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1.
Human mast cells can be divided into two subsets based on serine proteinase composition: a subset that contains the serine proteinases tryptase and chymase (MCTC), and a subset that contains only tryptase (MCT). In this study we examined both types of mast cells for two additional proteinases, cathepsin G and elastase, which are the major serine proteinases of neutrophils. Because human mast cell chymase and cathepsin G are both chymotrypsin-like proteinases, the properties of these enzymes were further defined to confirm their distinctiveness. Comparison of their N-terminal sequences showed 30% nonidentity over the first 35 amino acids, and comparison of their amino acid compositions demonstrated a marked difference in their Arg/Lys ratios, which was approximately 1 for chymase and 10 for cathepsin G. Endoglycosidase F treatment increased the electrophoretic mobility of chymase on SDS gels, indicating significant N-linked carbohydrate on chymase; no effect was observed on cathepsin G. Immunoprecipitation and immunoblotting with specific antisera to each proteinase revealed little, if any, detectable cross-reactivity. Immunocytochemical studies showed selective labelling of MCTC type mast cells by cathepsin G antiserum in sections of human skin, lung, and bowel. No labeling of mast cells by elastase antiserum was detected in the same tissues, or in dispersed mast cells from lung and skin. A protein cross-reactive with cathepsin G was identified in extracts of human skin mast cells by immunoblot analysis. This protein had a slightly higher Mr (30,000) than the predominant form of neutrophil cathepsin G (Mr 28,000), and could not be separated from chymase (Mr 30,000) by SDS gel electrophoresis because of the size similarity. Using casein, a protein substrate hydrolyzed at comparable rates by chymase and cathepsin G, it was shown that about 30% of the caseinolytic activity in mast cell extracts was sensitive to inhibitors of cathepsin G that had no effect on chymase. Hydrolytic activity characteristic of elastase was not detected in these extracts. These studies indicate that human MCTC mast cells may contain two different chymotrypsin-like proteinases: chymase and a proteinase more closely related to cathepsin G, both of which are undetectable in MCT mast cells. Neutrophil elastase, on the other hand, was not detected in human mast cells by our procedures.  相似文献   

2.
Identification of a chymotrypsin-like proteinase in human mast cells   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
An antiserum was produced against a chymotryptic proteinase purified from human skin. The antiserum did not cross-react with human leukocyte cathepsin G and elastase, rat mast cell proteinase I, and human skin tryptase. Indirect immunofluorescent staining of frozen skin sections to localize the proteinase showed cytoplasmic staining of cells scattered about the papillary dermis and around blood vessels and appendages. Restaining these sections with toluidine blue revealed that the fluorescently stained cells contained metachromatically staining granules, the major distinguishing feature of mast cells. A similar correlation was found in lung tissue. Ultrastructural studies employing the ferritin bridge technique to immunologically identify the proteinase additionally localized the proteinase to mast cell granules. Biochemical and immunochemical characterization of chymotryptic activity solubilized from isolated human lung mast cells identified a chymotryptic proteinase that may be identical to the skin chymotryptic proteinase. These studies establish that human skin mast cells contain a chymotrypsin-like proteinase that is a granule constituent and provide evidence that indicates a comparable proteinase is also present in lung mast cells.  相似文献   

3.
We isolated and characterized a chymotryptic serine proteinase from dog mastocytomas. Chymotryptic activity extracted at high ionic strength from mastocytomas propagated in nude mice was separated from tryptic activity by gel filtration and rapidly purified by sequential high-performance hydrophobic interaction and cation-exchange chromatography. The purified enzyme had an Mr of 27,000-30,000 by both analytical gel filtration and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and a single amino-terminal sequence by automated Edman degradation. Like chymases from rat and human mast cells, the mastocytoma enzyme exhibited a high kcat/Km (1.1.10(5) M-1.s-1) employing succinyl-L-Val-Pro-Phe-p-nitroanilide, the best of several p-nitroanilide substrates screened. It was inhibited by diisopropyl fluorophosphate and soybean trypsin inhibitor, but not by aprotinin, distinguishing it from the otherwise closely related neutrophil enzyme, cathepsin G. The amino-terminal 25 residues of mastocytoma chymase were found to be 72 and 68% identical to the corresponding sequences of chymases from rat peritoneal and mucosal mast cells, respectively; they were also closely related to human cathepsin G and to proteinase sequences from mouse cytotoxic T-lymphocytes. The mastocytoma chymotryptic enzyme contained an octapeptide sequence which is common to all chymotryptic leukocyte proteinases sequenced to date from four mammalian species; this feature distinguishes chymases and other chymotryptic leukocyte proteinases from serine proteinases of coagulation and digestion.  相似文献   

4.
A chymotrypsin-like proteinase was purified 2400-fold from human skin. The procedure involves extraction of the proteinase from skin in 2 M KCl, precipitation with protamine chloride, fractionation by gel filtration chromatography, and fractionation by chromatography using a CH-Sepharose-D-tryptophan methyl ester affinity column. The properties of this proteinase were compared to the rat mast cell proteinase I and human cathepsin G. Differences were observed in the rates at which the proteinases were inhibited by diisopropyl fluorophosphate, the sensitivity of the proteinases to protein proteolytic inhibitors, the relative hydrolytic rates of the proteinases for a series of substrates, and the kinetic constants of the proteinases for synthetic substrates. The human skin proteinase did not react with antiserum to the rat skin proteinase and did not elute in the same position as the rat skin proteinase on gel filtration columns. These data demonstrate that the human skin proteinase is distinct from the other proteinases. Extracts of involved skin from patients with cutaneous mastocytosis had 15-fold higher levels of chymotryptic activity than extracts of uninvolved skin or skin from normal controls. The enzymatic properties of the material extracted from the biopsied skin were similar to those of the proteinase from normal skin, suggesting that the human skin chymotrypsin-like proteinase is a mast cell constituent.  相似文献   

5.
We tested four synthetic substances for their histochemical value to demonstrate the catalytic activities of chymase or tryptase in mast cells in sections of human gut. Both Suc-Ala-Ala-Phe-4 methoxy-2-naphthylamide (MNA) and N-acetyl-L-methionine-alpha-naphthyl ester (alpha-N-O-Met) reacted with chymase but not tryptase in mast cells. Conversely, D-Val-Leu-Arg-MNA and Z-Ala-Ala-Lys-MNA were hydrolyzed by mast cell tryptase but not chymase. These results were confirmed by use of two inhibitors of chymotrypsin-like activity, chymostatin and Z-Gly-Leu-Phe-chloromethyl ketone (CK) and two inhibitors of trypsin-like activity, Tos-Lys-CK and D-Val-Leu-Arg-CK. Excellent staining reactions were obtained on cryostat sections of unfixed or aldehyde-fixed tissues and on paraffin sections of Carnoy-fixed tissues. For chymase, however, Suc-Ala-Ala-Phe-MNA is preferred on cryostat sections because it is more specific. On paraffin sections alpha-N-O-Met is preferred because other cells are not then stained. For tryptase, Z-Ala-Ala-Lys-MNA was more selective and more specific and is the preferred general purpose substrate on cryostat sections of aldehyde-fixed tissues and for paraffin sections. D-Val-Leu-Arg-MNA is the preferred substrate for cryostat sections of unfixed tissue. Only a limited number of mast cells showed a reaction for chymase, and these occurred mainly in the submucosa. All mast cells, however, gave a reaction for tryptase, and we recommend the use of either substrate for this enzyme for routine detection of mast cells in human tissues. Double staining for the two main mast cell proteases is most conveniently undertaken on paraffin sections of Carnoy-fixed tissues using MNA substrates for tryptase and alpha-N-O-Met for chymase.  相似文献   

6.
Mast cell populations can be distinguished by differences in the content and substrate specificity of their two major cytoplasmic granule proteases, the chymases and the tryptases. To explore the origins of differences in the types of proteases present in mast cells, we used a double cytochemical staining technique to reveal both chymase and tryptase in cells from four lines of dog mast cell tumors containing both enzymes. We expected that if chymase and tryptase were expressed together during cell development the relative staining intensity of chymase compared to tryptase would be constant among different cells of each tumor. Instead, we found substantial variation in the relative intensity of chymase and tryptase staining among cells of a given mastocytoma line, each of which contained cells presumed to be monoclonal in origin but heterogeneous with respect to cell development. The overall staining intensity for chymase or tryptase correlated with the amount of protease activity in extracts of tumor homogenates. Staining specificity was established by use of selective inhibitors and competitive substrates and was tested on various types of dog cells obtained by bronchoalveolar lavage. The results suggest that active chymase and tryptase may be expressed differently during mast cell differentiation and support the possibility of a close developmental relationship between mast cells differing in protease phenotype. Moreover, the success of the staining procedures applied to mastocytoma cells suggests that they may be of general utility in phenotyping of mast cells according to the protease activities present in their granules.  相似文献   

7.
Dog mast cell chymase: molecular cloning and characterization   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
We cloned and characterized a cDNA coding for the complete amino acid sequence of dog mast cell chymase. The cDNA was identified by screening a dog mastocytoma cDNA library with an oligonucleotide probe based on the amino acid sequence of a fragment of dog mastocytoma chymase. The deduced amino acid sequence reveals a putative 21-residue prepropeptide followed by a catalytic domain of 228 residues. The primary structure of the preproenzyme shares features with rat mucosal mast cell chymase (RMCP II), several lymphocyte-associated proteases, and neutrophil cathepsin G. The common characteristics include an apparent activation peptide terminating in glutamic acid, strict conservation of an octapeptide (residues 9-16) in the N-terminal portion of the catalytic domain, and the presence of only six cysteines available for intramolecular disulfide bond formation. However, dog chymase differs in being modified by N-glycosylation. Although the dog chymase catalytic domain exhibits a similar level of sequence identity when compared with both RMCP II and the rat connective tissue mast cell chymase RMCP I (58% and 61%, respectively), the dog enzyme most closely resembles RMCP I in its high predicted net charge (+16) and in the presence of serine at the base of its putative primary substrate binding pocket. The dog chymase differs strikingly from dog mast cell tryptase in the preprosequence and in the structure of the catalytic domain. Therefore, chymase appears not to be closely related to tryptase and may not share a mechanism of activation, even though both enzymes are packaged and released together.  相似文献   

8.
Selective markers for human mast cells are of paramount importance for understanding their role in physiological and pathological processes. A mouse monoclonal antibody (MAb) designated 2C7, raised against in vitro-derived human mast cells, was used in immunoenzymatic analysis of sections from a variety of human organs. Double immunolabeling with 2C7 and tryptase, chymase, Fc epsilon RIalpha, and c-kit was performed on cryostat tissue sections from skin, colon, uterus, breast, stomach, bladder, and lung. MAb 2C7 stained greater than 93% of the tryptase(+) or chymase(+) mast cells in all tissues examined. In addition, the majority of cells stained with the tryptase or chymase also stained for Fc epsilon RIalpha. However, there were a significant number of Fc epsilon RIalpha(1) cells in all tissues studied that were tryptase(-) and/or chymase(-). In contrast, MAb 2C7 in double immunoenzymatic staining co-localized with 93-96% of the Fc epsilon RIalpha(1) cells in all tissues. Analysis for c-kit expression on the different tissues revealed that the majority of tryptase(+) or chymase(+) cells in skin, uterus, bladder, and lung stained with c-kit. However, only approximately 70-78% of tryptase(+) cells in colon and stomach were c-kit(+). These data suggest that MAb 2C7 appears to identify mature mast cells and a population of Fc epsilon RIalpha(1), chymase(-), and tryptase(-) cells in a variety of human tissues.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Mast cell chymase. A potent secretagogue for airway gland serous cells   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Submucosal glands are the major sources of airway secretions in most mammals. Mast cells are abundant in the environment of airway submucosal glands and are rich sources of secreted proteases. To investigate the hypothesis that mast cell proteases stimulate airway gland secretion, we studied the ability of the two major mast cell granule proteases, chymase and tryptase, to cause secretion of 35S-labeled macromolecules from a line of cultured bovine airway gland serous cells. Mast cell chymase and tryptase were purified from dog mastocytoma cells. Chymase markedly stimulated serous cell secretion in a concentration-dependent fashion with a threshold of 10(-10) M, whereas tryptase had no effect. The response to 10(-8) M chymase (1530 +/- 80% over base line) was approximately 10-fold higher than that evoked by other agonists such as histamine and isoproterenol. The predominant 35S-labeled macromolecule released by chymase was chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan, the glycoconjugate present in serous cell secretory granules. The response to chymase was non-cytotoxic and was blocked by active site inhibitors of chymase (soybean trypsin inhibitor and chymostatin) and by inhibitors of cellular energy metabolism (azide,2,4-dinitrophenol, dicumarol). Supernatant obtained by degranulation of mastocytoma cells caused a secretory response of comparable magnitude to that caused by chymase. These findings demonstrate that chymase, but not tryptase, is a potent secretagogue for airway gland serous cells, and they suggest a possible role for chymase-containing mast cells in the pathogenesis of airway hypersecretion.  相似文献   

11.
Rat RNK-16 leukemia cells kill YAC-1, which are the cells lysed by rodent natural killer lymphocytes. We found chymotrypsin-like proteinase ('chymase') activity in the RNK-16 dense granules that also contain cytolytic activity. The chymase activity hydrolyzed the thiobenzyl peptide substrate Suc-Phe-Leu-Phe-SBzl and, in comparison to RNK-16 tryptase activity, was selectively inhibited by three different types of serine proteinase inhibitors. The selective inhibitors were the fungal aldehyde chymostatin, the chloromethylketone Z-Gly-Leu-Phe-CH2Cl, and the mechanism-based or 'suicide' inhibitor 7-amino-4-chloro-3-(2-phenylethoxy)isocoumarin. These proteinase inhibitors also blocked RNK-16 granule-mediated cytolysis. Chymostatin, a reversible inhibitor, delayed granule-mediated cytolysis, whereas the irreversible chloromethylketone and isocoumarin proteinase inhibitors completely abrogated granule-mediated cytolysis. The two irreversible inhibitors displayed biphasic inhibition of the chymase activity, indicating that at least two chymases are present in the granules. By Northern blot analysis, we found that RNK-16 mRNA hybridized strongly with a cDNA probe of CCPI, a mouse cytotoxic T lymphocyte serine proteinase gene. These data imply that chymase activity in the cytotoxic granules is important for cytolytic function and is likely to belong to a new subfamily of serine proteinases.  相似文献   

12.
Pig synovial and human skin fibroblast procollagenases were treated with highly purified tryptase, the major proteinase of human mast cells, to determine whether this trypsin-like proteinase could activate the latent form of collagenase and so be involved in connective tissue breakdown. No significant activation of either human or pig procollagenase was found, but the highest concentration of tryptase partially destroyed procollagenase. Tryptase did not degrade type I collagen or proteoglycan. These data indicate that human mast cell tryptase does not contribute to connective tissue breakdown via procollagenase activation or via proteoglycan degradation.  相似文献   

13.
Mast cells (MCs) are metachromatic cells that originate from multipotential hemopoietic stem cells in the bone marrow. Two distinct populations of MCs have been characterized: mucosal MCs are tryptase-positive while mast cells in skin contain tryptase and chymase. We now show that a sub-population of MCs is highly immunoreactive for thymosin β4, as revealed by immunohistochemical analyses of normal skin, normal colon mucosa and salivary gland tumors. Four consecutive serial sections from each case were immunostained for thymosin β4 (Tβ4), chymase, tryptase and stained for toluidine blue. In skin biopsies, MCs showed a comparable immunoreactivity for Tβ4, chymase and tryptase. In normal colon mucosa the vast majority of mucosal MCs expressed a strong cytoplasmic immunoreactivity for tryptase and for Tβ4, in the absence of chymase reactivity. A robust expression of Tβ4 was detected in tumor-infiltrating and peritumoral mast cells in salivary gland tumors and breast ductal infiltrating carcinomas. Tumorinfiltrating MCs also showed a strong immunoreactivity for chymase and tryptase. In this paper, we first demonstrate that normal dermal and mucosal mast cells exhibit strong expression of thymosin β4, which could be considered a new marker for the identification of mast cells in skin biopsies as well as in human tumors. The possible relationship between the degree of Tβ4 expression in tumor-infiltrating mast cells and tumor behaviour warrants further consideration in future investigations.Key words: mast cells, thymosin β4, tryptase, chymase.  相似文献   

14.
Recent interest in elucidating the role of non-lysosomal proteases in intracellular protein catabolism in muscle has led to various investigations with three alkaline proteases: a trypsin-like, a chymotrypsin-like, and a high molecular weight cysteine proteinase. Although in vitro biochemical assays have revealed the catabolic potential of at least two of these proteases, confirmation of their presence in muscle cells has been difficult. In this study immunohistochemical techniques were employed to localize each of these proteases in rat myoblasts. Antisera against the trypsin-like and chymotrypsin-like proteinase (both serine proteinases) showed strong localization in the cytoplasm immediately around the nucleus. Both also stained chromatin material in the nucleus of these cells. Fluorescent localization of the high molecular weight cysteine proteinase (Proteinase I) also appeared to be cell-associated in the myoblasts. The use of myoblasts in cell culture sections of whole muscle was advantageous, since localization of the proteases could be assessed in the absence of other cell types.  相似文献   

15.
A tryptic protease with the characteristics of a mast cell tryptase was purified from dog mastocytoma cells propagated in nude mice. Partial amino acid sequence of the mastocytoma tryptase revealed unexpected differences in comparison with other mast cell and leukocyte granule protease sequences. Extraction from mastocytoma homogenates at high ionic strength, followed by gel filtration and benzamidine affinity chromatography yielded a product with several closely spaced bands (Mr 30,000-32,000) on gel electrophoresis and a single N-terminal sequence. Nondenaturing analytical gel filtration revealed an apparent Mr of 132,000, suggesting noncovalent association as a tetramer. Studies with peptide p-nitroanilides indicated pronounced substrate preferences, with P1 arginine preferred to lysine. Benzoyl-L-Lys-Gly-Arg-p-nitroanilide was the best of the substrates screened. Inhibition by diisopropyl fluorophosphate and tosyllysine chloromethyl ketone indicated that the enzyme is a serine protease. Like the tryptases of human mast cells, mastocytoma tryptic protease was inhibited by NaCl, resistant to inactivation by alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor and plasma, and stabilized by heparin. Comparison of the N-terminal 24 residues of mastocytoma tryptase revealed 80% identity with the more limited sequence reported for human lung tryptase, and surprisingly, closer homology to serine proteases of digestion and clotting than to other leukocyte granule proteases sequenced to date, including mast cell chymase. The N-terminal isoleucine is the homolog of trypsinogen Ile-16 which becomes the new N-terminus upon cleavage of the activation peptide. Thus, the tryptase N-terminus is related to the catalytic domain of activated serine proteases, and lacks the N-terminal regulatory domains found in most clotting and complement serine proteases. These findings provide further evidence that tryptases are unique serine proteases and that they may be less closely related in evolution and function than are other leukocyte granule proteases described to date.  相似文献   

16.
To identify chymase- and tryptase-positive mast cells in the human uvea, and to study their associations with different types of resident uveal cells, uveal specimens from 24 human donor eyes were cryosectioned in sagittal and tangential planes. Enzyme histochemical staining of chymase was combined with immunohistochemical staining for tryptase, detected with the APAAP method. Fluorescence immunohistochemistry was performed with antibodies against c-kit, alpha smooth muscle actin, protein gene product (PGP) 9.5, CD45, and HLA-DR. In different uveal compartments, the total amounts of mast cells were calculated and the distributions of chymase and tryptase were quantified. All uveal mast cells were c-kit and CD45 positive and HLA-DR negative. No association existed between mast cells and actin-containing cells. Only a few mast cells were in close association with PGP 9.5-labeled nerve fibers. In the choroid, most mast cells were located in the inner central part (mean density = 48.9/mm2), and contained both chymase and tryptase (96%). The ciliary muscle contained numerous mast cells (mean density = 33.7/mm2), many of them tryptase positive but chymase negative (63%). In the pars plana, a high number of chymase-positive, tryptase-negative mast cells were found (20%). In the iris only a few mast cells were present. Although the choroid contains the most common subtype of mast cells, a unique situation concerning the distribution of chymase and tryptase is present in the anterior uveal tissues. A possible role for these cells in the special immunological situation of the anterior eye chamber merits further investigation. Accepted: 16 September 1999  相似文献   

17.
Characterization of proteinases from Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba)   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Fractions of three trypsin-like proteinases, TL I, TL II, and TL III, a chymotrypsin-like proteinase, CL, two carboxypeptidase A enzymes, CPA I and CPA II and two carboxypeptidase B enzymes, CPB I and CPB II, from Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) have been characterized with respect to purity by the means of capillary electrophoresis, CE, and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF-MS). The masses of the trypsin-like and chymotrypsin-like proteinases were determined to be 25,020, 25,070, 25,060, and 26,260Da for TL I, TL II, TL III, and CL, respectively. The masses of the CPA enzymes are likely 23,170 and 23,260Da, whereas the CPB enzyme masses likely are 33,730 and 33,900Da. The degradation efficiency and cleavage pattern of the trypsin-like proteinases were studied with native myoglobin as a model substrate using CE, MALDI-TOF-MS, and nanoelectrospray mass spectrometry (nESI-MS). The degradation efficiency of the trypsin-like proteinases was found to be approximately 12 and 60 times higher compared to bovine trypsin at 37 degrees C and 1-3 degrees C, respectively. All three fractions of trypsin-like proteinases showed a carboxypeptidase activity in combination with their trypsin activity.  相似文献   

18.
Cloning of the gene and cDNA for human heart chymase   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
We have recently identified and characterized a chymotrypsin-like serine proteinase in human heart (human heart chymase) that is the most catalytically efficient enzyme described, thus far, for the cleavage of angiotensin I to yield angiotensin II and the dipeptide His-Leu. Compared to other chymases, this enzyme also has an unusually high degree of specificity for the substrate angiotensin I. We report here the molecular cloning and nucleotide sequence of the gene and cDNA encoding human heart chymase, and determination of its entire deduced amino acid sequence. These data indicate that human heart chymase is highly homologous to other members of the chymase subfamily of chymotrypsin-like proteinases and, most likely, all evolved from a common ancestral gene. Potential regulatory elements found in the 5'-untranslated region of other chymases are also found in the human heart chymase gene. However, this gene lacks mast cell-specific sequences found in the 5'- and 3'-untranslated regions of the rat chymase II gene. In addition, human heart chymase contains clusters of unique amino acid sequences located at key positions likely involved in substrate binding, which may contribute to its high substrate specificity. These contrasting features of the human heart chymase gene and cDNA, and the potential determinants of its primary structure that underlie its unique functional characteristics are considered.  相似文献   

19.
The subcellular localization of human skin chymase to mast cell granules was established by immunoelectron microscopy, and binding of chymase to the area of the dermo-epidermal junction, a basement membrane, was demonstrated immunocytochemically in cryosections incubated with purified proteinase prior to immunolabeling. Because heparin and heparan sulfate proteoglycans are major constituents of mast cell granules and basement membranes, respectively, the ability of chymase to bind to glycosaminoglycans (GAG) was investigated. Among a variety of GAGs, only binding of chymase to heparin and heparan sulfate appears physiologically significant. Binding was ionic strength-dependent, involved amino groups on the proteinase, and correlated with increasing GAG sulfate content, indicating a predominantly electrostatic association. Interaction with heparin was observed in solutions containing up to 0.5 M NaCl, and interaction with heparan sulfate was observed in solutions containing up to 0.3 M NaCl. Binding of heparin did not detectably affect catalysis of peptide substrates, but may reduce accessibility of proteinase to protein substrates. Measurements among a series of serine class proteinases indicated that heparin binding was a more common property of mast cell proteinases than proteinases stored in other secretory granules. Binding of chymase to heparin is likely to have a storage as well as a structural role within the mast cell granule, whereas binding of chymase to heparan sulfate may have physiological significance after degranulation.  相似文献   

20.
The proteinase extracted from the myofibrillar fraction of (a) primary rat myocytes and (b) the L-8 myogenic cell line, both maintained in culture, was identified by immunochemical analysis as chymase, the chymotrypsin-like serine proteinase of rat mast cells. Chymase would therefore appear to be an intrinsic protein in the rat myocyte also.  相似文献   

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