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Unidad de Biofísica (CSIC/UPV-EHU) y Departamento de Bioquímica y Biología Molecular, Facultad de Ciencia y Tecnología, Universidad del País Vasco, Bilbao, Spain
Reprint requests to: Arturo Muga, Unidad de Biofísica (CSIC/ UPV-EHU) y Departamento de Bioquímica y Biología Molecular, Facultad de Ciencia y Tecnología, Universidad del País Vasco, Apartado 644, 48080 Bilbao, Spain; e-mail: gbpmuvia{at}lg.ehu.es; fax: +34-946013500.
(RECEIVED July 28, 2005; FINAL REVISION October 14, 2005; ACCEPTED October 27, 2005)
| Abstract |
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-helical subdomain and another comprising only the N-terminal ATPase domain), and a single-point DnaK mutant (T199A) with strongly reduced ATPase activity, were investigated by time-resolved infrared difference spectroscopy combined with the use of caged-nucleotides. The results indicate that (1) ATP, but not ADP, binding promotes a conformational change in both subdomains of the peptide binding domain that can be individually resolved; (2) these conformational changes are kinetically coupled, most likely to ensure a decrease in the affinity of DnaK for peptide substrates and a concomitant displacement of the lid away from the peptide binding site that would promote efficient diffusion of the released peptide to the medium; and (3) the
-helical subdomain contributes to stabilize the interdomain interface against the thermal challenge and allows bidirectional transmission of the allosteric signal between the ATPase and substrate binding domains at stress temperatures (42°C). Keywords: DnaK; Hsp70; chaperones; allosterism; infrared; caged-nucleotides
Abbreviations: SBD, substrate binding domain TR-IR, time resolved infrared spectroscopy IR, infrared spectroscopy
Article published online ahead of print. Article and publication date are at http://www.proteinscience.org/cgi/doi/10.1110/ps.051732706.
| Introduction |
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-sandwich that holds the peptide binding site and a helical subdomain that folds over the
-sandwich and controls the accessibility of the peptide binding site, acting as a lid.
Different cochaperones regulate DnaK activity through substrate binding and nucleotide hydrolysis (DnaJ), and through nucleotide exchange (GrpE). The activity of DnaK, and of all known Hsp70s, is modulated by an allosteric mechanism where the bound nucleotide at the ATPase domain determines the affinity of the SBD for protein substrates. Since allostery is bidirectional, substrate binding enhances the ATPase activity of the protein. Several biochemicalpartial proteolysis (Buchberger et al. 1995) and cross-linking (Farr et al. 1998)and biophysicalfluorescence spectroscopy (Moro et al. 2003; Slepenkov and Witt 2003) and small-angle X-ray scattering (Wilbanks et al. 1995; Shi et al. 1996)techniques have shown that ATP induces a global conformational change in the SBD of Hsp70 proteins that involves rearrangements of both
- and
-subdomains. These results demonstrate that ligand binding to one of these domains has an effect on the structural and functional properties of the other domain, although structural details of the intramolecular allosteric regulation are scarce. While the use of lidless mutants demonstrate a direct communication between the ATPase and the
-sandwich subdomain (Pellechia et al. 2000; Buczynski et al. 2001), it is not clear how the allosteric signal is transmited to the
-helical subdomain. High-resolution three-dimensional structures of isolated structural domains in various ligand states have been reported (Zhu et al. 1996; Harrison et al. 1997; Pellechia et al. 2000), but they do not provide information on either the interdomain interface or the residues involved in allosteric signaling. A recent NMR study of a 54-kDa two-domain construct of Hsp70 from Thermus thermophilus, containing the ATPase domain and a truncated SBD that includes the
-strand sandwich and lacks the lid subdomain, has allowed investigators to estimate the relative positioning of both protein domains and therefore to locate at least part of the interdomain interface (Revington et al. 2005).
In this context, infrared difference spectroscopy combined with the use of caged ligands opens the possibility to follow in real time the ATP-induced allosteric conformational change, as already demonstrated for other biological systems, including GroEL (von Germar et al. 1999). The results presented here show that (1) the allosteric transition induced in DnaK by ATP binding simultaneously affects both subdomains of the SBD; (2) ATP hydrolysis relaxes the protein conformation to an ADP-like state, more similar to the apo-protein; and (3) the stabilizing subdomain interactions at the SBD are essential to maintain a functional interdomain interface that allows allosteric signaling at stress temperatures (e.g., 42°C).
| Results |
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The difference IR spectra contain contributions from different molecular events, such as nucleotide binding and hydrolysis, and the photolysis reaction. ATP binding can only be monitored if the caged-nucleotide is unable to bind DnaK. Filtration experiments were performed to test whether binding of caged-ATP to nucleotide-free DnaK was taking place (Fig. 1A
). They demonstrated that this was not the case since unlike free nucleotides which bound tightly DnaK (Kd = 110 nM) (Theyssen et al. 1996; Russell et al. 1998), caged-ATP did not bind the protein and all the initially added caged ligand appeared in the filtrate. Therefore, the IR difference spectra also contain information of the binding process.
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The time evolution of a representative differential signal at 1636 cm1 shows two different kinetic events: a first one evidenced by a fast increase in the amplitude of the absorbance change (apparent rate constant of 0.65 sec1), followed by a second event characterized by a slow decrease with an apparent rate constant of 0.004 sec1 (Fig. 1B
). When the binding event is studied by intrinsic fluorescence, two transitions are observed instead of one (Slepenkov and Witt 1998). The apparent rate constant of the fast event is ATP-concentration dependent with a maximum rate of 20 sec1 at 25°C, its detection being beyond our experimental time resolution (0.5 sec), while the slow transition shows an apparent rate constant (k = 0.67 sec1) similar to that described in this study. To further distinguish binding from hydrolysis, caged-ATP was released into ADP-bound DnaK samples to slow down the binding event (Slepenkov and Witt 1998; Grimshaw et al. 2001) and to better mimic the physiological situation that includes nucleotide exchange. Under these experimental conditions, the first kinetic event experimentally detected after ATP release to the medium is characterized by the appearance of the following differential signals: 1693()/1685(+); 1674()/1660(+); 1650()/1636(+); 1567(+); 1543(), and 1391(+) (Fig. 2A
). The 1526() cm1 signal together with a broad band centered at ~1640 cm1 are due to the photolysis reaction (Fig. 2A
). Both the intensity and the position of the absorbance changes were essentially the same regardless of the presence of ADP in the sample before ATP release; thus, nucleotide exchange did not induce significant spectroscopic modifications (cf. top traces, Figs. 2
and 3
). It also follows from this comparison that a larger similarity exists between nucleotide-free and ADP-bound DnaK than between any of these states and the ATP-bound form of the protein (see below). Analysis of the differential signals at 1636 cm1 and 1650 cm1 shows the expected reduction in the apparent rate constant from 0.65 sec1 to 0.05 sec1 (Fig. 2B
). The similarity of this rate constant with the value found for ADP dissociation from ADP-DnaK complexes (0.035 sec1) (Theyssen et al. 1996) suggests, as expected, that ADP-dissociation precedes the ATP binding step that triggers protein conformational changes. Therefore, the fast kinetic event observed in this study represents the conformational change previously assigned to a global structural transition that occurs after ATP binding to the protein (Ha and McKay, 1995; Slepenkov and Witt 1998). The binding reaction is too fast to be detected in this study and was related with an alteration of the local environment around W102 (Slepenkov and Witt 1998).
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Allosteric communication
An important question that would be of interest to address is whether these absorbance changes are due to interdomain allosteric communication or to a more direct nucleotide-induced conformational change located at the ATPase domain. To answer this question the ATP-induced IR differential signals of wild-type and two DnaK deletion mutants that lack the helical lid subdomain (DnaK1507) or the entire SBD (ATPase domain) were compared (Fig. 4A
). The results obtained in H2O buffer indicate that progressive deletion of the SBD results in a significant reduction of the intensity of some absorbance changes. Removal of the helical subdomain of the SBD reduces the amplitude of the differential signal at 1650()/1636(+) cm1, as well as that of the positive absorbance change at 1391 cm1. Since the positive component of the first differential feature would overlap with that of the
-structure (see below), the conformational change at the lid subdomain can be experimentally characterized by a reduction of the intensity at 1650 cm1. As expected, deletion of the
-sandwich subdomain of the SBD results in a decrease in the intensity of the differential signal at 1636 cm1, characteristic of extended structures (Susi and Byler 1986), and a further decrease in the amplitude of the 1395 cm1 absorbance change that becomes negative. To prove that these absorbance changes were due to the allosteric transition that immediately follows ATP binding, the difference IR spectra of these proteins were also analyzed in the presence of ADP (Fig. 4A
, lower panel). In contrast to what was found for ATP, the absorbance changes induced by ADP binding to the three proteins were similar and include only weak differential signals in the amide I region (17001610 cm1). Thus, compared to ATP, ADP induces small conformational rearrangements that mostly affect to the ATPase domain of the protein. Taken together, these results demonstrate that ATP binding to the ATPase domain of DnaK induces conformational changes in both subdomains of the SBD of the protein that can be independently followed by difference IR spectroscopy.
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1550 cm1 to 1460 cm1 (Byler and Susi 1986; Arrondo et al. 1993; Jackson and Mantsch 1995). In contrast, larger downshifts (
30 cm1) are characteristic for the side-chain absorptions of solvent-accessible Asn, Gln, Lys, and Arg, as are small upshifts for COO bands (Chirgadze et al. 1975; Venyaminov and Kalnin 1990; Barth 2000). The comparison shows the following differences upon deuteration: (1) Differential features between 16301700 cm1 are down-shifted by 47 cm1; (2) the negative signal at 1618 cm1 becomes positive; and (3) a differential signal at 1581()/1560(+) cm1 is clearly detected only in D2O. Therefore, the components between 1700 and 1630 cm1 can be assigned to secondary structure elements while the one at 1560 cm1 might arise from side chains of acidic amino acids. The reason why this signal is not well defined in H2O could be related to the possible overlapping with other deuteration-sensitive vibrations.
Essentially the same results are obtained when the spectroscopic effect of ATP binding to the three proteins is analyzed in D2O, apart from the isotopic downshifts mentioned above for wild-type DnaK (Fig. 4
). The only significant difference is that in deuterated medium the 16001540 cm1 spectral region seems to be more sensitive to the presence of different subdomains of the SBD. The positive signal observed for wild-type DnaK at 1560 cm1 evolves to a broad one that might be composed of two components at 1572 and 1560 cm1 upon lid removal, and to one major absorbance change at 1572 cm1 for ATP-induced conformational change for the ATPase domain.
In light of the recent finding that interactions between helix B at the lid and loops at the
-sandwich of the SBD are essential to maintain the stability of the substrate binding site that allows formation of peptideDnaK complexes at stress temperatures (e.g., 42°C) (Moro et al. 2004), we also tested a putative role of these interactions in the thermal stabilization of the interdomain interface. If this were the case, only the IR difference spectrum of DnaK(1507) should be temperature sensitive while that of wild-type DnaK should remain unchanged. Figure 5A
shows that this is indeed the case, since absorbance changes at the same positions and with similar amplitudes are observed for wild-type DnaK within the temperature range 25°42°C. In contrast, the fine structure of the difference spectrum of the deletion mutant observed at 25°C is lost at 42°C, the spectrum resembling that of the ADP-bound state of the protein (see Fig. 4
). To rule out the possibility that the nucleotide did not bind to the deletion mutant at stress temperatures we also analyzed the ATPase activity of wild-type and DnaK(1507) at both permissive and stress temperatures. The activity values for wild-type and DnaK(1507) at 42°C were 6.4 times and 7.5 times higher, respectively (data not shown), than those measured at 25°C (Moro et al. 2004), indicating that at 42°C the deletion mutant binds ATP.
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ATP hydrolysis
The second kinetic event shown in Figure 1
, characterized by an exponential decrease of absorbance changes, reflects nucleotide hydrolysis. The time evolution of the difference spectra measured in H2O medium is shown in Figure 6
, and indicates that during hydrolysis a slow conformational change drives DnaK to a state similar, but not identical, to ADP-bound DnaK (Fig. 6
, top trace). Spectroscopically, this conformational change is characterized by (1) a decrease in the amplitude of differential signals appearing >1630 cm1 (1693/1685, 1674/1660, and 1650/1636 cm1), (2) the appearance of negative signals at 1559 cm1, and (3) the positive absorbance change at 1391 turns into a negative signal at 1396 cm1. When the same experiment is performed in D2O, a similar change in the difference spectrum is observed as a function of time, considering the effect of deuteration on the location of the differential signals (see Fig 4
; data not shown). The differences observed between wild-type DnaK and the two deletion mutants in the spectral regions 15601590 cm1 and 13901400 cm1, and the development of a negative signal at ~1560 cm1 during ATP hydrolysis indicate that the chemical environment of COOH group(s) from acidic residue(s) is modified. The development of this negative signal does not arise from a change in the protonation state of acidic residues since there is not experimental evidence of differential signals at 17001750 cm1, where the COOH groups absorb (Barth 2000). The alternative explanation, as found for GroEL, would be a modification of specific salt bridges (von Germar et al. 1999). If this were the case, the assignment of counterions for these COOgroup(s) is not straightforward due to the low extinction coefficient of absorbance bands of Arg and Lys residues, and the overlap with stronger signals coming from the polypeptide backbone in this spectral region, and therefore it would require the characterization of selected mutants.
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-helical lid, 1650 cm1, and
-sandwich, 1636 cm1 in H2O) show the same rate constant for the conformational change that follows ATP binding and for that associated to its subsequent hydrolysis, suggesting a concerted allosteric conformational change at the SBD in response to ATP.
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| Discussion |
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The experimental evidence for the existence of an ATP-induced allosteric conformational change, characterized by absorbance changes clearly assigned to structural elements at the SBD, raises two questions. The first one is related to the type of secondary structures involved and their location within the SBD. The assignment of differential absorbance features ~1620 cm1 to protein backbone conformational changes is based on theoretical and systematic IR studies of model proteins and amino acid side chains (Chirgadze et al. 1975; Byler and Susi 1986; Venyaminov and Kalnin 1990; Arrondo et al. 1993; Jackson and Mantsch 1995; Barth 2000) and on a previous spectroscopic characterization of the same deletion mutants (Moro et al. 2004). Removal of the helical lid results in the disappearance of a differential feature at 1650()/1636(+) and 1645()/1631(+) in H2O and D2O, respectively. The isotopic shift observed upon sample deuteration (5 cm1) is compatible with a solvent-exposed helical segment(s) undergoing a conformational change once ATP is bound. The observed negative/positive differential signal might be a consequence of a downshift of the helical component that could be due to hydrogen bond shortening. Regarding the biochemical behavior of the lidless mutant, it is important that it maintains the capacity of peptide release stimulation by ATP (Pellecchia et al. 2000; Buczynski et al. 2001; Moro et al. 2004), and of ATPase activity enhancement by peptides (Fig. 7
) at 25°C, indicating that the two domains of the deletion mutant are allosterically communicated. This indicates, as previously suggested (Pellecchia et al. 2000; Moro et al. 2004), that under these experimental conditions at least part of the allosteric transition involves the
-sandwich and does not require the lid to occur. Therefore, the differences observed between the ATP-induced IR spectra of DnaK(1507) and the ATPase domain are due to the allosteric interaction between the ATPase domain and the
-sandwich subdomain of the SBD that takes places immediately after nucleotide binding. The main difference between these spectra in the amide I region is the drastic reduction of the intensity of the positive differential feature at 1636 cm1 and 1631 cm1 in H2O and D2O, respectively. Again, the position in both solvents and the downshift observed upon deuteration is compatible with a solvent-exposed
-structure changing its conformation after ATP binding (Arrondo et al. 1993; Jackson and Matsch 1995). NMR studies of the isolated
-sandwich subdomain have also suggested that the loops forming the peptide binding pocket are highly flexible and that one of the
-strands (B3) is less ordered than in the crystal structure (Pellecchia et al. 2000; Stevens et al. 2003). Furthermore, peptide binding rigidifies the
-subdomain and reduces the mobility of the above-mentioned loops, locking in B3. Conformational changes in the same structural elements of the entire chaperone molecule would be compatible with the assignment and the small amplitude of the differential signals observed in this study.
The second question is related to the quantitative aspect of this conformational change. An attempt to quantify the structural changes of the protein backbone upon ATP binding might be carried out using the COBSI (change of backbone structure and interaction) index. This parameter, defined by Barth et al. (1996), relates the integrated intensity of the absorbance changes to the total protein absorbance in the amide I region (17001610 cm1). The small value of the COBSI index (105), four orders of magnitude lower than that of the thermal denaturation of the protein (0.12, obtained from Moro et al. 2004), suggests that the conformational rearrangement is localized, and most likely involves modifications of the hydrogen bonding pattern within specific secondary structures rather than a net change in secondary structure. Regardless of which of the proposed alternatives to open the substrate binding site in response to ATP binding takes placebending of helix B (Zhu et al. 1996) or displacement of the complete lid (Wang et al. 1998)our data indicate that neither of them is accompanied by a net change in secondary structure of the full-length protein.
A comparison of ours and NMR data is possible for the ATPase domain of the protein, since the effect of ADP and ATP on the nucleotide binding domain (NBD) of T. thermophilus has been characterized by NMR (Revington et al. 2004). In good agreement with the results presented here, it was shown that the differences between the nucleotide-bound states are less widespread than those observed between the apo and the ADP states. The residues involved in these conformational differences were located around the nucleotide binding site (Revington et al. 2004), and those showing the largest chemical shifts when comparing the nucleotide states were clustered at the interface between subdomains 1A and 1B. This region was also identified as the binding channel for DnaJ and is close to the linker that connects the ATPase and the SBD of DnaK. Therefore, the small absorbance differences between both nucleotide containing protein states are in agreement with NMR data.
While other techniques detect a global conformational change in the SBD of DnaK or in one of its subdomains (Buchberger et al. 1995; Farr et al. 1998; Moro et al. 2003; Slepenkov and Witt 2003), TR-IR can resolve in real time structural rearrangements affecting both the
and the
-subdomains of the wild-type DnaK. An interesting finding of this study is that absorbance changes assigned to the lid and the
-subdomains of the SBD show the same time dependence after ATP binding and its subsequent hydrolysis. If the conformational change at the
-subdomain reduces the affinity of DnaK for peptide substrates, and the conformational change at the lid subdomain is involved in moving the lid away from the peptide binding site, the functional consequence of this kinetic coupling is that ATP binding would efficiently mediate diffusion of the released peptide to the medium. A recent NMR study of a deletion mutant of T. thermophilus Hsp70 lacking the lid subdomain has shown that the ATPase domain and the
-subdomain of this protein behave as a single unit and not as two individual domains connected by a flexible linker, indicating that these protein regions should be closely docked (Revington et al. 2005). The kinetic coupling found in this work for the full-length protein indicates that the lid subdomain also forms part of the structural unit closely connected to the ATPase domain. Furthermore, we have also found an important role for the lid subdomain in stabilizing the binding site to display a convenient affinity for peptide substrates, as well as the interdomain interface at stress temperatures to allow bidirectional transmission of the allosteric signal. The interactions that the lid establishes with the
-subdomain, through helix B and the loops flanking the peptide binding site, have been proposed to stabilize the ability of DnaK to stably bind substrates against the thermal challenge (Moro et al. 2004). Our present observation, regarding defective allosteric signaling at stress temperatures, might be explained considering that these interactions either stabilize the region of the
-subdomain that forms part of the interdomain interface, or that the lid is close enough to the ATPase domain and also contributes to the interdomain interaction and hence stabilizes the allosteric interface. Both observations support the view of SBD and ATPase domain functioning as a single unit, e.g., in a concerted manner, in the full-length DnaK.
A comparison of the results presented here with the proposed mechanisms of DnaK action (Theyssen et al. 1996; Slepenkov and Witt 1998) also indicates:
20 sec1) described by fluorescence spectroscopy is not accompanied by a net change in secondary structure, in spite of inducing local alterations in the local environment of W102.
0.65 sec1) triggered by ATP binding is associated with a conformational transition that as seen by IR mainly affects the SBD and therefore reflects a concerted allosteric conformational modification of both subdomains of the SBD. A concerted structural transition in the ATPase domain of DnaK in response to peptide binding, e.g., in the opposite direction to that described here, has also been described (Slepenkov and Witt 2003), suggesting that both protein domains are tightly communicated.
0.004 sec1) relaxes the protein conformation to an ADP-like state. In summary, these results suggest that the SBD, in spite of having two structurally different subdomains, has been designed to function as a single functional unit in connection with the ATPase domain, in the sense that both subdomains (1) respond concomitantly to the allo-steric signal generated by ATP binding and its subsequent hydrolysis and (2) are required to stabilize the interdomain interface.
| Materials and methods |
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Sample preparation
Sample buffer was exchanged by extensive dialysis against 100 mM MOPS (pH 7.0), 50 mM KCl, 10 mM MgCl2 in H2O or repeated concentration and dilution steps with the same buffer made in D2O, using Centricon 30 (Millipore-Amicon) filters. IR samples were prepared by drying onto a CaF2 window 1 µL of the following reagents: 9 mM caged nucleotide (Molecular Probes-Invitrogen) and 50 mM DTT. They were rehydrated with 2.5 µL of the desired protein dissolved in the above buffer, and the samples were sealed with a second window. Protein concentration was
1 and 1.4 mM in D2O and H2O, respectively, as estimated spectrophotometrically using an extinction coefficient of
280 = 15,800 M1cm1 (Montgomery et al. 1999). All experiments were carried out using thermostated cell holders at 25°C unless otherwise stated.
Time-resolved infrared spectroscopy (TR-IR)
Experiments were performed in a Nexus 870 (Thermo Nicolet) IR spectrophotometer equipped with an MCT detector. Photolytic release of nucleotides from their caged derivatives was triggered with a Xenon flash tube. The voltage of the flash power supply was adjusted to release the desired nucleotide concentration that in all cases was the same as the protein concentration in the sample (single-turnover conditions). Data were acquired with double-sided interferograms, at a spectral resolution of 4 cm1.
To improve the signal-to-noise ratio, signals obtained from several samples were averaged after normalizing the spectra to an identical protein concentration. Normalization prevents the possible predominance of individual samples with the highest protein concentrations in the averaged spectra, and was performed as previously described (vonGermar et al. 2000). Control experiments on samples prepared as described above but without protein were performed in the same time interval to obtain the photolysis spectra. For the kinetic analysis of ATP-induced difference spectra, selected bands were integrated as described previously (Barth et al. 1991; vonGermar et al. 2000). The time slots of spectra recording were represented by their average times. The band intensities were fitted to single exponential equations (Sigmaplot 8.0, SPSS Inc.).
Nucleotide binding assay
Free and caged nucleotide (10 µM) were centrifuged in the absence or the presence of 10 µM DnaK, using microconcentration filters (Microcon 30, Millipore-Amicon). The filtration membrane retained the protein and the bound nucleotide while the unbound nucleotide passed through it. Nucleotide concentration in the filtrate was estimated from the absorbance at 260 nm, using an extinction coefficient of 15,400 M1 cm1.
ATPase activity
Steady-state ATPase activity measurements were carried out in 40 mM HEPES (pH 7.5), 50 mM KCl, 10 mM MgCl2 in a thermostated cuvette, using an enzymatic ATP-regenerating system (Moro et al. 2003). Protein and ATP concentrations were 5 µM and 1 mM, respectively. ATP hydrolysis was followed recording the NADH absorbance decrease at 340 nm in a Cary (Varian) spectrophotometer. NRLLLTG (NR) peptide was added at the desired final concentration, and the ATPase activity stimulation curves were fitted to the equation Ai = Amax * [NR]i/(Kd + [NR]i), Kd being an apparent binding constant.
| Acknowledgments |
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