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Title: Welcome Each of You to My Molecular Biology Class


1
Welcome Each of You to My Molecular Biology Class
2
Molecular Biology of the Gene, 5/E --- Watson et
al. (2004)
Part I Chemistry and Genetics Part II
Maintenance of the Genome Part III Expression
of the Genome Part IV Regulation Part V Methods
3/22/05
3
Part V Methods
Ch 20 Techniques of Molecular Biology Ch 21
Model Organisms
4
  • Molecular Biology Course
  • CHAPTER 21
  • Model Organisms

5
Model Organisms
  • Fundamental problems are solved in the simplest
    and most accessible system in which the problem
    can be addressed.
  • These organisms are called model organisms.

6
Some Important Model Organisms
  • Escherichia coli and its phage (the T phage and
    phage ?)
  • Bakers yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae
  • The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans
  • The fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster
  • The house mouse Mus musculus

7
Features of Model Systems
  • The availability of powerful tools of traditional
    and molecular genetics.
  • The study of each model system attracted a
    critical mass of investigators. (Ideas,methods,
    tools and strains could be shared)

8
HOW to choose a model organism?
  • It depends on what question is being asked.
    When studying fundamental issues of molecular
    biology, simpler unicellular organisms or viruses
    are convenient. For developmental questions, more
    complicated organisms should be used.

9
CHAPTER 15 The Genetic Code
Model 1 BACTERIOPHAGE
5/08/05
10
Bacteriophage (Viruses)
  • The simplest system
  • Their genomes are replicated only after being
    injected into a host cell.
  • The genomes can recombine during these infections.

11
Figure Bacteriophage
12
  • Each phage attaches to a specific cell surface
    molecule (usually a protein) and so only cells
    bearing that receptor can be infected by a
    given phage.

13
Two Basic Types
  • Lytic phage eg. T phage
  • infect a bacterial cell
  • DNA replication
  • coat proteins expression
  • host cell lysed to release the new phage

14
The lytic growth cycle
Figure 21-1
15
  • 2. Temperate phage
  • eg. Phage ?
  • Lysogeny (????)the phage genome integrated into
    the bacterial genome and replicated passively as
    part of the host chromosome, coat protein genes
    not expressed.
  • The phage is called a prophage.
  • Daughter cells are lysogens.

16
Figure 21-2 The lysogenic cycle of a
bacteriophage
17
  • The lysogenic state can switch to lytic growth,
    called induction.
  • Excision of the prophage DNA
  • DNA replication
  • Coat proteins expression
  • Lytic growth

18
Figure 16-24 Growth and induction of ? lysogen
19
Assays of Phage Growth
  • Progagate phage
  • by growth on a suitable bacterial host in
    liquid culture.
  • Quantify phage
  • plaque (???) assay

Bacteriophage
20
Progagate phage
  • Find a suitable host cell that supports the
    growth of the virus.
  • The mixture of viruses and bacteria are filtered
    through a bacterial-proof filter.

21
Quantify phage
  • Phage are mixed with and adsorb to bacterial
    cells.
  • Dilute the mix.
  • Add dilutions to soft agar (contain many
    uninfected bacterial cells).
  • Poured onto a hard agar base.
  • Incubated to allow bacterial growth and phage
    infection.

22
Soft agar
Hard agar
a petri dish
23
As the viruses replicate and are released, they
spread and infect the nearby cells.
  • This circle-of-death produces a hole or PLAQUE
    in a lawn of living cells. These plaques can be
    easily seen and counted so that the numbers of
    virus can be quantitated.

24
The Single-Step Growth Curve
Latent period-the time lapse between infection
and release of progeny. Burst size-the number of
phage released
Bacteriophage
Figure 21-4
25
The Single-Step Growth Curve
  • It reveals the life cycle of a typical lytic
    phage.
  • It reveals the length of time it takes a phage to
    undergo one round of lytic growth, and also the
    number of progeny phage produced per infected
    cell.

26
Method
1. Phage were mixed with bacterial cells for 10
minutes. (Long enough for adsorption but too
short for further infection progress.) 2. The
mixture is diluted by 10,000. (Only those cells
that bound phage in the initial incubation will
contribute to the infected population progeny
phage produced from those infections will not
find host cells to infect.)
27
3. Incubate the dilution. At intervals, a sample
can be removed from the mixture and the number of
free phage counted using a plaque assay.
28
Phage Crosses and Complementation Tests

Bacteriophage
Mixed infection a single cell is infected with
two phage particles at once.
29
Mixed infection (co-infection)
  • 1. It allows one to perform phage crosses.

If two different mutants of the same phage
co-infect a cell, recombination can occur between
the genomes. The frequency of this genetic
exchange can be used to order genes on the genome.
30
  • 2. It allows one to assign mutations to
    complementation groups.

If two different mutant phage co-infect the same
cell and as a result each provides the function
that the other was lacking, the two mutations
must be in different genes (complementation
groups). If not, the two mutations are likely
located in the same gene.
31
Transduction and Recombinant DNA
  • During infection, a phage might pick up a piece
    of bacterial DNA (mostly happens when a prophage
    excises form the bacterial chromosome).
  • The resulting recombinant phage can transfer the
    bacterial DNA from one host to another, known as
    specialized transduction.

Bacteriophage
eg. Phage ?
32
CHAPTER 15 The Genetic Code
Model 2 BACTERIA
5/08/05
33
Features of bacteria
  • a single chromosome
  • a short generation time
  • convenient to study genetically

34
Assays of Bacteria Growth
  • Bacteria can be grow in liquid or on solid (agar)
    medium.
  • Bacterial cells are large enough to scatter
    light, allowing the growth of a bacterial culture
    to be monitored in liquid culture by the increase
    in optical density (OD).

Bacteria
35
  • Bacterial cells can grow exponentially when not
    over-crowded, called exponential phase.

Figure 21-5 Bacteria growth curve
  • As the population increase to high numbers of
    cells, the growth rate slows, called stationary
    phase.

36
Quantify bacteria
  • Dilute the culture.
  • Plate the cells on solid medium in a petri dish.
  • Single cells grow into colonies count the
    colonies.
  • Knowing how many colonies are on the plate and
    how much the culture was diluted makes it
    possible to calculate the concentration of cells
    in the original culture.

37
Bacteria Exchange DNA by
  • Sexual Conjugation
  • Phage-Mediated Transduction
  • DNA-Mediated Transformation

Bacteria
38
We use genetic change to
  • Map mutations.
  • Construct strains with multiple mutations.
  • Build partially diploid strains for
    distinguishing recessive from dominant mutations
    and for carrying out cis-trans analyses.

39
Sexual Conjugation
Plasmids autonomously replicating DNA elements
in bacteria.
Some plasmids are capable of transferring
themselves from one cell to another. eg.
F-factor (fertility plasmid of E.coli)
40
  • F cell cell harboring an F-factor.
  • Hfr strain a strain harboring an integrated
    F-factor in its chromosome.
  • F-lac an F-factor containing the lactose
    operon.

Figure 21-6
41
  • F plasmid is a fertility plasmid that contains a
    small segment of chromosomal DNA.
  • F-factors can be used to create partially
    diploid strains.
  • eg. F-lac

42
  • F-factor-mediated conjugation is a replicative
    process. The products of conjugating are two F
    cells.
  • The F-factor can undergo conjugation only with
    other E.coli strains.

43
  • Some plasmids can transfer DNA to a wide variety
    of unrelated strains, called promiscuous
    conjugative plasmids.
  • They provide a convenient means for introducing
    DNA into bacteria strains that cant undergo
    genetic exchange.

44
Phage-mediated transduction
  • Generalized transduction A fragment of
    chromosomal DNA is packaged instead of phage DNA.
    When such a phage infects a cell, it introduces
    the segment of chromosomal DNA to the new cell.
  • Specialized transduction

45
Figure 21-7 Phage-mediated generalized
transduction
46
DNA-mediated transformation
  • Some bacterial species can take up and
    incorporate linear, naked DNA into their own
    chromosome by recombination.
  • The cells must be in a specialized state known as
    genetic competence.

47
Bacterial Plasmids Can Be Used as Cloning Vectors
  • Plasmid circular DNA in bacteria that can
    replicate autonomously.
  • Plasmids can serve as vectors for bacterial DNA
    as well as foreign DNA.
  • DNA should be inserted without impairing the
    plasmid replication.


Bacteria
48
Transposons Can Be Used to Generate Insertional
Mutations and Gene and Operon Fusions

Bacteria
eg1. Transposons that integrate into the
chromosome with low-sequence specificity can be
used to generate a library of insertional
mutations on a genome-wide basis.
49
Figure 21-8 Transposon-generated insertional
mutagenesis
50
Insertional mutations generated by transposons
have two advantages over traditional mutations.
  • The insertion of a transposon into a gene is more
    likely to result in complete inactivation of the
    gene.
  • Having inactivated the gene, the inserted DNA is
    easy to isolate and clone that gene.

51
eg2. Gene and operon fusions created by
transopsons
Promoter-less lacZ
Reporter gene
Figure 21-9
Gene fusion a fusion in which the reporter is
joined both transcriptionally and translationally
to the target gene.
52
Studies on the Molecular Biology of Bacteria Have
Been Enhanced by Recombinant DNA Technology,
Whole-Genome Sequencing, and Transcriptional
Profiling

Bacteria
53
Biochemical Analysis Is Especially Powerful in
Simple Cells with Well-Developed Tools of
Traditional and Molecular Genetics

Bacteria
54
  • Large quantities of bacterial cells can be grown
    in a defined and homogenous physiological state.
  • It is easier to purify protein complexes
    harboring precisely engineered alterations or to
    overproduce and obtain individual proteins in
    large quantities.
  • It is much simpler to carry out DNA replication,
    gene transcription, protein synthesis, etc. in
    bacteria than in higher cells.

55
Bacteria Are Accessible to Cytological Analysis

Despite their simplicity and the absence of
membrane-bound cellular compartments, bacteria
are accessible to the tools of cytology, such as
Bacteria
  • Immunofluorescence microscopy
  • Fluorescence microscopy
  • Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH)

56
Phage and Bacteria Told Us Most of the
Fundamental Things about the Gene

Bacteria
There are countless examples where fundamental
processes of life were understood by choosing
these simplest of systems.
57
CHAPTER 15 The Genetic Code
Model 3 BAKERS YEAST Saccharomyces cerevisiae
5/08/05
58
Features of S. cerevisiae
  • Have small genomes
  • Can be grown rapidly in the lab
  • Central characteristics
  • they contain a discrete (????) nucleus with
    multiple linear chromosomes packaged into
    chromatin
  • their cytoplasm includes a full spectrum of
    intracellular organelles and cytoskeletal
    structures.

59
The Existence of Haploid and Diploid Cells
Facilitate Genetic Analysis of S. cerevisiae
Saccharomyces cerevisiae

S. Cerevisiae can grow in either a haploid state
(one copy of each chromosome) or diploid state
(two copies of each chromosome). Conversion
between the two states is mediated by mating
(haploid to diploid) and sporulation (diploid to
haploid).
60
S. Cerevisiae exist in three forms two haploid
cell types, a and ?, and the diploid product of
mating between these two.
Figure 21-10
61
Application in the Lab
  • Genetic complementation by mating two haploid
    strains, each contains one of the two mutations
    whose complementation is being tested.
  • Testing the function of an individual gene
    mutations can be made in haploid cells in which
    there is only a single copy of that gene.

62
Generating Precise Mutations in Yeast Is Easy
Saccharomyces cerevisiae

When linear DNA with ends homologous to any given
region of the genome is introduced into S.
cerevisiae cells, very high rates of homologous
recombination are observed resulting in the
transformation.
63
Figure 21-11 Recombinational transformation in
yeast
This property can be used to make precise changes
within the genome, allowing very detailed
questions to be elucidated.
64
S. Cerevisiae Has a Small, Well-Characterized
Genome
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
  • S. Cerevisiae was the first eukaryotic organism
    to have its genome entirely sequenced. (1996)
  • 1.3X106 bp, approximately 6,000 genes.
  • The availability of the complete genome sequence
    has allowed genome-wide approaches to studies
    of this organism.

65
S. Cerevisiae Cells Change Shape as They Grow
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
  • S. Cerevisiae divides by budding. The bud grows
    until it reaches a size approximately equal to
    the size of the mother cell and is released from
    it.
  • The emergence of a new bud is tightly connected
    to the initiation of DNA replication.

66
Start replicating its genome
Figure 21-12 The mitotic cell cycle in
yeast
Chromosome segregation
67
CHAPTER 15 The Genetic Code
Model 4 THE NEMATODE WORM, Caenorhabditis
elegans
4/22/05
68
Caenorhabditis elegans
  • Suitable characteristics
  • Rapid generation time
  • Hermaphrodite(?????) reproduction producing large
    numbers of self-progeny

69
  • Sexual reproduction so that genetic stocks could
    be constructed
  • A small number of transparent cells so that
    development could be followed directly

70
C.elegans Has a Very Raplid Life Cycle
Caenorhabditis elegans
  • C.elegans is cultured on petri dishes, fed a
    simple diet of bacteria and grow well at 25C .

71
Eggs
12h
Juvenile
40h
Adult
12 h
15d
Death
Figure 21-13 The lifecycle of the C. elegans
72
  • Dauer
  • Forming under stressful condition
  • Resistant to environmental stresses
  • Living many months while waiting for
    environmental conditions to improve

73
C. elegans Is Composed of Relatively Few, Well
Studied Cell Lineages
Caenorhabditis elegans
Figure 21-14 a
74
Figure 21-14 b The body plan of the wrom
gonad??? oocyte???? uterus?? vulva??
pharynx? intestine? anus??
75
  • Mutations that disrupt the formation of the vulva
    form a bag of worms (the hatched worms devour
    their mother and become trapped inside her skin).

76
  • The genes are components of a highly conserved
    receptor tyrosine kinase signaling pathway that
    controls cell proliferation.

77
  • Mutations that inactivate this pathway eliminate
    vulva development.
  • Mutations that activate this pathway cause
    overproliferation of the vulva precursor cells.

78
The cell Death Pathway Was Discovered in C.
elegans
  • Cell death is under genetic control (a mutated
    ced gene).
  • Analysis of the ced mutants showed that the cell
    commits suicide. In males, a cell known as the
    linker cell is killed by its neighbor.

Caenorhabditis elegans
79
RNAi Was Discovered in C. elegans
  • RNAi silencing

Caenorhabditis elegans
Enzyme Dicer makes siRNAs
siRNAs direct a complex called RISC to repress
gene in three ways
Translational inhibition
Motifying promoters
Digesting mRNA
80
Figure 17-30
81
  • In 1998, RNAi was discovered in C. elegans, which
    is significant in two respects
  • RNAi appears to be universal.
  • Experimental investigation reveals the molecular
    mechanisms.

82
CHAPTER 15 The Genetic Code
  • Model 5 THE FRUIT FLY, Drosophila melanogaster

4/22/05
83
  • In 1908, Thomas Hunt Morgan and his research
    associates at Columbia University placed rotting
    fruit on the window ledge of their laboratory.
    Among the menagerie of creatures that were
    captured, the fruit fly emerged as the animal of
    choice.

84
Drosophila Has a Rapid Life Cycle
Figure 21-15 The rapid life cycle of Drosophila
Drosophila melanogaster
85
  • The growth of the imaginal disks arising from
    invaginations of epidermis in mid-stage embryos.

Figure 21-16 Imaginal disks in Drosophila
86
  • There is disks for appendages, eyes, antennae,
    the mouthparts, and genitalia.
  • Disks are composed of fewer than 100 cells in the
    embryo but thousands of cells in mature larvae.

87
  • The wing imaginal disk has become an important
    model system for the control of complex
    patterning processes by gradients of secreted
    signaling molecules.

88
The First Genome Maps Were Produced in Drosophila
Drosophila melanogaster
  • Useful features of the flies in experimental
    research
  • Fecundity
  • Rapid life cycle
  • Four chromosomes (two large autosomes, a smaller
    X, and a very small fourth chromosome)
  • Polytene chromosomes

89
Endoreplication in the absence of mitosis
generates enlarged chromosomes in some tissues of
the fly
Figure 21-17 Polytene chromosomes
90
  • Two major discoverise by the Morgan lab in 1910
  • Mendels first law Genes are located on
    chromosomes, and each gene is composed of two
    alleles that assort independently during meiosis.
  • Mendels second law Genes located on separate
    chromosomes segregate independently

91
  • By the 1930s, extensive genetic maps were
    produced that identified the relative positions
    of numerous genes. (the distances between linked
    genes mapped by recombination frequencies)

92
  • Large-scale genetic screens are performed by
    feeding adult males a mutagen which cause
    mutations, and then mating them with normal
    females.(A variety of method used to study these
    mutations)

93
Method one
  • Bridges used polytene chormosomes to determine a
    physical map of the Drosophila genome.
  • Bridges identified 5000 bands on the four
    chromosomes and established a correlation between
    the bands and the locations of genetic loci .

94
For example
  • Female fruit flies that contain the white
    mutation and a small deletion in the other X
    chromosome, which removes polytene bands 3C2-3C3,
    exhibit white eyes. This type of analysis led to
    the conclusion that the white gene is located
    between polytene bands 3C2-3C3 on the X chromosome

95
Method two
  • Balancer chromosomes contain inversions

Figure 21-16
96
  • Such balancers fail to undergo recombination with
    the native chromosome. Thus, it is possible to
    maintain fruit flies that contain recessive,
    lethal mutations.

97
Genetic Mosaics Permit the Analysis of Lethal
Genes in Adult Files
Drosophila melanogaster
  • Mosaics are animals that contain small patches of
    mutant tissue in a generally normal genetic
    background.
  • The most spectacular genetic mosaics are
    gyandromorphs.

98
Figure 21-19 Gyandromorphs
99
  • Rarely, one of the two X chromosomes is lost at
    the first mitotic division.
  • Sexual identity in flies is determined by the
    number of X chromosomes. (two-female one-male)

100
  • Suppose that one of the X chromosomes contains
    the recessive white allele. Then one half of the
    fly, the male half, has white eyes. While the
    other female half, has red eyes.

101
The yeast FLP Recombinase Permits the Efficient
Production of Genetic Mosaics
Drosophila melanogaster
  • The frequency of mitotic recombination was
    greatly enhanced by the use of the FLP
    recombinase from yeast.
  • FLP recognizes FRT and catalyzes DNA
    rearrangement.

102
  • FRT sequences were inserted near the centromere
    of each of the four chromosomes using P-element
    transformation.
  • Heterozygous flies contain a null allele in gene
    Z on one chromoso-me and a wild-type copy of that
    gene on the other.

103
  • In transgenic strains that contain FLP protein
    coding sequence under the control of
    heat-inducible hsp70 promoter, FLP is synthesized
    upon heat shock.

104
FLP binds to the FRT motifs in the two homologs
containing gene Z and catalyze mitotic
recombination.
Figure 21-20 FLP-FRT
105
It Is Easy to Create Transgenic Fruit Flies that
Carry Foreign DNA
Drosophila melanogaster
  • P-elements are transposable DNA that can cause
    hybrid dysgenesis (????).(how? )

106
Figure 21-21 hybrid dysgenesis
  • The F1 progeny are often sterile, when mating
    females from the M strain with males from the
    P strain.

107
  • P-elements encode both a repressor of
    transposition and a transposase that promotes
    mobilization.
  • The repressor is expressed in the developing P
    eggs. Thus M eggs lack the repressor that
    inhibits p-element mobilization.

108
  • Sometimes the P-elements insert into genes that
    are essential for the development of progenitors
    of the gametes (???), and, as a result, the
    adult flies derived from the these matings are
    sterile.

109
P-elements can be used as vectors in the
transformation of the fly embryos.
Figure 21-22
110
  • A full length P-element transposon is 3 kb in
    length. It contains inverted repeats at the
    termini that are essential for excision and
    insertion.

111
  • Recombinant DNA is inserted into defective
    P-elements that lack the internal genes encoding
    repressor and transposase.
  • Transposase is injected along with the
    recombination P-element vector.

112
  • The recombinant P-elements insert into random
    positions in the pole cells.
  • The amount of recombination p-element and
    transposase is calibrated so that, on average, a
    given pole cell receives just a single integrated
    p-element.

113
  • The embryos are allowed to develop into adults
    and then mated with tester strains.
  • The recombinant P-element contains a marker
    gene such as white.

114
  • P-element transformation is routinely used to
    identify regulatory sequences.
  • It can also be used to examine protein coding
    genes in various genetic backgrounds.

115
CHAPTER 15 The Genetic Code
  • Model 6 THE HOUSE MOUSE, Mus musculus

4/22/05
116
The predominance of the mouse model
  • The mouse is an excellent model for human
    development and disease, although, the life cycle
    of the mouse is slow by the standard of the
    nematode worm and fruit fly.

117
  • The mouse provides the link between the basic
    principles, discovered in simpler creatures like
    worms and flies, and human disease.
  • The chromosome complement is similar between the
    mouse and human (autosomomes and X,Y sex
    chromosomes)

118
  • Extended regions of a given mouse chromosome
    contain homologous regions of the corresponding
    human chromosomes. (more than 85 of the mouse
    genes are correspond to human genes.)

119
Mouse Embryonic Development Depends on Stem Cells
  • The first obvious diversification of cell types
    is at the 16-cell stage, called the morula (???).
  • The cells in outer regions of the morula develop
    into the placenta (??).
  • Cells in internal regions generate the inner
    cell mass (ICM) which is the prime source of
    embryonic stem cells.

Mus musculus
120
  • At the 64-cell stage the mouse embryo, called a
    blastocyst (??), is ready for implantation.
    Interactions between the blastocyst and uterine
    wall lead to the formation of the plancenta.

121
  • Then the embryo enters gastrulat-ion (???), and
    the ICM forms all three germ layers endoderm
    (???) , mesoderm (???), ectoderm (???).
  • The first stage in gastrulation is the
    subdivision of the ICM into two cell lays an
    inner hypoblast (???) and an outer epiblast (???).

122
  • Then a groove called primitive streak (??) forms
    along the length of the epiblast and the cells
    that migrate into the groove form the internal
    mesoderm. The anterior end of the primitive
    streak is the node.

123
  • Shortly thereafter, a fetus emerges that contains
    a brain, a spinal cord, and internal organs (eg
    heart and liver).

124
Figure 21-23 overview of mouse embryogenesis
125
It is Easy to Introduce Foreign DNA into the
Mouse Embryo
  • Create transgenic mice by microinjection method.
  • First, Inject DNA into the egg pronucleus.
  • Second, place the embryos into the oviduct
    (???) of a female mouse.
  • Third, the injected DNA integrates at random
    positions in the genome.

Mus musculus
126
Figure 21-24
127
  • Germline transformation the offspring of
    transgenic mice also contain the foreign
    recombinant DNA.

128
  • A transgenic strain of mice was created that
    contains a portion of the Hoxb-2 regulatory
    region attached to a lacZ report gene. There are
    two bands of staining detected in the hindbrain
    region of 10.5 day embryos.

Figure 21-25
129
Homologous Recombination Permits the Selective
Ablation of Individual Genes
Mus musculus
  • The single most powerful method of mouse
    transgenesis is the ability to disrupt, or knock
    out, single genetic loci. This permits the
    creation of mouse models for human disease.

130
  • Gene disruption experiments
  • They are done with embryonic stem (ES) cells.
  • A recombinant DNA is created that contains a
    mutant form of the gene of interest.
  • The method is used to create a cell line lacking
    any given gene.

131
  • The process of the experiment

First, designing the recombination vector. It
contains the modified target gene, the NEO gene
(downstream of the target gene), the region of
homology with the host cell chromosome
(downstream of and flanking NEO) and a marker
(TK, gene for thymidine kinase).
132
  • Second, transform the vector into ES cells.
  • Third, select for NEO. Only the cells which
    undergo double recombination with the host cell
    chromosome can survive in the neomycin containing
    medium.

133
  • Fourth, select against TK. If illicit
    recombination occurs, TK gene will frequently be
    contained. In this case, the cells which undergo
    illicit recombination will die in the GANC
    containing medium.

134
  • Fifth, harvest the homologous recombination ES
    cells and inject them into the ICM of normal
    blastocysts.
  • Sixth, insert the hybrid embryo into the oviduct
    of a host mouse and allowed to develop to term.

135
Figure 21-26
136
Mice Exhibit Epigenetic Inheritance
  • Parental imprinting only one of the two alleles
    for certain genes is active, because the other
    copy of is selectively inactivated either in the
    developing sperm cell or the developing egg.

Mus musculus
137
See the detail in chapter 17
Figure 21-27 imprinting in the mouse
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