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Journal of Bacteriology, December 2007, p. 8626-8635, Vol. 189, No. 23
0021-9193/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.00777-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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TEDA School of Biological Sciences and Biotechnology, Nankai University,1 Tianjin Key Laboratory of Microbial Functional Genomics,2 Tianjin Research Center for Functional Genomics and Biochip, 23 Hongda Street, TEDA, Tianjin 300457, People's Republic of China,3 N. D. Zelinsky Institute of Organic Chemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences, 119991 Moscow, Russian Federation4
Received 18 May 2007/ Accepted 19 September 2007
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-D-glucose-1-phosphate in three reaction steps catalyzed by glucose-1-phosphate thymidyltransferase (RmlA), dTDP-D-glucose 4,6-dehydratase (RmlB), and dTDP-4-keto-6-deoxy-D-glucose aminotransferase (VioA). An additional acetyltransferase (VioB) catalyzes the conversion of dTDP-D-Qui4N into dTDP-D-Qui4NAc in E. coli O7. Kinetic parameters and some other properties of VioA and VioB are described and differences between VioA proteins from S. dysenteriae type 7 (VioAD7) and E. coli O7 (VioAO7) discussed. To our knowledge, this is the first time that functions of VioA and VioB have been biochemically characterized. This study provides valuable enzyme sources for the production of dTDP-D-Qui4N and dTDP-D-Qui4NAc, which are potentially useful in the pharmaceutical industry for drug development. |
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The O antigen of Shigella dysenteriae type 7 is composed of a tetrasaccharide O unit containing a residue of 4-(N-acetylglycyl)amino-4,6-dideoxy-D-glucose (D-Qui4NGlyAc) (17). The same O-antigen structure is also present in E. coli O121, which belongs to Shiga toxin-producing E. coli causing hemolytic uremic syndrome (28, 38). The E. coli O7 O antigen is composed of a pentasaccharide O unit containing a residue of 4-acetamido-4,6-dideoxy-D-glucose (D-Qui4NAc) (19). Both Qui4NGlyAc and Qui4NAc belong to dideoxy(acetylglycyl/acetyl)amino hexoses, which are sugars not often found in studied polysaccharides.
In our previous study, the O-antigen gene cluster of S. dysenteriae type 7 was sequenced and three genes from this organism, rmlAD7, rmlBD7, and vioAD7, were proposed to be responsible for the synthesis of dTDP-D-Qui4N (the nucleotide-activated precursor of D-Qui4NGlyAc) (10). Glucose-1-phosphate thymidyltransferase (RmlA) catalyzes the conversion of glucose-1-phosphate to dTDP-D-glucose (dTDP-D-Glc), which is then converted to dTDP-4-keto-6-deoxy-D-glucose (dTDP-D-Glc4O) by dTDP-D-glucose 4,6-dehydratase (RmlB). Both reaction steps have been biochemically verified in a number of bacterial strains (11, 30). VioA, a putative sugar aminotransferase (SAT) of the DegT/DnrJ/EryC1/StrS family, was proposed to catalyze the conversion of dTDP-D-Glc4O to dTDP-D-Qui4N. The E. coli O7 O-antigen gene cluster was also sequenced (20), and the biosynthetic pathway for dTDP-D-Qui4NAc was proposed, in which dTDP-D-Qui4NAc is derived from dTDP-D-Qui4N by a transacetylation reaction catalyzed by a putative acetyltransferase of the NodL-LacA family, VioBO7 (20). However, the functions of VioA and VioB have not yet been confirmed.
In this study, we characterized the biosynthetic pathways of dTDP-D-Qui4N and dTDP-D-Qui4NAc. Genes encoding RmlA, RmlB, VioA, and VioB were cloned from S. dysenteriae type 7 (rmlAD7, rmlBD7, and vioAD7) and/or E. coli O7 (vioAO7 and vioBO7), and the gene products were overexpressed and purified as His-tagged fusion proteins. In vitro enzymatic reactions were carried out, and the products were analyzed by spectroscopic methods. VioA was identified as a novel aminotransferase catalyzing the conversion of dTDP-D-Glc4O to dTDP-D-Qui4N in S. dysenteriae type 7 and E. coli O7, and VioB was identified as a novel acetyltransferase catalyzing the conversion of dTDP-D-Qui4N to dTDP-D-Qui4NAc in E. coli O7. Enzymatic properties of VioA and VioB were investigated, and differences between VioAD7 and VioAO7 are discussed.
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-D-Glucose-1-phosphate, dTTP, dTDP-D-Glc, pyridoxal-5-phosphate (PLP), inorganic pyrophosphatase, acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA), SH-CoA, and aminooxy acetic acid were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO), methanol and acetonitrile were purchased from Fisher (Pittsburgh, PA), and acetic acid was purchased from Fluka (Buchs SG, Switzerland). All the chemicals were at the highest purity available. Restriction enzymes and recombinant Taq DNA polymerase were from TaKaRa (Japan), and T4 DNA ligase was from Promega (Madison, WI). Other chemicals and reagents were from Sangon Co., Ltd. (Shanghai, China). Bacterial strains and plasmids used are listed in Table 1. |
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TABLE 1. Strains, plasmids, and primers used in this study
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Protein expression and purification. E. coli BL21(DE3) carrying each of the recombinant plasmids was grown overnight at 37°C in LB medium containing 50 µg/ml kanamycin. The overnight culture (5 ml) was inoculated into 500 ml of fresh LB medium and grown until the A600 reached 0.6. The expression of RmlAD7, VioAD7, and VioBO7 was induced with 0.1 mM isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) at 37°C for 4 h, and expression of RmlBD7 and VioAO7 was induced with 0.1 mM IPTG at 12°C for 8 h and at 25°C for 4 h. After IPTG induction, cells were harvested by centrifugation, washed with 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) containing 300 mM NaCl and 10 mM imidazole, resuspended into 5 ml of the same buffer, and sonicated. The cell debris was removed by centrifugation, and total soluble proteins in the supernatant were collected. The His6-tagged fusion proteins in the supernatant were purified by nickel ion affinity chromatography with a chelating Sepharose Fast Flow (GE Healthcare) column according to the manufacturer's instructions. Unbound proteins were washed out with 100 ml of wash buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 300 mM NaCl, and 25 mM imidazole). The fusion proteins were eluted with 3 ml of elution buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 300 mM NaCl, and 250 mM imidazole) and dialyzed overnight against 50 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) at 4°C. Protein concentration was determined by the Bradford method.
Enzyme activity assays.
The reaction mixture for RmlA contained 50 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.4), 5 mM MgCl2, 4 mM
-D-glucose-1-phosphate, 4 mM dTTP, 0.02 U inorganic pyrophosphatase, and a 0.13 µM concentration of purified RmlAD7 (39). The reaction mixture for RmlB contained 50 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.4), 5 mM MgCl2, 8 mM dTDP-D-Glc, and a 2.65 µM concentration of purified RmlBD7 (39). To assay the VioA activity, the RmlB mixture was supplemented with 50 mM L-glutamate (L-Glu), 0.2 mM PLP, and 2 µM VioAD7 or 0.66 µM VioAO7 after the RmlB reaction (30). To assay the VioB activity, the VioA mixture was supplemented with 2.5 mM acetyl-CoA and 1.93 µM VioBO7 after the VioA reaction (30). All reactions were carried out in a final volume of 50 µl at 37°C for 2 h unless otherwise indicated. Products from each of the reactions were analyzed by capillary electrophoresis (CE), electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS), and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR). Enzyme activities were indicated by the conversion of substrates into products.
Kinetic-parameter measurements. To measure Km and Vmax values of VioAD7 and VioAO7, reactions were carried out with various concentrations of dTDP-D-Glc4O (0.05 to 2 mM for VioAD7 and 0.02 to 0.1 mM for VioAO7) with 1 µM VioAD7 and 0.022 µM VioAO7. To measure Km and Vmax values of VioB, reactions were carried out with various concentrations of dTDP-D-Qui4N (0.08 to 0.48 mM), a constant concentration of acetyl-CoA (3 mM), various concentrations of acetyl-CoA (0.187 to 1.87 mM), and a constant concentration of dTDP-D-Qui4N (1.9 mM) with a 3.86 nM concentration of purified VioBO7. All reactions were performed in a final volume of 20 µl, and reactions were terminated by adding an equal volume of chloroform. Conversion from dTDP-D-Glc4O to dTDP-D-Qui4N and from dTDP-D-Qui4N to dTDP-D-Qui4NAc was examined by CE. Conversion of acetyl-CoA to SH-CoA was measured with Ellman's reagent according to the method of Pfoestl et al. (30). Km and Vmax values were calculated based on the Michaelis-Menten equation. The data are averages of results from three independent experiments.
Determination of temperature optimum, divalent-cation effects, and amino donor requirements for VioAD7, VioAO7, and VioBO7. To determine the temperature optimum for each enzyme, reactions were carried out at 4, 15, 25, 37, 50, 65, and 75°C, respectively. To test the effects of different cations on enzyme activity, reactions were carried out in the presence of 5 mM MgCl2, MnCl2, FeSO4, CoCl2, and CaCl2 for 1 h (VioAD7), 30 min (VioAO7), or 20 min (VioBO7). To test the amino donors for the transamination reactions catalyzed by VioAD7 and VioAO7, reactions were carried out in the presence of 50 mM L-arginine (L-Arg), L-aspartic acid (L-Asp), L-asparagine (Asn), L-glycine (L-Gly), L-alanine (L-Ala), L-glutamine (L-Gln), or L-Glu. Enzyme activities were examined by CE, and the data are the averages of results from three independent experiments.
CE. CE was performed using a Beckman Coulter P/ACE MDQ CE system with a photoelectricity diode array detector (Beckman Coulter, CA). The capillary was bare silica (inside diameter, 75 µm by 57 cm, with the detector at 50 cm) and conditioned before each run by washing it with 0.1 M NaOH first, with deionized water next, and with 25 mM borate-sodium hydroxide, pH 9.4 (used as the mobile phase) last for 2 min each time. Samples were loaded by pressure injection at 0.5 lb/in2 for 10 s, and separation was carried out at 20 kV. Peak integration and trace alignments were done with Beckman P/ACE Station software (32 Karat, version 5.0). Conversion ratios were calculated by comparing the peak areas of the substrate and product.
ESI-MS and tandem MS. The reaction mixtures of RmlBD7, VioAD7, and VioBO7 were separated by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) using a BioCAD 700E perfusion chromatography workstation (Applied Biosystems, CA) with an Venusil MP-C18 column (5-µm particle size, 4.6 by 250 mm) (Agela Technologies, Inc.). The mobile phase used was composed of 10% acetonitrile and 90% 50 mM triethylamine-acetic acid (pH 6.0), and the flow rate was 0.6 ml/min. Fractions containing the expected products were collected, lyophilized, and redissolved in 50% methanol before they were injected into a Finnigan LCQ Advantage MAX ion trap mass spectrometer (Thermo Electron, CA) in the negative mode (4.5 kV, 250°C) for ESI-MS analysis. For second and third MS (MS2 and MS3) analyses, nitrogen was used as the collision gas and helium as the auxiliary gas and collision energies used were typically 20 to 30 eV.
NMR spectroscopy.
A sample of dTDP-D-Qui4NAc (0.2 mg) was deuterium exchanged by freeze-drying from D2O, dissolved in 99.96% D2O (150 µl), and examined using a Shigemi (Japan) microtube. NMR spectra were recorded on a Bruker DRX-500 spectrometer (Germany) at 30°C using internal sodium trimethylsilyl- [2,2,3,3-2H4]propanoate (
H 0.00) and external aqueous 85% H3PO4 (
P 0) as references. Two-dimensional NMR spectra were obtained using standard pulse sequences from the manufacturer, and the XWinNMR 2.6 program (Bruker) was used to acquire and process the NMR data. A mixing time of 200 ms was used in a total correlation spectroscopy (TOCSY) experiment, which was employed to correlate all coupled protons within each spin system (4).
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FIG. 1. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of purified RmlAD7 (lane 1), RmlBD7 (lane 2), VioAD7 (lane 3), VioAO7 (lane 4), and VioBO7 (lane 5). Proteins were denatured at 100°C for 5 min in 0.1% SDS and 1% 2-mercaptoehanol before being loaded in a 5% (wt/vol) stacking gel and separated in a 12% (wt/vol) separation gel. The gel was stained with Coomassie bright blue R250. The molecular weight markers from the LMW-SDS marker kit (GE Healthcare) are indicated at the right of the panel.
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-D-glucose-1-phosphate as the initial substrate and by analyzing each of the reaction products by CE. When RmlAD7, the first enzyme of the pathways, was added, a peak eluted at the same time (9.5 min) that the standard dTDP-D-Glc (Fig. 2A and B) was produced, confirming the function of RmlAD7 as RmlA. When the second enzyme, RmlBD7, was added, the peak corresponding to dTDP-D-Glc was converted to a peak that eluted at 10.4 min, indicating that the emerging peak is the product of RmlB (Fig. 2C). The peak at 10.4 min was converted to a new peak that eluted at 9.3 min when L-glutamate, PLP, and purified VioAD7 were added next (Fig. 2D), and this peak had not appeared when VioAD7 was heat denatured before the addition or in the presence of the PLP-dependent aminotransferase inhibitor aminooxy acetic acid (12; data not shown). The same was found when purified VioAO7 was used instead of VioAD7 (Fig. 2E). These results indicated that the peak at 9.3 min was the product of VioAD7 and VioAO7 and that both enzymes are PLP-dependent aminotransferases catalyzing the transfer of an amino group onto the RmlB product. The peak at 9.3 min disappeared almost completely, and another new peak that migrated at 8.8 min appeared when acetyl-CoA and purified VioBO7 were added to the reaction mixture (Fig. 2F). Conversion of acetyl-CoA to SH-CoA was also detected by comparing the migration times of the peaks before and after the reaction with those of the standard chemicals (Fig. 2G and H), indicating that the acetyl group was transferred to the VioA product. No products were produced when VioBO7 was heat denatured before the addition (data not shown).
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FIG. 2. CE chromatographs of reaction products. Shown are chromatographs of standard (std) dTDP-D-Glc without addition (A) and after the addition of RmlAD7 (B); RmlAD7 and RmlBD7 (C); RmlAD7, RmlBD7, and VioAD7 (D); RmlAD7, RmlBD7, and VioAO7 (E); RmlAD7, RmlBD7, VioAO7, and VioBO7 (F); standard acetyl-CoA (G); and standard SH-CoA (H). a.u., arbitrary units.
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FIG. 3. ESI-mass spectra of dTDP-D-Glc4O (A), dTDP-D-Qui4N (B), and dTDP-D-Qui4NAc (C); MS2 analysis of the ion with m/z 588.20 in panel C (D); and MS3 analysis of the ion with m/z 321.13 in panel D (E).
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TABLE 2. Interpretations of the ion peaks shown in Fig. 3
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Determination of the configuration at C-4 of the hexose unit in the VioBO7 product by NMR spectroscopy.
The 1H NMR spectrum of dTDP-D-Qui4NAc was assigned using two-dimensional 1H,1H COSY and TOCSY experiments. In the TOCSY spectrum (Fig. 4), cross-peaks were generated between all coupled protons within each spin system, including those between H-1 and H-2-H-6 of the QuiNAc moiety at
5.58 (H-1)/3.61 (H-2), 3.77 (H-3), 3.63 (H-4), 4.06 (H-5), and 1.18 (H-6); between H-1' and H-2'-H-5' of 2'-deoxyribose in the dTDP moiety at
6.35 (H-1)/2.38 (H-2), 4.63 (H-3), and 4.18 (H-4-H-5a and -H-5b); and between H-6 and CH3 of thymine at
7.74/1.93. The assigned chemical shifts were in good agreement with those published for dTDP (24) and
-Qui4NAc (29). Relatively large 3J2,3, 3J3,4, and 3J4,5 coupling constants (ca. 9 to 10 Hz) determined from the 1H NMR spectrum are characteristic for the all-axial orientation of the Qui4NAc ring protons; hence, the sugar has the gluco configuration and is thus 4-acetamido-4,6-dideoxy-
-D-glucose. The 31P NMR spectrum contained signals for a diphosphate group at
–11.1 and –12.7, which, as expected, showed strong correlations with the H-5' signal of dTDP at
–11.1/4.18 and H-1 of
-Qui4NAc at
–12.7/5.58 in the 1H,31P heteronuclear multiquantum coherence spectrum. These data proved finally that the enzymatic product of VioBO7 is dTDP-D-QuiNAc, whose structure is depicted in Fig. 4. The biosynthetic pathways for dTDP-D-Qui4N and dTDP-D-Qui4NAc are summarized in Fig. 5.
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FIG. 4. Part of a 1H,1H TOCSY spectrum of dTDP-D-Qui4NAc. The corresponding parts of the 1H NMR spectrum are displayed along the axes. Arabic numerals refer to protons in the Qui4NAc and dTDP moieties designated Q and T, respectively. Signals of contaminating triethylamine are marked with an asterisk. Connectivities between coupled protons in the spin systems of Qui4NAc (Q1-Q6), 2'-deoxyribose (T1'-T5'), and thymine (T6-CH3) are traced by dotted lines. The structure of dTDP-D-Qui4NAc, the enzymatic product of VioBO7, is shown.
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FIG. 5. Pathways for the biosynthesis of dTDP-D-Qui4N and dTDP-D-Qui4NAc. -D-Glc-1-P, -D-glucose-1-phosphate; PPi, inorganic pyrophosphate.
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TABLE 3. Kinetic parameters
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FIG. 6. Effects of temperature (A), cations (B), and amino donors (C) on the conversion rates of VioAD7, VioAO7, and VioBO7.
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Analysis of amino donors for VioAD7 and VioAO7. Seven amino acids, including L-Arg, L-Asp, L-Asn, L-Gly, L-Ala, L-Gln, and L-Glu, were tested as amino donors for the transamination reaction catalyzed by VioAD7 and VioAO7 (Fig. 6C). High conversion rates for both VioAD7 (84.9%) and VioAO7 (84.5%) were obtained when L-Glu was utilized, and this is consistent with other PLP-dependent SATs (12). L-Gln was also an effective amino donor for VioAD7, with a 74.1% conversion rate being detected, but less effective for VioAO7 (15.9%). In addition, L-Ala could be used by both VioA enzymes and L-Gly by only VioAD7 as poor amino donors.
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VioAD7 and VioAO7 catalyze the same transamination reaction. Sequence analysis reveals that the two SATs share 53% identity (67% similarity), which is much higher than the levels they share with other reported SATs (Table S1 in the supplemental material). Based on the position of the amino receptor, SATs can be divided into three subgroups acting on scyllo-inosose (1, 13, 14), NDP-3-keto sugars (7, 23, 30, 35), or NDP-4-keto sugars (2, 5, 12, 27, 34, 36). This is also supported by the phylogenetic analysis of SATs (Fig. S2 in the supplemental material). As expected, VioAD7 and VioAO7 fall into the NDP-4-keto sugar subgroup but form a separate branch within the subgroup in the phylogenetic tree.
Sequence alignment of VioAD7, VioAO7, and other reported SATs reveals the substitution of amino acids at the potential activity sites in motifs II and IV in VioAO7 (Fig. 7). A glycine residue in motif II is replaced by a serine residue in VioAO7, and the same was found in StsC and TbmB, the glutamine:scyllo-inosose aminotransferases from Streptomycetes (1, 14). A lysine residue in motif IV has been suggested to form a Schiff base with cofactor PLP (12). In VioAO7, we found two arginine residues and one lysine residue in tandem at the site. As in lysine, arginine also contains the
-NH2 group and is expected to contribute to the binding of PLP. This may explain the higher activity of VioAO7, which has a Km value that is 20 times lower and a kcat/Km ratio that is about 150 times higher than those of VioAD7. Furthermore, the Km of VioAO7 is the lowest among all kinetically characterized SATs, including Cj1294 (27), Cj1121c (36), WecE (12), and RfbE (2). In future work, it is worthwhile to perform site-directed mutagenesis at the potential active sites to investigate any significance of amino acid substitution in relation to enzyme activity.
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FIG. 7. Sequence alignments of VioAD7, VioAO7, and other reported sugar aminotransferases. Multiple alignments were performed with the Clustal W program using the BioEdit sequence alignment software. The GenBank accession numbers for StsC_Sgr, TbmB_Ste, FdtB_Ath, GnnB_Afe, TylB_Sfr, ArnB_Eco, Cj1121c_Cje, Cj1294_Cje, RfbE_Vch, WecE_Eco, VioA_Sdy, and VioA_Eco are CAA70012, Q2MF17, AAS55722, AAS48422, S49052, AAM92146, CAL35238, AAT12282, CAA42137, AAC76796, AAR97958, and AAD44154, respectively. Four motifs are boxed. Sgr, Streptomyces griseus; Ste, Streptomyces tenebrarius; Ath, Aneurinibacillus thermoaerophilus; Afe, Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans; Sfr, Streptomyces fradiae; Eco, Escherichia coli; Cje, Campylobacter jejuni; Vch, Vibrio cholerae; Sdy, Shigella dysenteriae.
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Rare sugars are potentially useful in the pharmaceutical and chemical industries for drug development. Amino sugars have been reported as components of many macrolide antibiotics, including tylosin, desosamine, and erythromycin (7, 8, 23, 37). Chemical synthesis of rare sugars is difficult due to the need for multistep reactions of protection and deprotection. This work provides genetic and biochemical means for the synthesis of Qui4N and Qui4NAc, which are not commonly found and are not yet commercially available.
This work was supported by the NSFC General Program (grants 30370023, 30670038, and 30500024), the NSFC Key Program (grant 30530010), the Tianjin Municipal Special Fund for Science and Technology Innovation (grant 05FZZDSH00800), the National 863 Program of China (grant 2006AA020703), the RFBR (grants 05-04-48992 and 05-04-39015 to A.V.P. and Y.A.K.), the Council on Grants of the president's office of the Russian Federation for Support of Young Russian Scientists (project MK-157.2007.4) to A.V.P., and the Russian Science Support Foundation.
Published ahead of print on 28 September 2007. ![]()
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://jb.asm.org/. ![]()
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