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1.
The inhibition by cupric ions of the hydration of CO2 catalyzed by carbonic anhydrase II is interesting because of the results of Tuet al. obtained at chemical equilibrium, indicating that Cu2+ inhibits specifically a proton transfer in the catalytic pathway. We have measured this inhibition at steady state, using stopped-flow methods. The inhibition by Cu2+ of the hydration of CO2 catalyzed by carbonic anhydrase II had aK I near 1×10?6 M atpH 7.0 and gave inhibition that is noncompetitive atpH 6.0 and mixed, but close to uncompetitive, atpH 6.8. ThepH dependence of this binding is consistent with a binding site for Cu2+ on the enzyme with apK a near 7. The binding interaction between Cu2+ and the fluorescent inhibitor 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-l-sulfonamide on carbonic anhydrase II was noncompetitive, indicating that the binding site for Cu2+ is distinct from the coordination sphere of zinc in which the actual interconversion of CO2 and HCO 3 ? and the binding of sulfonamides takes place.  相似文献   

2.
We studied anionic inhibition of the reaction CO2 + OH?? HCO3? catalyzed by human red cell carbonic anhydrase B (I) and C (II), using iodide and cyanate. In the forward reaction with respect to CO2 as the substrate, inhibition was mixed but favoring noncompetitive; the back reaction, with HCO3? as the substrate, yielded strict competitive kinetics. Mean inhibition constants, KI, in the pH range 7.2–7.5 are: iodide, 0.5 mm for enzyme B and 16 mm for C; cyanate, 0.8 μm for B and 20 μm for C. When OH? was considered as the substrate for the forward reaction, cyanate and chloride behaved as competitive inhibitors. The true inhibition constant (KI0) for cyanate (calculated for infinitely low OH?) is 0.4 μm for enzyme B and 4 μm for C. Apart from the difference in anion affinity and some 10-fold higher activity of C > B, the isozymes showed similar patterns of inhibition. Data agree with generally proposed mechanisms describing the active site as ZnH2O with pKa of about 7.  相似文献   

3.
The steady-state kinetic parameters for the hydration of CO2 catalyzed by membrane-bound carbonic anhydrase from the renal brush-border of the dog are compared with the same parameters for water-soluble bovine erythrocyte carbonic anhydrase. For the membrane-bound enzyme, the turnover number kcat is 6.5 × 105 s?1 and the Michaelis constant is 7.5 mm for CO2 hydration at pH 7.4 and 25 °C. The corresponding constants for bovine carbonic anhydrase under these conditions are 6.3 × 105 s?1 and 15 mm (Y. Pocker and D.W. Bjorkquist (1977)Biochemistry16, 5698–5707). The rate constant for the transfer of a proton between carbonic anhydrase and buffer was determined from the dependence of the catalytic rate on the concentration of the buffers imidazole and N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N′-2-ethanesulfonic acid (Hepes); the value of 2 × 108m?1s?1 describes this constant for both forms of carbonic anhydrase at pH 7.4. Furthermore, the pH dependence of the initial velocity of hydration of CO2 in the range of pH 6.5 to 8.0 is identical for the membrane-bound and soluble enzyme at low buffer concentration (1–2 mm imidazole). We conclude that the membrane plays no detectable role in affecting the CO2 hydration activity and that the active site of the renal, membrane-bound carbonic anhydrase is exposed to the aqueous phase.  相似文献   

4.
The tryptophan residue Trp5, highly conserved in the α class of carbonic anhydrases including human carbonic anhydrase II (HCA II), is positioned at the entrance of the active site cavity and forms a π-stacking interaction with the imidazole ring of the proton shuttle His64 in its outward orientation. We have observed that replacement of Trp5 in HCA II caused significant structural changes, as determined by X-ray diffraction, in the conformation of 11 residues at the N-terminus and in the orientation of the proton shuttle residue His64. Most significantly, two variants W5H and W5E HCA II had His64 predominantly outward in orientation, while W5F and wild type showed the superposition of both outward and inward orientations in crystal structures. Although Trp5 influences the orientation of the proton shuttle His64, this orientation had no significant effect on the rate constant for proton transfer near 1 μs−1, determined by exchange of 18O between CO2 and water measured by mass spectrometry. The apparent values of the pKa of the zinc-bound water and the proton shuttle residue suggest that different active-site conformations influence the two stages of catalysis, the proton transfer stage and the interconversion of CO2 and bicarbonate.  相似文献   

5.
Carbonic anhydrase activity of intactCommelina communis L. leaves was measured using mass spectrometry, by following the18O-exchange kinetics between18O-enriched carbon dioxide and water. A gas-diffusion model (Gerster, 1971, Planta97, 155–172) was used to interpret the18O-exchange kinetics and to determine two constants, one (k) related to the hydration of CO2 and the other (ke), related to the diffusion of CO2. Both constants were determined inCommelina communis L. leaves after stripping the lower epidermis to remove any stomatal influence. The hydration constant (k) was 17200 +2200 ·min–1 (mean±SD, 12 experiments), i.e., about 8 600 times the uncatalyzed hydration of CO2 in pure water, and was specifically inhibited by ethoxyzolamide, a powerful inhibitor of carbonic anhydrases, half-inhibition occurring around 10–5 Methoxyzolamide. The diffusion constant (ke) was 1.18±0.28·min–1 (mean±SD, 12 experiments) and was only slightly inhibited (about 20%) by ethoxyzolamide. Carbonic anhydrase activity of stripped leaves was not affected by the leaf water status (up to 50% relative water deficits), was strongly inhibited by monovalent anions such as Cl or NO 3 , and decreased by about 50% when the photon flux density during growth was increased from 100 to 500 mol photons·m–2·s–1. By studying the effect of ethoxyzolamide (10–4 M) on photosynthetic O2 exchange, measured using18O2 and mass spectrometry, we found that inhibition of carbonic anhydrase activity by 92–95% had little effect on the response curves of net O2 evolution to increased CO2 concentrations. Ethoxyzolamide had no effect on the photosynthetic electron-transport rate, measured as gross O2 photosynthesis at high CO2 concentration (>350 l·–1), but was found to increase both gross O2 photosynthesis and O2 uptake at lower CO2 levels. The chloroplastic CO2 concentration calculated from O2-exchange data was not significantly modified by ethoxyzolamide. We conclude from these results that, under normal conditions of photosynthesis, most of the carbonic anhydrase activity is not involved in CO2 assimilation. Measurement of carbonic anhydrase activity using18O-isotope exchange therefore provides a suitable model to study the in-vivo regulation of this chloroplastic enzyme in plants submitted to various environmental conditions.Abbreviations CA carbonic anhydrase - Ccc chloroplastic CO2 concentration - Ce external CO2 concentration - EZA ethoxyzolamide - k CO2 hydration rate constant - ke CO2 diffusion rate constan - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - Rubisco ribulose-1,5 bisphosphate carboxylase oxygenase - RWD relative water deficit The authors wish to thank P. Carrier for technical assistance with mass-spectrometric experiments and Dr. P. Thibault for helpful suggestions and comments. Dr. A. Vavasseur is gratefully acknowledged for supplyingCommelima communis. cultures. P.C., P.T. and A.V. are all from the CEA, Département de Physiologie Végétale et Ecosystèmes, Cadarache, France.  相似文献   

6.
In order to broaden our understanding of the eukaryotic CO2-concentrating mechanism the occurrence and localization of a thylakoid-associated carbonic anhydrase (EC 4.2.1.1) were studied in the green algae Tetraedron minimum and Chlamydomonas noctigama. Both algae induce a CO2-concentrating mechanism when grown under limiting CO2 conditions. Using mass-spectrometric measurements of 18O exchange from doubly labelled CO2, the presence of a thylakoid-associated carbonic anhydrase was confirmed for both species. From purified thylakoid membranes, photosystem I (PSI), photosystem II (PSII) and the light-harvesting complex of the photosynthetic apparatus were isolated by mild detergent gel. The protein fractions were identified by 77 K fluorescence spectroscopy and immunological studies. A polypeptide was found to immunoreact with an antibody raised against thylakoid carbonic anhydrase (CAH3) from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. It was found that this polypeptide was mainly associated with PSII, although a certain proportion was also connected to light harvesting complex II. This was confirmed by activity measurements of carbonic anhydrase in isolated bands extracted from the mild detergent gel. The thylakoid carbonic anhydrase isolated from T. minimum had an isoelectric point between 5.4 and 4.8. Together the results are consistent with the hypothesis that thylakoid carbonic anhydrase resides within the lumen where it is associated with the PSII complex. Received: 13 May 2000 / Accepted: 16 August 2000  相似文献   

7.
Microbial carbonic anhydrase promotes carbonate deposition, which is important in the formation and evolution of global carbon cycle and geological processes. A kind of bacteria producing extracellular carbonic anhydrase was selected to study the effects of temperature, pH value and Ca2+ concentration on bacterial growth, carbonic anhydrase activity and calcification rate in this paper. The results showed that the activity of carbonic anhydrase at 30 °C was the highest, which was beneficial to the calcification reaction, calcification rate of CaCO3 was the fastest in alkaline environment with the initial pH value of 9.0. When the Ca2+ concentration was 60 mM, compared with other Ca2+ concentration, CA bacteria could grow and reproduce best, and the activity of bacteria was the highest, too low Ca2+ concentration would affect the generation of CaCO3, while too high Ca2+ concentration would seriously affect the growth of bacteria and reduce the calcification rate. Finally, the mechanism of CaCO3 precipitation induced by microbial carbonic anhydrase was studied. Carbonic anhydrase can accelerate the hydration of CO2 into HCO3, and react with OH and Ca2+ to form CaCO3 precipitation in alkaline environment and in the presence of calcium source.  相似文献   

8.
Reengineering metalloproteins to generate new biologically relevant metal centers is an effective a way to test our understanding of the structural and mechanistic features that steer chemical transformations in biological systems. Here, we report thermodynamic data characterizing the formation of two type-2 copper sites in carbonic anhydrase and experimental evidence showing one of these new, copper centers has characteristics similar to a variety of well-characterized copper centers in synthetic models and enzymatic systems. Human carbonic anhydrase II is known to bind two Cu2+ ions; these binding events were explored using modern isothermal titration calorimetry techniques that have become a proven method to accurately measure metal-binding thermodynamic parameters. The two Cu2+-binding events have different affinities (K a approximately 5 × 1012 and 1 × 1010), and both are enthalpically driven processes. Reconstituting these Cu2+ sites under a range of conditions has allowed us to assign the Cu2+-binding event to the three-histidine, native, metal-binding site. Our initial efforts to characterize these Cu2+ sites have yielded data that show distinctive (and noncoupled) EPR signals associated with each copper-binding site and that this reconstituted enzyme can activate hydrogen peroxide to catalyze the oxidation of 2-aminophenol.  相似文献   

9.
Carbonic anhydrases in plants and algae   总被引:12,自引:1,他引:12  
Carbonic anhydrases catalyse the reversible hydration of CO2, increasing the interconversion between CO2 and HCO3 + H+ in living organisms. The three evolutionarily unrelated families of carbonic anhydrases are designated α-, β-and γ-CA. Animals have only the α-carbonic anhydrase type of carbonic anhydrase, but they contain multiple isoforms of this carbonic anhydrase. In contrast, higher plants, algae and cyanobacteria may contain members of all three CA families. Analysis of the Arabidopsis database reveals at least 14 genes potentially encoding carbonic anhydrases. The database also contains expressed sequence tags (ESTs) with homology to most of these genes. Clearly the number of carbonic anhydrases in plants is much greater than previously thought. Chlamydomonas, a unicellular green alga, is not far behind with five carbonic anhydrases already identified and another in the EST database. In algae, carbonic anhydrases have been found in the mitochondria, the chloroplast thylakoid, the cytoplasm and the periplasmic space. In C3 dicots, only two carbonic anhydrases have been localized, one to the chloroplast stroma and one to the cytoplasm. A challenge for plant scientists is to identify the number, location and physiological roles of the carbonic anhydrases.  相似文献   

10.
The p-nitrophenyl phosphatase activity of muscle carbonic anhydrase   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Carbonic anhydrase III from rabbit muscle, a newly discovered major isoenzyme of carbonic anhydrase, has been found to be also a p-nitrophenyl phosphatase, an activity which is not associated with carbonic anhydrases I and II. The p-nitrophenyl phosphatase activity has been shown to chromatograph with the CO2 hydratase activity; both activities are associated with each of its sulfhydryl oxidation subforms; and both activities follow the same pattern of pH stability. This phosphomonoesterase activity of carbonic anhydrase III has an acidic pH optimum (<5.3); its true substrate appears to be the phosphomonoanion with a Km of 2.8 mm. It is competitively inhibited by the typical acid phosphatase inhibitors phosphate (Ki = 1.22 × 10?3M), arsenate (Ki = 1.17 × 10?3M), and molybdate (Ki = 1.34 × 10?7M), with these inhibitors having no effect on the CO2 hydratase or the p-nitrophenyl acetate esterase activities of carbonic anhydrase III. The p-nitrophenyl acetate esterase activity of carbonic anhydrase III, on the other hand, has the sigmoidal pH profile with an inflection at neutral pH, typical of carbonic anhydrases for all of their substrates, and is inhibitable by acetazolamide (a highly specific carbonic anhydrase inhibitor) to the same degree as the CO2 hydratase activity. The acid phosphatase-like activity of carbonic anhydrase III is slightly inhibited by acetazolamide at acidic pH, and inhibited to nearly the same degree at neutral pH. These data are taken to suggest that the phosphatase activity follows a mechanism different from that of the CO2 hydratase and p-nitrophenyl acetate esterase activities and that there is some overlap of the binding sites.  相似文献   

11.
Novel sulfonamide derivatives 6ai, as new carbonic anhydrase inhibitors which candidate for glaucoma treatment, were synthesized from the reactions of 4-amino-N-(4-sulfamoylphenyl) benzamide 4 and sulfonyl chloride derivatives 5ai with high yield (71–90%). The structures of these compounds were confirmed by using spectral analysis (FT-IR, 1H NMR, 13C NMR, LC/MS and HRMS). The inhibition effects of 6ai on the hydratase and esterase activities of human carbonic anhydrase isoenzymes, hCA I and II, which were purified from human erythrocytes with Sepharose®4B-l-tyrosine-p-aminobenzene sulfonamide affinity chromatography, were studied as in vitro, and IC50 and Ki values were determined. The results show that newly synthesized compounds have quite powerful inhibitory properties.  相似文献   

12.
We have measured the exchange of 18O between CO2 and H2O in stirred suspensions of Chlorella vulgaris (UTEX 263) using a membrane inlet to a mass spectrometer. The depletion of 18O from CO2 in the fluid outside the cells provides a method to study CO2 and HCO3 kinetics in suspensions of algae that contain carbonic anhydrase since 18O loss to H2O is catalyzed inside the cells but not in the external fluid. Low-CO2 cells of Chlorella vulgaris (grown with air) were added to a solution containing 18O enriched CO2 and HCO3 with 2 to 15 millimolar total inorganic carbon. The observed depletion of 18O from CO2 was biphasic and the resulting 18C content of CO2 was much less than the 18O content of HCO3 in the external solution. Analysis of the slopes showed that the Fick's law rate constant for entry of HCO3 into the cell was experimentally indistinguishable from zero (bicarbonate impermeable) with an upper limit of 3 × 10−4 s−1 due to our experimental errors. The Fick's law rate constant for entry of CO2 to the sites of intracellular carbonic anhydrase was large, 0.013 per second, but not as great as calculated for no membrane barrier to CO2 flux (6 per second). The experimental value may be explained by a nonhomogeneous distribution of carbonic anhydrase in the cell (such as membrane-bound enzyme) or by a membrane barrier to CO2 entry into the cell or both. The CO2 hydration activity inside the cells was 160 times the uncatalyzed CO2 hydration rate.  相似文献   

13.
Carbonic anhydrase (CA) is an important metabolic enzyme family closely related to many physiological and pathological processes. Currently, carbonic anhydrase inhibitors are the target molecules in the treatment and diagnosis of many diseases. In present study, we investigated the inhibitory effects of some indazole molecules on the CA‐I and CA‐II isoenzymes isolated from human erythrocytes. We showed that human CA‐I and CA‐II activities were reduced by of some indazoles at low concentrations. IC50 values, Ki constants, and inhibition types for each indazole molecule were determined. The indazoles showed Ki constants in a range of 0.383 ± 0.021 to 2.317 ± 0.644 mM, 0.409 ± 0.083 to 3.030 ± 0.711 mM against CA‐I and CA‐II, respectively. Each indazole molecule exhibited a noncompetitive inhibition effect. Bromine‐ and chlorine‐bonded indazoles were found to be more potent inhibitory effects on carbonic anhydrase isoenzymes. In conclusion, we conclude that these results may be useful in the synthesis of carbonic anhydrase inhibitors.  相似文献   

14.
Carbonyl sulfide (COS), a substrate for carbonic anhydrase, inhibited alkalization of the medium, O2 evolution, dissolved inorganic carbon accumulation, and photosynthetic CO2 fixation at pH 7 or higher by five species of unicellular green algae that had been air-adapted for forming a CO2-concentrating process. This COS inhibition can be attributed to inhibition of external HCO3 conversion to CO2 and OH by the carbonic anhydrase component of an active CO2 pump. At a low pH of 5 to 6, COS stimulated O2 evolution during photosynthesis by algae with low CO2 in the media without alkalization of the media. This is attributed to some COS hydrolysis by carbonic anhydrase to CO2. Although COS had less effect on HCO3 accumulation at pH 9 by a HCO3 pump in Scenedesmus, COS reduced O2 evolution probably by inhibiting internal carbonic anhydrases. Because COS is hydrolyzed to CO2 and H2S, its inhibition of the CO2 pump activity and photosynthesis is not accurate, when measured by O2 evolution, by NaH14CO3 accumulation, or by 14CO2 fixation.  相似文献   

15.
The purification, immobilization, and characterization of carbonic anhydrase (CA) secreted by Bacillus subtilis VSG-4 isolated from tropical soil have been investigated in this work. Carbonic anhydrase was purified using ammonium sulfate precipitation, Sephadex-G-75 column chromatography, and DEAE-cellulose chromatography, achieving a 24.6-fold purification. The apparent molecular mass of purified CA obtained by SDS-PAGE was found to be 37 kD. The purified CA was entrapped within a chitosan–alginate polyelectrolyte complex (C-A PEC) hydrogel for potential use as an immobilized enzyme. The optimum pH and temperature for both free and immobilized enzymes were 8.2 and 37°C, respectively. The immobilized enzyme had a much higher storage stability than the free enzyme. Certain metal ions, namely, Co2+, Cu2+, and Fe3+, increased the enzyme activity, whereas CA activity was inhibited by Pb2+, Hg2+, ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA), 5,5′-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid (DTNB), and acetazolamide. Free and immobilized CAs were tested further for the targeted application of the carbonation reaction to convert CO2 to CaCO3. The maximum CO2 sequestration potential was achieved with immobilized CA (480 mg CaCO3/mg protein). These properties suggest that immobilized VSG-4 carbonic anhydrase has the potential to be used for biomimetic CO2 sequestration.  相似文献   

16.
A CO2 hydration activity for Mn(II) human carbonic anhydrase B (MnHCAB) of 7% of the activity of the native Zn2+ enzyme has been determined using a 13C magnetization—transfer NMR approach, that involves two complementary experiments. As this approach also allows a determination of the individual relaxation rates of the enzyme-bound CO2 and HCO?3, an evaluation could be made of the distances between these substrates and the paramagnetic Mn2+ in the active site. Thus HCO?3 is found to bind directly to Mn2+, whereas CO2 is attached relatively weakly to the enzyme without a direct bond to the metal ion.  相似文献   

17.
The enzymatic activities of carbonic anhydrase (CA, EC 4.2.1.1) isozymes CA I, II, IX (catalytic domain (cdCA IX) and catalytic domain plus proteoglycan, flCA IX), XII and XIV were investigated as a function of pH for the CO2 hydration to bicarbonate and a proton. The cytosolic isoforms CA I and II as well as the catalytic domain of CA IX, together with the transmembrane isoforms CA XII and XIV showed sigmoid pH dependencies of kcat/KM, with a pKa of 6.90–7.10, showing thus optimal catalytic efficiency around pH 7. The full length CA IX had a similar shape of the pH dependency curve but with a pKa of 6.49, having thus maximal catalytic activity at pH values around 6.5, typical of hypoxic solid tumors in which CA IX is overexpressed. The proteoglycan domain of CA IX (present only in this transmembrane isoform) may thus act as an intrinsic buffer promoting efficient CO2 hydration at acidic pH values found in hypoxic tumors.  相似文献   

18.
Carbonic anhydrase III, a cytosolic enzyme found predominantly in skeletal muscle, has a turnover rate for CO2 hydration 500-fold lower and a KI for inhibition by acetazolamide 700-fold higher (at pH 7.2) than those of red cell carbonic anhydrase II. Mutants of human carbonic anhydrase III were made by replacing three residues near the active site with amino acids known to be at the corresponding positions in isozyme II (Lys-64----His, Arg-67----Asn, and Phe-198----Leu). Catalytic properties were measured by stopped-flow spectrophotometry and 18O exchange between CO2 and water using mass spectrometry. The triple mutant of isozyme III had a turnover rate for CO2 hydration 500-fold higher than wild-type carbonic anhydrase III. The binding constants, KI, for sulfonamide inhibitors of the mutants containing Leu-198 were comparable to those of carbonic anhydrase II. The mutations at residues 64, 67, and 198 were catalytically independent; the lowered energy barrier for the triple mutant was the sum of the energy changes for each of the single mutants. Moreover, the triple mutant of isozyme III catalyzed the hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl acetate with a specific activity and pH dependence similar to those of isozyme II. Phe-198 is thus a major contributor to the low CO2 hydration activity, the weak binding of acetazolamide, and the low pKa of the zinc-bound water in carbonic anhydrase III. Intramolecular proton transfer involving His-64 was necessary for maximal turnover.  相似文献   

19.
《Process Biochemistry》2014,49(12):2114-2121
The codon-optimized carbonic anhydrase gene of Persephonella marina EX-H1 (PMCA) was expressed and characterized. The gene with the signal peptide removed, PMCA(sp−), resulted in the production of approximately five times more purified protein than from the intact gene PMCA using an Escherichia coli expression system. PMCA(sp−) is formed as homo-dimer complex. PMCA(sp−) has a wide pH tolerance (optimum pH 7.5) and a high thermostability even at 100 °C (88 min of thermal deactivation half-life). The melting temperature for PMCA(sp−) was 84.5 °C. The apparent kcat and Km values for CO2 hydration were 3.2 × 105 s−1 and 10.8 mM. The activity of the PMCA(sp−) enzyme was enhanced by Zn2+, Co2+, and Mg2+, but was strongly inhibited by Cu2+, Fe3+, Al3+, Pb2+, Ag+, and Hg2+. PMCA(sp−) readily catalyzed the hydration of CO2, precipitating CaCO3 as calcite in the presence of Ca2+.  相似文献   

20.
The α-carbonic anhydrase gene from Helicobacter pylori strain 26695 has been cloned and sequenced. The full-length protein appears to be toxic to Escherichia coli, so we prepared a modified form of the gene lacking a part that presumably encodes a cleavable signal peptide. This truncated gene could be expressed in E. coli yielding an active enzyme comprising 229 amino acid residues. The amino acid sequence shows 36% identity with that of the enzyme from Neisseria gonorrhoeae and 28% with that of human carbonic anhydrase II. The H. pylori enzyme was purified by sulfonamide affinity chromatography and its circular dichroism spectrum and denaturation profile in guanidine hydrochloride have been measured. Kinetic parameters for CO2 hydration catalyzed by the H. pylori enzyme at pH 8.9 and 25°C are kcat=2.4×105 s−1, KM=17 mM and kcat/KM=1.4×107 M−1 s−1. The pH dependence of kcat/KM fits with a simple titration curve with pKa=7.5. Thiocyanate yields an uncompetitive inhibition pattern at pH 9 indicating that the maximal rate of CO2 hydration is limited by proton transfer between a zinc-bound water molecule and the reaction medium in analogy to other forms of the enzyme. The 4-nitrophenyl acetate hydrolase activity of the H. pylori enzyme is quite low with an apparent catalytic second-order rate constant, kenz, of 24 M−1 s−1 at pH 8.8 and 25°C. However, with 2-nitrophenyl acetate as substrate a kenz value of 665 M−1 s−1 was obtained under similar conditions.  相似文献   

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