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Medical Research Council Functional Genetics Unit, Department of Human Anatomy and Genetics (S.D.B., B.M.S., L.A.B., D.B.S.) and Department of Biochemistry (P.C.B.), University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom
Abstract
Ionotropic GABA receptors are abundant in both vertebrate and invertebrate nervous systems, where they mediate rapid, mostly inhibitory synaptic transmission. A GABA-gated chloride channel subunit from Drosophila melanogaster [Resistant to Dieldrin (RDL)] has been cloned, functionally expressed, and found to exhibit many aspects of the pharmacology of native, bicuculline-insensitive insect GABA receptors. RDL is the target of the commercially important insecticide fipronil. A point mutation in the channel-lining region of the RDL molecule is known to underlie most cases of resistance to insecticides acting on GABA receptors. RDL is widely distributed throughout the insect nervous system, but the subunit composition of RDL-containing in native receptors is unknown. It is possible that in some instances, RDL coexpresses with glutamate-gated chloride channel subunits. Other ionotropic receptor subunits (LCCH3 and GRD) form GABA-gated cation channels when heterologously expressed. Interest in RDL as a model ligandgated anion channel has been enhanced by the recent discovery of pre-mRNA A-to-I editing, which, together with alternative splicing, adds to the functional diversity of this GABA receptor subunit.
Ionotropic GABA receptor molecules (GABARs) are members of the dicysteine-loop (`Cys-loop') superfamily of neurotransmitter receptors, which also includes nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, type 3 5-hydroxytryptamine receptors, and glycine receptors (Karlin and Akabas, 1995; Karlin, 2002; Olsen et al., 2004). Ionotropic GABARs are pentameric proteins. Each polypeptide subunit possesses a long N-terminal extracellular domain containing residues that contribute to the neurotransmitter binding site and four transmembrane regions (M1eCM4), the second of which (M2) provides many of the residues that line the integral chloride channel (Whiting, 2003; Kim et al., 2004; Darlison et al., 2005). Vertebrate ionotropic GABARs may be divided into two pharmacological categories: bicuculline-sensitive GABAA receptors (composed of 1eC6, 1eC3, 1eC3, , , , and 1eC3 subunits and allosterically modulated by benzodiazepines and barbiturates as well as pregnane steroids) and bicuculline-insensitive GABAC receptors (composed of the three known isoforms of the subunit and insensitive to the majority of modulators of GABAA receptors) (Mustafa, 1995; Sieghart, 1995; McKernan and Whiting, 1996; Whiting, 2003; Connolly and Wafford, 2004; Rudolph and Mohler, 2004). This division into A and C subtypes is difficult to reconcile with recent findings on GABARs in brainstem neurons, which are composed of 1 subunits coexpressed with 1 and 2 subunits (Milligan et al., 2004) to yield receptors with properties of both GABAA and GABAC subtypes. Furthermore, GABAA and GABAB receptors, which differ structurally and in their signaling mechanisms, may be closely functionally coupled. This is supported by the recent finding that the GABAA 2S subunit forms a complex with GABABR1 subunits (thereby enhancing GABAB receptor trafficking to the cell surface, which otherwise requires coexpression with the GABABR2 subunit). The GABAA 2S subunit also forms a complex with both GABABR1 and GABABR2 subunits to allow agonist-induced receptor internalization (Balasubramanian et al., 2004).
Insect ionotropic GABARs do not readily fit the vertebrate GABAA/GABAC receptor categories. The majority are distinguished from the GABAA type of vertebrate receptors by their insensitivity to bicuculline and differ from GABAC receptors in that they are subject to allosteric modulation, albeit weak, by benzodiazepines and barbiturates (Sattelle, 1990). An insect ionotropic Drosophila melanogaster GABAR subunit, RDL (Resistant to Dieldrin), can be heterologously expressed to form functional homo-oligomeric receptors, the pharmacology of which closely resembles that of the majority of native insect GABARs and so has proved to be of value in investigating GABAR physiology and pharmacology. Here, we show that RDL very closely mimics the pharmacology of most insect native neuronal GABARs reported so far and is therefore a useful homomeric model insect GABAR. As such, it facilitates the interpretation of site-directed mutagenesis experiments.
The Insect GABA-Gated Chloride Channel Family
The GABA-receptor subunit-encoding Rdl gene was isolated from a naturally occurring dieldrin-resistant strain of the dipteran D. melanogaster (ffrench-Constant et al., 1991, 1993; ffrench-Constant and Rocheleau, 1993). Highly conserved Rdl-like receptor genes have since been identified in several other insect orders. RDL subunits are distributed throughout the adult (Harrison et al., 1996) and embryonic (Aronstein and Ffrench-Constant, 1995) nervous system of D. melanogaster but not on muscle (Harrison et al., 1996). Their expression pattern suggests roles in fast GABAergic synaptic transmission (Buchner et al., 1988; DiAntonio et al., 1993; Harrison et al., 1996) and learning (Harrison et al., 1996; Strambi et al., 1998; Sattelle et al., 2000) as well as visual and olfactory processing (Harrison et al., 1996). Recordings of spontaneous GABA-mediated currents in D. melanogaster embryonic neurons have provided electrophysiological evidence that RDL contributes to synaptic GABARs (Lee et al., 2003).
Other subunits in the D. melanogaster genome are predicted to have anion channel characteristics based on signature sequences in their predicted transcripts, among which there are GABAR subunit candidates. These include CG6927, CG7589, CG11340, and CG12344. Until functional expression data are available, these candidates are difficult to distinguish from other insect ligand-gated anion channels, which include histamine-gated chloride channels (Gengs et al., 2002), a glutamate-gated chloride channel subunit (Cully et al., 1996), candidate GABA-/glycine-gated ion channels GRD (Harvey et al., 1994) and CG7589 (identified in genome annotation), as well as CG8916, a protein identified in genome annotations as a GABAA receptor but so far not functionally expressed. Furthermore, although the GABAR-like sequences of LCCH3, another GABAR-like subunit, and GRD suggested possible anion channel activity, coexpression of these two subunits in Xenopus laevis oocytes results in a cationic channel (Gisselmann et al., 2004). This finding counsels caution when interpreting annotations based on sequence data alone. RDL and LCCH3 coexpress to form a picrotoxinin-insensitive, bicuculline-sensitive channel with pharmacology quite unlike native insect GABARs (Zhang et al., 1995). So far, coexpression of RDL with GRD has not been reported. It is noteworthy that RDL is not expressed on cockroach muscle (Harrison et al., 1996) despite the existence of GABA-gated chloride currents in these cells (Rauh et al., 1997a; Schnee et al., 1997). This suggests the existence of muscle GABA-gated chloride channels that do not contain RDL.
Alternative Splicing of the Rdl Gene
By means of alternative splicing in two of its nine exons (exons 3 and 6), the RDL gene encodes four distinct polypeptides (Fig. 1A), all of which are expressed (ffrench-Constant and Rocheleau, 1993). Three splice variants (RDLac, RDLbd, and RDLab) have been cloned and functionally expressed (Hosie and Sattelle, 1996a). Residues that vary in exon 3 lie upstream to loop D of the GABA binding site and near the equivalent positions of known determinants of agonist potency in GABAA receptors of vertebrates. Alternative splicing occurs in other ligand-gated ion channels (Villarroel, 1999) and has been shown to affect agonist sensitivity in glycine receptors (Miller et al., 2004). It is noteworthy that alternative splicing of the D. melanogaster nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subunit D6 (Grauso et al., 2002) also occurs in exon 3, which aligns to exon 3 of RDL. The exon 6 alternatively spliced residues of RDL lie in loops F and C (Fig. 1B) and exon 6 splicing affects the expressed receptor's affinity for GABA (Hosie and Sattelle, 1996a) (Fig. 1C). The agonist profile for one splice variant (RDLbc) remains to be determined. Nevertheless, two of the variant amino acid residues are particularly interesting: the two splice variants containing the `a' form of exon 3 (RDLac and RDLad) have Val53 and Leu57, respectively, whereas those containing the `b' form (RDLbc and RDLbd) have Leu53 and Lys57. These two residues are near a valine (Val46 in the nicotinic subunit of modified muscle cells in the electric organ of Torpedo marmorata), which is highly conserved among ligand-gated ion channels and in T. marmorata is proposed to form the closest contact between the ligand-binding and transmembrane domains (Miyazawa et al., 2003). This suggests that RDL exon 3 is involved in the coupling of ligand binding to pore opening. Structural perturbation due to alternative splicing in exon 6 has been shown to account for differences in the potency of three glycine receptor agonists (Miller et al., 2004).
The 10 alternatively-spliced residues affected by exon 6 splicing are located in loops F and C of the RDL binding site on the external face of the vestibule (Fig. 1B). Loop F is known to be involved in GABA binding and chloride channel gating in the vertebrate GABAAR 1 subunit (Newell and Czajkowski, 2003). Our comparative models of the RDL receptor suggest that exon 6 alternative splicing may influence the putative agonist binding site at the RDL subunit interface (S. D. Buckingham, P. C. Biggin, B. M. Sattelle, L. A. Brown, and D. B. Sattelle, unpublished observations).
The pharmacological diversity among vertebrate GABAA receptor subtypes is largely determined by different subunit isoforms that make up the receptor. Because the D. melanogaster genome contains only a small number of genes identified as GABAR subunits, two of which can be coexpressed to form GABA-gated cation channels, the alternative splicing of the Rdl gene in D. melanogaster may serve to increase functional diversity in the absence of a large number of GABAR subunits. This possibility is strengthened by findings from immunocytochemical studies suggesting that RDL is very widely distributed and hence a likely component of many insect nervous system GABARs (Aronstein et al., 1996; Harrison et al., 1996).
Pre-mRNA Editing of RDL
Pre-mRNA A-to-I editing is widespread in animal tissues (Athanasiadis et al., 2004). It involves substitution of an inosine for an adenosine, the result being interpreted by the translation machinery as a guanosine. RDL is edited at four sites that may, based on comparison with equivalent residues in other receptors, affect the receptor's responses to GABA. They are R122G in the N-terminal domain, I283V in the first transmembrane domain, N294D in the TM1eCTM2 loop, and M360V in the TM3eCTM4 loop (Fig. 2A). So far, the effects of these substitutions on receptor function have not been tested, but comparison with equivalent residues in other subunits suggests that at least some of these edited residues are at positions likely to affect agonist actions. The residue Arg122 is in loop A of the agonist binding site, adjacent to the equivalent residue (Trp93) in nicotinic acetylcholine receptors known to be critical in agonist binding (Fig. 2B). The edited residue Met360 is located in the large intracellular loop between TM3 and TM4, which has been shown to influence GABAR desensitization kinetics and GABA EC50 (Fisher, 2004) and aligns with Leu277 of the human 2 GABAA receptor subunit, which, when mutated to alanine, results in a 50-fold increase in the EC50 for GABA (O'Shea and Harrison, 2000).
RDL As a Model of Native Insect GABA Receptors
In addition to its potential as a model for anionic ligandgated ion channels, RDL may also provide a convenient model for insect GABARs, which are the targets of commercially important insecticides, such as fipronil, used in animal health and crop protection applications. Although little is known of the pharmacology or physiology of native D. melanogaster GABA receptors, RDL shares a number of distinctive features with native GABA receptors of other insect species.
The Agonist Profile and Bicuculline Insensitivity of RDL Resembles the Most Abundant Native Insect GABARs. RDL homomeric receptors are distinguished from vertebrate GABAA receptors by their insensitivity to bicuculline, their low sensitivity to 3-aminopropanesulfonic acid, and their high sensitivity to both isoguvacine (Hosie and Sattelle, 1996a) and muscimol (Buckingham et al., 1994a) (Fig. 1C). They are distinguished from vertebrate GABAC receptors by the high efficacy of muscimol, cis-aminocrotonic acid (CACA), and isoguvacine. Such pharmacology is typical of many native insect GABARs (Lummis and Sattelle, 1985, 1986; Sattelle et al., 1988). Unlike many native insect GABARs (Brotz and Borst, 1996), however, RDL is sensitive to CACA, an agonist of vertebrate GABAC, but not of GABAA, receptors (Hosie and Sattelle, 1996a). However, it should be noted that CACA does act on some insect GABARs, including those that mediate inhibition by identified filiform hair receptors of an identified projection interneuron (Gauglitz and Pfluger, 2001).
A feature of most insect GABARs is an insensitivity to bicuculline, a feature shared by extrasynaptic GABARs on the motor neuron Df of Periplaneta americana (Sattelle et al., 1988; Buckingham et al., 1994b), synaptic GABARs on the giant interneuron 2 of P. americana (Buckingham et al., 1994b), GABARs that mediate inhibition by identified filiform hair receptors of an identified projection interneuron (Gauglitz and Pfluger, 2001), motion-sensitive visual interneurons of the blowfly Calliphora erythrocephala (Brotz and Borst, 1996), GABA-mediated inhibitory postsynaptic potentials recorded in an identified locust (Schistocerca gregaria) interneuron (Watson and Burrows, 1987) and many, but not all, locust (Locusta migratoria) neuron ionotropic GABARs (Lees et al., 1987; Benson, 1988). However, it is clear that, in addition to bicuculline-insensitive receptors, a class of bicuculline-sensitive GABARs also exists in insects. For example, bicuculline blocks ionotropic GABARs of some adult (Waldrop et al., 1987) and larval Manduca sexta abdominal ganglion neurons (Sattelle et al., 2003) as well as electrically evoked or odor-evoked inhibitory postsynaptic potentials and GABA responses in projection neurons of antennal lobes of this species (Christensen et al., 1998a,b). It is clear, however, that RDL and its equivalent cloned from Heliothis virescens (Wolff and Wingate, 1998) resemble, in their insensitivity to bicuculline, the majority of insect ionotropic GABARs.
RDL Provides a Useful Model of the Native Convulsant Antagonist Site. The convulsant antagonist site is the target of insecticides, including fipronil (Fig. 3), although fipronil, at micromolar concentrations, has also been shown to be a potent blocker of insect (Ikeda et al., 2003; Zhao et al., 2004) and nematode (Horoszok et al., 2001) L-glutamateeCgated chloride channels. Pharmacological differences between insect and vertebrate GABARs at this site have been shown to underlie the selectivity of these compounds for insects. RDL shares much of the convulsant pharmacology that distinguishes insect from vertebrate GABARs (Buckingham et al., 1996). The pharmacology of the convulsant site of RDL has been delineated in detail in a structure/function analysis of the sensitivity of RDL homomers to a range of picrodendrin analogs (Hosie et al., 1996). As is the case for in situ insect GABARs, RDL is also blocked by 3,3-bis-trifluromethyl-bicyclo-[2,2,1]heptane-2,2-dicarbonitrile (BIDN) (Hosie et al., 1995; Buckingham et al., 1996) (Fig. 4), an important new probe of the insect convulsant site (Rauh et al., 1997a,b). Although both BIDN and fipronil (Fig. 3) are potent blockers of RDL (Buckingham et al., 1994a, 1996; Rauh et al., 1997a; Grolleau and Sattelle, 2000) (Figs. 3 and 4) and in situ insect GABARs (Rauh et al., 1997a), single channel studies have revealed that they act at distinct albeit possibly overlapping sites (Grolleau and Sattelle, 2000) (Fig. 3, C and D). Indeed, as many as four convulsant binding sites have been identified in housefly head membranes (Deng et al., 1993).
RDL Mimics the Barbiturate and Steroid Insensitivity of Native Insect GABA Receptors. GABARs of insects are only weakly sensitive to pregnane steroids and to pentobarbital, which potently enhance vertebrate GABAA receptors (Lummis and Sattelle, 1986). Phenobarbital and pentobarbital (10 eeC1 mM) enhanced the GABA responses of RDL homomers (Buckingham et al., 1996). The pregnane steroid 5-pregnan-3 -ol-20-one (10 e) yielded a moderate enhancement of the GABA-response of RDL homomers (Millar et al., 1994), reflecting the low steroid sensitivity of native insect GABARs. The potency of pentobarbital and phenobarbital on RDL homomers (Hosie and Sattelle, 1996b) is similar to that observed on native locust GABARs (Lees et al., 1987) and less than that seen on vertebrate GABAA receptors. The steroid site on vertebrate GABARs remains elusive; once detected, however, it will interesting to compare it with the equivalent regions of RDL, which is much less sensitive to these compounds.
Benzodiazepines Are Less Potent on RDL Homomers than on Native Insect GABA Receptors. Although RDL mimics well the agonist, competitive antagonist, and convulsant sites of insect GABARs, differences have emerged among RDL and known native insect GABARs in their sensitivity to benzodiazepines. For example, whereas the agonist responses of certain bicuculline-insensitive insect GABARs are enhanced by micromolar concentrations of flunitrazepam (Sattelle et al., 1988), the GABA responses of RDL homomers (Millar et al., 1994) or its H. virescens equivalent (Wolff and Wingate, 1998) are unaffected by flunitrazepam (100 e). More importantly, insect native GABARs and RDL homomers are both enhanced by lower concentrations of 4'-chlorodiazepam (Ro5-4864) (it inhibits native receptors at higher concentrations; R. Higashino and D. B. Sattelle, unpublished obervations), although RDL receptors were approximately 100-fold less sensitive to this compound than native insect receptors (Sattelle et al., 1988; Buckingham et al., 1996; Hosie and Sattelle, 1996b).
Thus, RDL homomers do not match closely the benzodiazepine or barbiturate pharmacology of known insect GABARs. It is therefore probable that native GABARs of insects are composed of RDL coexpressed with other as-yet-unidentified subunits.
Coassembly of RDL with Glutamate-Gated Chloride Receptor Subunits
One possible explanation for the difference between RDL homomers and native receptors at the benzodiazepine site is that native insect GABARs are not RDL homomers but include other subunit types or are a mix of RDL splice variants. Indeed, there is evidence that the GABARs present at the neuromuscular junction of Caenorhabditis elegans are heteromultimers composed of two splice variants encoded by the unc-49 gene (Bamber et al., 2005). In heterologously expressed vertebrate GABAA receptors, the efficacy of benzodiazepines is highly dependent upon receptor subtype composition (Buhr and Sigel, 1997; Smith, 2001). Indeed, the single channel properties of RDL-containing receptors on cultured D. melanogaster neurons differ from those of RDL homomers (Zhang et al., 1995). Thus, native RDL-containing receptors are likely to be hetero-oligomers of RDL and other, as-yet-unknown subunits. Heterologous expression studies provide evidence that coexpression of RDL with other insect putative GABAR subunits results in receptors with distinct pharmacologies (Table 1). In a recent study (Ludmerer et al., 2002), antibodies to RDL and to a D. melanogaster glutamate-gated chloride channel subunit both immunoprecipitated the entire fraction of receptors for the insecticide (nodulosporic acid), suggesting that RDL coassembles in vivo with a glutamate receptor subunit—the first evidence for coassembly of subunits from different subclasses of ligand-gated ion channels. Because RDL staining is not observed in muscle, even though GABA-gated chloride channels are present in insect muscle, such coexpression must be confined to certain regions of the nervous system.
GABA-Gated Cation Channels
It was recently reported (Gisselmann et al., 2004) that GRD and LCCH3 form GABA-gated cation channels when coexpressed in X. laevis oocytes. These channels are bicuculline-insensitive but are blocked by picrotoxin. Unlike RDL, they are insensitive to dieldrin and diazepam. It would be interesting to pursue further the expression patterns of RDL and these two subunits—RDL expression is not known to overlap with that of LCCH3 (Aronstein et al., 1996), but the expression patterns of GRD have not yet been reported, so the prediction that the expression patterns of LCCH3 and GRD overlap remains untested. A GABA-gated cation channel (EXP-1) has also been cloned from C. elegans (Beg and Jorgensen, 2003). No native GABA-gated cation channel has yet been recorded from any insect neuron, so if such receptors exist in insects, they may be rare.
Studies on other homomeric receptors from the ligand-gated ion channel superfamily offer some insight into the residues that define the charge-selectivity filter of the RDL receptor. In the case of both the 7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (Corringer et al., 1999a,b) and the 5HT3 receptor (Gunthorpe and Lummis, 2001), selected residues in the TM1-TM2 loop and within TM2 dictate whether the receptors are cationic or anionic. An alignment of RDL with LCCH3, GRD, and the 7 nAChR suggests that GRD at least shares similarities with the cationic 7 receptor at these key residues (Fig. 5A).
Molecular Target for Insecticides and a Point Mutation in RDL That Accounts for Resistance
As GABARs are prevalent in the nervous systems of insects, they are the targets of naturally occurring (e.g., picrotoxinin and a wide range of picrotoxin-like molecules of plant origin) as well as man-made (e.g., dieldrin, fipronil) insecticides. In the past, dieldrin, the structure of which can be related to picrotoxin, was a major insecticide, but it has been banned because it persists in the environment and because its intensive use in the years after World War II resulted in many examples of resistance to insecticide. Fipronil is the first of the phenylpyrazole group of chemicals to be introduced for pest control and is now a major pesticide in use with crops and as an antiparasitic (flea and mite control), with an estimated world market of US$150 million. The usefulness of an insecticide is often limited by the development of resistance, which is common in field populations of many insect species (Georghiu, 1986). In the case of dieldrin resistance in D. melanogaster, insecticide resistance arises from the substitution of a single amino acid: Ala Ser at the 2' position in the lumen of the GABA receptor's channel (Hosie et al., 1997; ffrench-Constant et al., 2000; Bass et al., 2004) (Fig. 5B). In the peach aphid, Myzus persicae, cyclodiene resistance results from an Ala Gly mutation (Anthony et al., 1998). Fipronil resistance in the RDL equivalent in Drosophila simulans has also been shown to arise from the two mutations, Ala Gly similar to the equivalent mutation in D. melanogaster, and a T350M mutation in the third transmembrane domain (Le Goff et al., 2005). The mutation at Thr350 has not been described in any field populations of dieldrin-resistant D. melanogaster or in any mosquito populations. Resistance raised in the laboratory (Le Goff et al., 2005) may arise from a selection pressure different from that in the field, resulting in different mutations. In functional expression studies comparing the wild-type and resistant forms of D. melanogaster RDL, 2' Ala Ser confers resistance to a variety of insecticides, such as fipronil, dieldrin, picrotoxinin, and picrodendrin-O, which act allosterically as noncompetitive antagonists of insect GABARs. This substitution also renders RDL homomers resistant to the antagonists t-butylbicyclophosphorothionate, lindane, and BIDN (Sattelle, 1990; Buckingham et al., 1994a, 1996; Hosie et al., 1995) (Fig. 2D), although these compounds interact noncompetitively in radioligand binding studies, suggesting that they have distinct binding sites. The ability of RDL to form functional homomers allows a more convenient study of the effects of the A302S/G mutation upon single channel properties of the channel, as well as simplifying the interpretations of such experiments. For example, the single channel properties of dieldrin-resistant RDL stably expressed in a D. melanogaster cell line provided the first evidence that the insecticide fipronil and the new convulsant site probe BIDN act at separate sites (Grolleau and Sattelle, 2000) (Summarized in Fig. 4).
Conclusions
The cloned RDL receptor is not only a convenient model of insect ionotropic GABARs but also a convenient homomeric anionic ligand-gated ion channel accessible to combined computational and site-directed mutagenesis approaches to understanding the structural basis of anion channel function and insecticide resistance. The experimental work so far indicates that RDL is widely distributed throughout the central nervous systems of insects of different orders (Lepidoptera, Diptera, Coleoptera and Dictyoptera), is located at synaptic sites and on neuronal cell bodies, and that RDL homomers mimic the characteristic agonist, barbiturate, and pregnane steroid pharmacology of native bicuculline-insensitive insect GABARs. In all these respects, RDL very closely resembles native insect GABARs. The close similarity between RDL homomers and native insect GABARs suggests that RDL-like subunits, which are widely distributed in the D. melanogaster nervous system, may underlie several aspects of the distinct pharmacology of bicuculline-insensitive insect GABARs.
The RDL subunit offers potential for generating insect-vertebrate chimeric GABARs, which will help identify the binding sites of modulators that differ in their actions on vertebrate and insect GABARs. Its ability to form homomeric receptors that resemble native receptors also facilitates computational studies, just as the vertebrate 7 receptor enabled molecular modeling of cationic ligand-gated ion channels. Expression studies on the fourth as-yet-uncharacterised splice variant will complete the description of all splice variants for this receptor. Finally, expression studies of edited RDL receptors will provide the first functional characterization of the consequences of pre-mRNA A-to-I editing in GABARs.
Acknowledgements
We are indebted to Drs. Alistair Hosie and Andrew Jones for helpful discussions.
doi:10.1124/mol.105.015313.
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