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1.
Selenocysteine lyase is a pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP)-dependent enzyme that catalyzes the exclusive decomposition of L-selenocysteine to L-alanine and elemental selenium. An open reading frame, named csdB, from Escherichia coli encodes a putative protein that is similar to selenocysteine lyase of pig liver and cysteine desulfurase (NifS) of Azotobacter vinelandii. In this study, the csdB gene was cloned and expressed in E. coli cells. The gene product was a homodimer with the subunit Mr of 44,439, contained 1 mol of PLP as a cofactor per mol of subunit, and catalyzed the release of Se, SO2, and S from L-selenocysteine, L-cysteine sulfinic acid, and L-cysteine, respectively, to yield L-alanine; the reactivity of the substrates decreased in this order. Although the enzyme was not specific for L-selenocysteine, the high specific activity for L-selenocysteine (5.5 units/mg compared with 0.019 units/mg for L-cysteine) supports the view that the enzyme can be regarded as an E. coli counterpart of mammalian selenocysteine lyase. We crystallized CsdB, the csdB gene product, by the hanging drop vapor diffusion method. The crystals were of suitable quality for x-ray crystallography and belonged to the tetragonal space group P43212 with unit cell dimensions of a = b = 128.1 A and c = 137.0 A. Consideration of the Matthews parameter Vm (3.19 A3/Da) accounts for the presence of a single dimer in the crystallographic asymmetric unit. A native diffraction dataset up to 2.8 A resolution was collected. This is the first crystallographic analysis of a protein of NifS/selenocysteine lyase family.  相似文献   

2.
We have purified three NifS homologs from Escherichia coli, CSD, CsdB, and IscS, that appear to be involved in iron-sulfur cluster formation and/or the biosynthesis of selenophosphate. All three homologs catalyze the elimination of Se and S from L-selenocysteine and L-cysteine, respectively, to form L-alanine. These pyridoxal 5'-phosphate enzymes were inactivated by abortive transamination, yielding pyruvate and a pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate form of the enzyme. The enzymes showed non-Michaelis-Menten behavior for L-selenocysteine and L-cysteine. When pyruvate was added, they showed Michaelis-Menten behavior for L-selenocysteine but not for L-cysteine. Pyruvate significantly enhanced the activity of CSD toward L-selenocysteine. Surprisingly, the enzyme activity toward L-cysteine was not increased as much by pyruvate, suggesting the presence of different rate-limiting steps or reaction mechanisms for L-cysteine desulfurization and the degradation of L-selenocysteine. We substituted Ala for each of Cys358 in CSD, Cys364 in CsdB, and Cys328 in IscS, residues that correspond to the catalytically essential Cys325 of Azotobacter vinelandii NifS. The enzyme activity toward L-cysteine was almost completely abolished by the mutations, whereas the activity toward L-selenocysteine was much less affected. This indicates that the reaction mechanism of L-cysteine desulfurization is different from that of L-selenocysteine decomposition, and that the conserved cysteine residues play a critical role only in L-cysteine desulfurization.  相似文献   

3.
Selenophosphate synthetase (SPS), the selD gene product from Escherichia coli, catalyzes the biosynthesis of monoselenophosphate from selenide and ATP. Characterization of selenophosphate synthetase revealed the determined K(m) value for selenide is far above the optimal concentration needed for growth and approached levels which are toxic. Selenocysteine lyase enzymes, which decompose selenocysteine to elemental selenium (Se(0)) and alanine, were considered as candidates for the control of free selenium levels in vivo. The ability of a lyase protein to generate Se(0) in the proximity of SPS maybe an attractive solution to selenium toxicity as well as the high K(m) value for selenide. Recently, three E. coli NifS-like proteins, CsdB, CSD, and IscS, were characterized. All three proteins exhibit lyase activity on L-cysteine and L-selenocysteine and produce sulfane sulfur, S(0), or Se(0) respectively. Each lyase can effectively mobilize Se(0) from L-selenocysteine for selenophosphate biosynthesis.  相似文献   

4.
Mechanism of reactions catalyzed by selenocysteine beta-lyase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The reaction mechanism of selenocystine beta-lyase has been studied and it was found that elemental selenium is released enzymatically from selenocysteine, and reduced to H2Se nonenzymatically with dithiothreitol or some other reductants that are added to prepare selenocysteine from selenocystine in the anaerobic reaction system. 1H and 13C NMR spectra of L-alanine formed in 2H2O have shown that an equimolar amount of [beta-2H1]- and [beta-2H2]alanines are produced. The deuterium isotope effect at the alpha position was observed; kH/kD = 2.4. These results indicated that the alpha hydrogen of selenocysteine was removed by a base at the active site, and was incorporated into the alpha position of alanine, a product, without exchange of a solvent deuterium. When the enzyme was incubated with L-selenocysteine in the absence of added pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, the activity decreased with prolonged incubation time. However, the activity was recovered by addition of 5'-phosphate. The spectrophotometric study showed that the inactivated enzyme was the apo form. The apoenzyme was activated by a combination of pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate and various alpha-keto acids such as alpha-ketoglutarate and pyruvate. Thus, the enzyme is inactivated through transamination between selenocysteine and the bound pyridoxal 5'-phosphate to produce pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate and a keto acid derived from selenocysteine. The pyridoxal enzyme, an active form, is regenerated by addition of alpha-keto acids. This regulatory mechanism is analogous to those of aspartate beta-decarboxylase [EC 4.1.1.12], arginine racemase [EC 5.1.1.9], and kynureninase [EC 3.7.1.3] [K. Soda and K. Tanizawa (1979) Adv. Enzymol. 49, 1].  相似文献   

5.
Escherichia coli CsdB is a pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP)-dependent enzyme that catalyzes both cysteine desulfuration and selenocysteine deselenation. The enzyme has a high specific activity for L-selenocysteine relative to L-cysteine. On the other hand, its paralog, IscS, exhibits higher activity for L-cysteine, which acts as a sulfur donor during the biosynthesis of the iron-sulfur cluster and 4-thiouridine. The structure of CsdB complexed with L-propargylglycine was determined by X-ray crystallography at 2.8 A resolution. The overall polypeptide fold of the complex is similar to that of the uncomplexed enzyme, indicating that no significant structural change occurs upon formation of the complex. In the complex, propargylglycine forms a Schiff base with PLP, providing the features of the external aldimine formed in the active site. The Cys364 residue, which is essential for the activity of CsdB toward L-cysteine but not toward L-selenocysteine, is clearly visible on a loop of the extended lobe (Thr362-Arg375) in all enzyme forms studied, in contrast to the corresponding disordered loop (Ser321-Arg332) of the Thermotoga maritima NifS-like protein, which is closely related to IscS. The extended lobe of CsdB has an 11-residue deletion compared with that of the NifS-like protein. These facts suggest that the restricted flexibility of the Cys364-anchoring extended lobe in CsdB may be responsible for the ability of the enzyme to discriminate between selenium and sulfur.  相似文献   

6.
Microbial distribution of selenocysteine lyase.   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
We studied the distribution of selenocysteine lyase, a novel enzyme catalyzing the conversion of selenocysteine into alanine and H2Se, which we first demonstrated in various mammalian tissues (Esaki et al., J. Biol. Chem. 257:4386-4391, 1982). Enzyme activity was found in various bacteria such as Alcaligenes viscolactis and Pseudomonas alkanolytica. No significant activity was found in yeasts and fungi. Selenocysteine lyases from A. viscolactis and P. alkanolytica acted specifically on L-selenocysteine and required pyridoxal 5'-phosphate as a cofactor.  相似文献   

7.
Selenophosphate synthetase (SPS), the selD gene product from Escherichia coli, catalyzes the biosynthesis of monoselenophosphate, AMP, and orthophosphate in a 1:1:1 ratio from selenide and ATP. It was recently demonstrated that selenium delivered from selenocysteine by an E. coli NifS-like protein could replace free selenide in the in vitro SPS assay for selenophosphate formation (G. M. Lacourciere, H. Mihara, T. Kurihara, N. Esaki, and T. C. Stadtman, J. Biol. Chem. 275:23769-23773, 2000). During growth of E. coli in the presence of 0.1 microM (75)SeO(3)(2-) and increasing amounts of L-selenocysteine, a concomitant decrease in (75)Se incorporation into formate dehydrogenase H and nucleosides of bulk tRNA was observed. This is consistent with the mobilization of selenium from L-selenocysteine in vivo and its use in selenophosphate formation. The ability of E. coli to utilize selenocysteine as a selenium source for selenophosphate biosynthesis in vivo supports the participation of the NifS-like proteins in selenium metabolism.  相似文献   

8.
The purification and characterization of bacterial selenocysteine beta-lyase, an enzyme which specifically catalyzes the cleavage of L-selenocysteine to L-alanine and Se0, are presented. The enzyme, purified to near homogeneity from Citrobacter freundii, is monomeric with a molecular weight of ca. 64,000 and contains 1 mol of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate as a cofactor per mol of enzyme. L-Selenocysteine is the sole substrate (Km, 0.95 mM). L-Cysteine is a competitive inhibitor of the enzyme (Ki, 0.65 mM). The enzyme also catalyzes the alpha, beta elimination of beta-chloro-L-alanine to form NH3, pyruvate, and Cl- and is irreversibly inactivated during the reaction. The physicochemical properties, e.g., amino acid composition and subunit structure, of the bacterial enzyme are fairly different from those of the pig liver enzyme (Esaki et al., J. Biol. Chem. 257:4386-4391, 1982). However, the catalytic properties of both enzymes, e.g., substrate specificity and inactivation by the substrate or a mechanism-based inactivator, beta-chloro-L-alanine, are very similar.  相似文献   

9.
There are two possible mechanisms (co- or post-translational) for incorporation of Se into glutathione peroxidase in which selenocysteine presents at the active site of the enzyme and corresponds to UGA on the mRNA. We studied the above mechanisms using opal suppressor tRNA in mammals. Opal suppressor tRNA did not accept any selenocysteine and phosphoseryl-tRNA did not change to selenocysteyl-tRNA. Meanwhile, phosphoprotein changed to a protein containing selenocysteine by the incubation with H2Se and some enzymes. From these results, we propose that phosphoserine on glutathione peroxidase (apo-enzyme), which is synthesized with phosphoseryl-tRNA, is converted to selenocysteine in the mature enzyme, by a posttranslational mechanism. Opal suppressor tRNA may play a role to synthesize the apo-enzyme of glutathione peroxidase.  相似文献   

10.
The biochemical properties of the enzyme responsible for nematode "activated L-serine sulphydrase" activity (L-cysteine + R-SH----cysteine thioether + H2S) have been investigated using primarily the gastro-intestinal nematodes Nippostrongylus brasiliensis and Haemonchus contortus. The activated L-serine sulphydrase enzyme was found to be cytosolic in origin and exhibited maximal activity at pH 9.0. Enzyme activity was widely distributed amongst the major tissues of adult female Ascaris suum but was particularly abundant in longitudinal muscle. The enzyme appeared to have a rigid specificity for L-cysteine as the primary thiol substrate, but was capable of utilising a number of sulphur amino acids (and derivatives) and nonphysiological thiols as second substrates. The best second thiol substrates were nonphysiological, hydroxyl-containing thiols that showed some structural similarity to the standard second substrate, 2-mercaptoethanol. Kinetic analyses revealed that the enzyme operates by a sequential catalytic mechanism, and the absolute Michaelis constants were: KL-cysteine = 0.21 +/- 0.02 mM and K2-mercaptoethanol = 5.58 +/- 0.59 mM. The enzyme was relatively insensitive to inhibition by a variety of substrate analogues and known inhibitors of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate dependent enzymes, whilst plant phenols caused significant levels of inhibition. The most potent inhibitors discovered were the anthelmintics bithionol, dichlorophene and hexachlorophene. Further characterisation revealed that hexachlorophene was a parabolic competitive inhibitor of the activated L-serine sulphydrase enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
12.
delta-(L-alpha-Aminoadipyl)-L-cysteinyl-D-valine (ACV) synthetase, the multienzyme catalyzing the formation of ACV from the constituent amino acids and ATP in the presence of Mg2+ and dithioerythritol, was purified about 2700-fold from Streptomyces clavuligerus. The molecular mass of the native enzyme as determined by gel filtration chromatography is 560 kDa, while that determined by denaturing gel electrophoresis is 500 kDa. The enzyme is able to catalyze pyrophosphate exchange in dependence on L-cysteine and L-valine, but no L-alpha-aminoadipic-acid-dependent ATP/PPi exchange could be detected. Other L-cysteine- and L-valine-activating enzymes present in crude extracts were identified as aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases which could be separated from ACV synthetase. The molecular mass of these enzymes is 140 kDa for L-valine ligase and 50 kDa for L-cysteine ligase. The dissociation constants have been estimated, assuming three independent activation sites, to be 1.25 mM and 1.5 mM for cysteine and ATP, and 2.4 mM and 0.25 mM for valine and ATP, respectively. The enzyme forms a thioester with alpha-aminoadipic acid and with valine in a molar ratio of 0.6:1 (amino acid/enzyme). Thus, the bacterial ACV synthetase is a multifunctional peptide synthetase, differing from fungal ACV synthetases in its mechanism of activation of the non-protein amino acid.  相似文献   

13.
T Mizutani  T Hitaka 《FEBS letters》1988,232(1):243-248
This study has been undertaken in order to elucidate the mechanisms of incorporation of Se into glutathione peroxidase (GSHPx), in which selenocysteine corresponds to the opal termination codon UGA on the mRNA. We studied the above mechanisms using an opal suppressor tRNA, prepared from bovine liver, and casein as a model protein for the GSHPx apo-enzyme which might contain phosphoserine. The results showed that opal suppressor tRNA did not accept selenocysteine (lower than 0.1 mmol/mol) under the standard conditions. A trace amount of phosphoseryl-tRNA was converted to selenocysteyl-tRNA by incubation with H2Se and some enzymes. Meanwhile, a number of phosphoserine residues in casein were converted to selenocysteine residues by incubation with H2Se and enzymes. These results suggest that opal suppressor tRNA plays a role in synthesizing GSHPx via co- and/or post-translational mechanisms.  相似文献   

14.
The Escherichia coli NifS CsdB protein is a member of the homodimeric pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP)-dependent family of enzymes. These enzymes are capable of decomposing cysteine or selenocysteine into L-alanine and sulfur or selenium, respectively. E. coli NifS CsdB has a high specificity for L-selenocysteine in comparison to l-cysteine, suggesting a role for this enzyme is selenium metabolism. The 2.0 A crystal structure of E. coli NifS CsdB reveals a high-resolution view of the active site of this enzyme in apo-, persulfide, perselenide, and selenocysteine-bound intermediates, suggesting a mechanism for the stabilization of the enzyme persulfide and perselenide intermediates during catalysis, a necessary intermediate in the formation of sulfur and selenium containing metabolites.  相似文献   

15.
Tchong SI  Xu H  White RH 《Biochemistry》2005,44(5):1659-1670
A [4Fe-4S] enzyme that decomposes L-cysteine to hydrogen sulfide, ammonia, and pyruvate has been isolated and characterized from Methanocaldococcus jannaschii. The sequence of the isolated enzyme demonstrated that the protein was the product of the M. jannaschii MJ1025 gene. The protein product of this gene was recombinantly produced in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity. Both the isolated and recombinant enzymes are devoid of pyridoxal phosphate (PLP) and are rapidly inactivated upon exposure to air. The air-inactivated enzyme is activated by reaction with Fe2+ and dithiothreitol in the absence of air. The air-inactivated enzyme contains 3 mol of iron per subunit (43 kDa, SDS gel electrophoresis), and the native enzyme has a measured molecular mass of 135 kDa (gel filtration), indicating it is a trimer. The enzyme is very specific for L-cysteine, with no activity being detected with D-cysteine, L-homocysteine, 3-mercaptopropionic acid (cysteine without the amino group), cysteamine (cysteine without the carboxylic acid), or mercaptolactate (the hydroxyl analogue of cysteine). The activity of the enzyme was stimulated by 40% when the enzyme was assayed in the presence of methyl viologen (4 mM) and inhibited by 70% when the enzyme was assayed in the presence of EDTA (7.1 mM). Preincubation of the enzyme with iodoacetamide (17 mM) completely abolishes activity. The enzymatic activity has a half-life of 8 or 12 min when the enzyme is treated at room temperature with 0.42 mM N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) or 0.42 mM iodoacetamide, respectively. MALDI analysis of the NEM-inactivated enzyme showed Cys25 as the site of alkylation. Site-directed mutagenesis of each of four of the cysteines conserved in the orthologues of the enzyme reduced the catalytic efficiency and thermal stability of the enzyme. The enzyme was found to catalyze exchange of the C-2 hydrogen of the L-cysteine with solvent. These results are consistent with three of the conserved cysteines being involved in the formation of the [4Fe-4S] center and the thiolate of Cys25 serving as a base to abstract the alpha-hydrogen in the first step of the elimination. Although the enzyme has no sequence homology to any known enzymes, including the non-PLP-dependent serine/threonine dehydratases or aconitases, the mechanisms of action of all of these enzymes are similar, in that each catalyzes an alpha,beta-elimination reaction adjacent to a carboxylate group. It is proposed that the enzyme may be responsible for the production of sulfide required for the biosynthesis of iron-sulfur centers in this archaea. A mechanism of action of the enzyme is proposed.  相似文献   

16.
A group of selenium (Se)‐hyperaccumulating species belonging to the genus Astragalus are known for their capacity to accumulate up to 0.6% of their foliar dry weight as Se, with most of this Se being in the form of Se‐methylselenocysteine (MeSeCys). Here, we report the isolation and molecular characterization of the gene that encodes a putative selenocysteine methyltransferase (SMT) enzyme from the non‐accumulator Astragalus drummondii and biochemically compare it with an authentic SMT enzyme from the Se‐hyperaccumulator Astragalus bisulcatus, a related species that lives within the same native habitat. The non‐accumulator enzyme (AdSMT) shows a high degree of homology with the accumulator enzyme (AbSMT) but lacks the selenocysteine methyltransferase activity in vitro, explaining why little or no detectable levels of MeSeCys accumulation are observed in the non‐accumulator plant. The insertion of mutations on the coding region of the non‐accumulator AdSMT enzyme to better resemble enzymes that originate from Se accumulator species results in increased selenocysteine methyltransferase activity, but these mutations were not sufficient to fully gain the activity observed in the AbSMT accumulator enzyme. We demonstrate that SMT is localized predominantly within the chloroplast in Astragalus, the principal site of Se assimilation in plants. By using a site‐directed mutagenesis approach, we show that an Ala to Thr amino acid mutation at the predicted active site of AbSMT results in a new enzymatic capacity to methylate homocysteine. The mutated AbSMT enzyme exhibited a sixfold higher capacity to methylate selenocysteine, thereby establishing the evolutionary relationship of SMT and homocysteine methyltransferase enzymes in plants.  相似文献   

17.
In epidemiology and human supplementation studies, as well as many animal models, selenium has shown antitumorigenic activity. The mechanism of action, however, has not been satisfactorily resolved. Selenium supplementation affects many enzymes in addition to those where selenocysteine is an essential component. Such enzymes include cytoprotective detoxifying enzymes, and the regulation of these enzymes by a set of 2-substituted selenazolidine-4(R)-carboxylic acids (SCAs) has been investigated. Following seven consecutive daily doses of these prodrugs of L-selenocysteine, changes in hepatic enzyme activities and/or mRNA levels of glutathione transferase (GST), microsomal epoxide hydrolase (mEH), NAD(P)H-quinone oxidoreductase (NQO), UDP-glucuronosyltransferase (UGT), glutathione peroxidase (GPx), and thioredoxin reductase (TR) have been observed. Among the enzymes examined, UGTs and GPx were found to be the least affected. Among the compounds, 2-oxoSCA produced the most changes and 2-phenylSCA produced the least, none. For no two compounds was the pattern of changes identical, and for a single compound, few changes were reproduced in common by the two routes of administration investigated. In general, more changes were elicited following intraperitoneal (i.p.) administration than with the intragastric (i.g.) route. This dominance was typified by 2-butylSCA and 2-cyclohexylSCA where enzyme activity elevations (TR and mEH with both, NQO with 2-butylSCA) were seen only with the i.p. route. With 2-oxoSCA, however, GST, TR, and NQO activities were found to be elevated independent of route. Only with GST (both routes) and TR (i.p. route), elevations in mRNAs accompanied the 2-oxoSCA elicited elevations of activities at the time of sacrifice. For some enzymes, most notably mEH with compounds administered i.p., elevations in mRNAs were not manifest as increased enzyme activity. Thus, although constituting a closely related series of compounds, each 2-substituted SCA produced its own unique pattern of changes, and for most members, changes were predominant following i.p. administration.  相似文献   

18.
Type 2 deiodinase (D2) is a low Km iodothyronine deiodinase that metabolizes thyroxine (T4) to the active metabolite T3. We have recently shown that the cDNA for the human D2 coding region contains two in-frame selenocysteine (TGA) codons. The 3' TGA is seven codons 5' to a universal stop codon, TAA. The human D2 enzyme, transiently expressed in HEK-293 cells, can be in vivo labeled with 75Se as a doublet of approximately 31 kDa. This doublet is consistent with the possibility that the carboxy-terminal TGA codon can either encode selenocysteine or function as a stop codon. To test this hypothesis we mutagenized the second selenocysteine codon to a cysteine (TGC) or to an unambiguous stop codon (TAA). While the selenium incorporation pattern is different between the wild-type and mutant proteins, the deiodination properties of the enzyme are not affected by mutating the 3'TGA codon. Thus, we conclude that neither this residue nor the remaining seven carboxy-terminal amino acids are critical for the deiodination process.  相似文献   

19.
The forms of Se in the Se-dependent enzyme formate dehydrogenase is known to be selenocysteine, but the way this amino acid enters the polypeptide chain has not been established. Through the use of a cysteine-requiring mutant ofEscherichia coli K-12 that could also grow in the presence of glutathione, we were able to study the effect of selenite, selenide, andl-selenocysteine, each at a concentration of 0.1 μM, on the synthesis of formate dehydrogenase. The three forms of Se served equally well for inducing formate dehydrogenase activity, measured by dichlorophenol-indophenol reduction mediated by phenazine methosulfate. It is known that selenite can be reduced to selenide by the action of glutathione reductase, present inE. coli, and that selenocysteine is converted to elemental Se by the action of selenocysteine lyase, also present in the mutant. Elemental Se is then reduced nonenzymatically to hydrogen selenide. The conversion of both selenite and selenocysteine to selenide and the ability of each form of Se to induce the synthesis of equal levels of formate dehydrogenase suggest that the incorporation of Se into formate dehydrogenase is accomplished by a posttranslational mechanism.  相似文献   

20.
Lambs, maintained on a selenium-deficient diet supplemented with 94 atom % Na2 27SeO3, have been used as a source of 77Se-enriched erythrocyte glutathione peroxidase. After 5 months on this diet, the percentage of selenium in the enzyme derived from the supplement had reached 88%. From each monthly bleeding of two sheep, approximately 20 mg of 77Se-enriched glutathione peroxidase could be isolated in pure form. Although attempts to observe 77Se NMR signals from the native enzyme labeled with 6,6'-[77Se]diselenobis-(3-nitrobenzoic acid) failed, due to the low solubility of the enzyme, two 77Se resonances were observed after unfolding the enzyme with 8 M urea and reaction with iodoacetamide. These resonances, at 195 and 377 ppm, were from the selenoether alkylamide derivative and from protein cross-linked selenide sulfide species, respectively. Relaxation time measurements on the selenoether at 4.7 and 9.4 teslas enabled an estimate of the chemical shift anisotropy to be made. A value of less than or equal to 262 ppm was determined. Reduction of the denatured selenide sulfide species with dithiothreitol gave an observable 77Se resonance from the Se- moiety at pH 8 and from SeH at pH 4.2. The chemical form of the selenocysteine residue in the resting state enzyme most consistent with formation of the acetamide derivative and the selenide sulfide is Se- or SeH. From the magnitudes of the estimated chemical shift anisotropies, it is predicted that direct observation of selenium in the native enzyme will be feasible if the enzyme concentration can be increased to 0.25 mM tetrameric glutathione peroxidase.  相似文献   

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