL-1. A mAb to human M-CSF specifically inhibited only M-NFS-60 proliferation induced by the human growth factor, whether produced by mammalian or bacterial cells. This study shows two effects of M-CSF on the IL-3-dependent NFS-60 line. Upon first exposure to M-CSF, cells may undergo global differentiation to slowly replicating macrophages in conditions we have not been able to define. The more common effect is rapid growth of immature myeloid cells like the bone marrow precursors, but with a block to differentiation. Thus, these cells may be useful as models of M-CSF-induced differentiation, and of permanently maintained macrophage precursors.  相似文献   

19.
In bone marrow cell (BMC) cultures supplemented with colony-stimulating factor (CSF), accessory cells develop that are capable of inducing specific helper T cells. These accessory cells become effective after 4 days in culture and can be found not only in the adherent but also in the nonadherent cell population. On the other hand, very few accessory cells with helper cell-inducing capacity are obtained in BMC cultures without CSF. The active BMC-derived cell type has been shown to carry Ia surface antigen, since pretreatment with anti-Ia serum and complement abolished the capacity of these cells to function like macrophages in helper T cell induction. Moreover, the appearance of functional accessory cells in these cultures coincided with the presence of Ia-bearing cells.  相似文献   

20.
When granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF), purified to homogeneity from mouse lung-conditioned medium, was added to agar cultures of mouse bone marrcw cells, it stimulated the formation of small numbers of granulocytic colonies. At high concentrations of G-CSF, a small proportion of macrophage and granulocyte-macrophage colonies also developed. G-CSF stimulated colony formation by highly enriched progenitor cell populations obtained by fractionation of mouse fetal liver cells using a fluorescence-activated cell sorter, indicating that G-CSF probably acts directly on target progenitor cells. Granulocytic colonies stimulated by G-CSF were small and uniform in size, and at 7 days of culture were composed of highly differentiated cells. Studies using clonal transfer and the delayed addition of other regulators showed that G-CSF could directly stimulate the initial proliferation of a large proportion of the granulocvte-macrophage progenitors in adult marrow and also the survival and/or proliferation of some multipotential, erythroid, and eosinophil progenitors in fetal liver. However, G-CSF was unable to sustain continued proliferation of these cells to result in colony formation. When G-CSF was mixed with purified granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) or macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF), the combination stimulated the formation by adult marrow cells of more granulocyte-macrophage colonies than either stimulus alone and an overall size increase in all colonies. G-CSF behaves as a predominantly granulopoietic stimulating factor but has some capacity to stimulate the initial proliferation of the same wide range of progenitor cells as that stimulated by GM-CSF.  相似文献   

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