4,931 research outputs found
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Ice-COLD-PCR enables rapid amplification and robust enrichment for low-abundance unknown DNA mutations
Identifying low-abundance mutations within wild-type DNA is important in several fields of medicine, including cancer, prenatal diagnosis and infectious diseases. However, utilizing the clinical and diagnostic potential of rare mutations is limited by sensitivity of the molecular techniques employed, especially when the type and position of mutations are unknown. We have developed a novel platform that incorporates a synthetic reference sequence within a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) reaction, designed to enhance amplification of unknown mutant sequences during COLD-PCR (CO-amplification at Lower Denaturation temperature). This new platform enables an Improved and Complete Enrichment (ice-COLD-PCR) for all mutation types and eliminates shortcomings of previous formats of COLD-PCR. We evaluated ice-COLD-PCR enrichment in regions of TP53 in serially diluted mutant and wild-type DNA mixtures. Conventional-PCR, COLD-PCR and ice-COLD-PCR amplicons were run in parallel and sequenced to determine final mutation abundance for a range of mutations representing all possible single base changes. Amplification by ice-COLD-PCR enriched all mutation types and allowed identification of mutation abundances down to 1%, and 0.1% by Sanger sequencing or pyrosequencing, respectively, surpassing the capabilities of other forms of PCR. Ice-COLD-PCR will help elucidate the clinical significance of low-abundance mutations and our understanding of cancer origin, evolution, recurrence-risk and treatment diagnostics
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Enrichment of Mutations in Multiple DNA Sequences Using COLD-PCR in Emulsion
Background: Multiplex detection of low-level mutant alleles in the presence of wild-type DNA would be useful for several fields of medicine including cancer, pre-natal diagnosis and infectious diseases. COLD-PCR is a recently developed method that enriches low-level mutations during PCR cycling, thus enhancing downstream detection without the need for special reagents or equipment. The approach relies on the differential denaturation of DNA strands which contain Tm-lowering mutations or mismatches, versus ‘homo-duplex’ wild-type DNA. Enabling multiplex-COLD-PCR that can enrich mutations in several amplicons simultaneously is desirable but technically difficult to accomplish. Here we describe the proof of principle of an emulsion-PCR based approach that demonstrates the feasibility of multiplexed-COLD-PCR within a single tube, using commercially available mutated cell lines. This method works best with short amplicons; therefore, it could potentially be used on highly fragmented samples obtained from biological material or FFPE specimens. Methods: Following a multiplex pre-amplification of TP53 exons from genomic DNA, emulsions which incorporate the multiplex product, PCR reagents and primers specific for a given TP53 exon are prepared. Emulsions with different TP53 targets are then combined in a single tube and a fast-COLD-PCR program that gradually ramps up the denaturation temperature over several PCR cycles is applied (temperature-tolerant, TT-fast-eCOLD-PCR). The range of denaturation temperatures applied encompasses the critical denaturation temperature corresponding to all the amplicons included in the reaction, resulting to a gradual enrichment of mutations within all amplicons encompassed by emulsion. Results: Validation for TT-fast-eCOLD-PCR is provided for TP53 exons 6–9. Using dilutions of mutated cell-line into wild-type DNA, we demonstrate simultaneous mutation enrichment between 7 to 15-fold in all amplicons examined. Conclusions: TT-fast-eCOLD-PCR expands the versatility of COLD-PCR and enables high-throughput enrichment of low-level mutant alleles over multiple sequences in a single tube
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Differential strand separation at critical temperature: A minimally disruptive enrichment method for low-abundance unknown DNA mutations
Detection of low-level DNA variations in the presence of wild-type DNA is important in several fields of medicine, including cancer, prenatal diagnosis and infectious diseases. PCR-based methods to enrich mutations during amplification have limited multiplexing capability, are mostly restricted to known mutations and are prone to polymerase or mis-priming errors. Here, we present Differential Strand Separation at Critical Temperature (DISSECT), a method that enriches unknown mutations of targeted DNA sequences purely based on thermal denaturation of DNA heteroduplexes without the need for enzymatic reactions. Target DNA is pre-amplified in a multiplex reaction and hybridized onto complementary probes immobilized on magnetic beads that correspond to wild-type DNA sequences. Presence of any mutation on the target DNA forms heteroduplexes that are subsequently denatured from the beads at a critical temperature and selectively separated from wild-type DNA. We demonstrate multiplexed enrichment by 100- to 400-fold for KRAS and TP53 mutations at multiple positions of the targeted sequence using two to four successive cycles of DISSECT. Cancer and plasma-circulating DNA samples containing traces of mutations undergo mutation enrichment allowing detection via Sanger sequencing or high-resolution melting. The simplicity, scalability and reliability of DISSECT make it a powerful method for mutation enrichment that integrates well with existing downstream detection methods
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COLD-PCR Amplification of Bisulfite-Converted DNA Allows the Enrichment and Sequencing of Rare Un-Methylated Genomic Regions
Aberrant hypo-methylation of DNA is evident in a range of human diseases including cancer and diabetes. Development of sensitive assays capable of detecting traces of un-methylated DNA within methylated samples can be useful in several situations. Here we describe a new approach, fast-COLD-MS-PCR, which amplifies preferentially un-methylated DNA sequences. By employing an appropriate denaturation temperature during PCR of bi-sulfite converted DNA, fast-COLD-MS-PCR enriches un-methylated DNA and enables differential melting analysis or bisulfite sequencing. Using methylation on the MGMT gene promoter as a model, it is shown that serial dilutions of controlled methylation samples lead to the reliable sequencing of un-methylated sequences down to 0.05% un-methylated-to-methylated DNA. Screening of clinical glioma tumor and infant blood samples demonstrated that the degree of enrichment of un-methylated over methylated DNA can be modulated by the choice of denaturation temperature, providing a convenient method for analysis of partially methylated DNA or for revealing and sequencing traces of un-methylated DNA. Fast-COLD-MS-PCR can be useful for the detection of loss of methylation/imprinting in cancer, diabetes or diet-related methylation changes
Mutation scanning of peach floral genes
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Mutation scanning technology has been used to develop crop species with improved traits. Modifications that improve screening throughput and sensitivity would facilitate the targeted mutation breeding of crops. Technical innovations for high-resolution melting (HRM) analysis are enabling the clinic-based screening for human disease gene polymorphism. We examined the application of two HRM modifications, COLD-PCR and QMC-PCR, to the mutation scanning of genes in peach, <it>Prunus persica</it>. The targeted genes were the putative floral regulators <it>PpAGAMOUS </it>and <it>PpTERMINAL FLOWER I</it>.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>HRM analysis of <it>PpAG </it>and <it>PpTFL1 </it>coding regions in 36 peach cultivars found one polymorphic site in each gene. <it>PpTFL1 </it>and <it>PpAG </it>SNPs were used to examine approaches to increase HRM throughput. Cultivars with SNPs could be reliably detected in pools of twelve genotypes. COLD-PCR was found to increase the sensitivity of HRM analysis of pooled samples, but worked best with small amplicons. Examination of QMC-PCR demonstrated that primary PCR products for further analysis could be produced from variable levels of genomic DNA.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Natural SNPs in exons of target peach genes were discovered by HRM analysis of cultivars from a southeastern US breeding program. For detecting natural or induced SNPs in larger populations, HRM efficiency can be improved by increasing sample pooling and template production through approaches such as COLD-PCR and QMC-PCR. Technical advances developed to improve clinical diagnostics can play a role in the targeted mutation breeding of crops.</p
Study of Strategies for Genetic Variant Discrimination and Detection by Optosensing
Tesis por compendio[ES] La medicina actual se dirige hacia un enfoque más personalizado basándose en el diagnóstico molecular del paciente a través del estudio de biomarcadores específicos. Aplicando este principio molecular, el diagnóstico, pronóstico y selección de la terapia se apoyan en la identificación de variaciones específicas del genoma humano, como variaciones de un único nucleótido (SNV). Para detectar estos biomarcadores se dispone de una amplia oferta de tecnologías. Sin embargo, muchos de los métodos en uso presentan limitaciones como un elevado coste, complejidad, tiempos de análisis largos o requieren de personal y equipamiento especializado, lo que imposibilita su incorporación masiva en la mayoría de los sistemas sanitarios. Por tanto, existe la necesidad de investigar y desarrollar soluciones analíticas que aporten información sobre las variantes genéticas y que se puedan implementar en diferentes escenarios del ámbito de la salud con prestaciones competitivas y económicamente viables.
El objetivo principal de esta tesis ha sido desarrollar estrategias innovadoras para resolver el reto de la detección múltiple de variantes genéticas que se encuentran en forma minoritaria en muestras biológicas de pacientes, cubriendo las demandas asociadas al entorno clínico. Las tareas de investigación se centraron en la combinación de reacciones de discriminación alélica con amplificación selectiva de DNA y el desarrollo de sistemas ópticos de detección versátiles.
Con el fin de atender el amplio abanico de necesidades, en el primer capítulo, se presentan resultados que mejoran las prestaciones analíticas de la reacción en cadena de la polimerasa (PCR) mediante la incorporación de una etapa al termociclado y de un agente bloqueante amplificando selectivamente las variantes minoritarias que fueron monitorizadas mediante fluorescencia a tiempo real. En el segundo capítulo, se logró la discriminación alélica combinando la ligación de oligonucleótidos con la amplificación de la recombinasa polimerasa (RPA), que al operar a temperatura constante permitió una detección tipo point-of-care (POC). La identificación de SNV se llevó a cabo mediante hibridación en formato micromatriz, utilizando la tecnología Blu-Ray como plataforma de ensayo y detección. En el tercer capítulo, se integró la RPA con la reacción de hibridación alelo especifica en cadena (AS-HCR), en formato array para genotipar SNV a partir de DNA genómico en un chip. La lectura de los resultados se realizó mediante un smartphone. En el último capítulo, se presenta la síntesis de un nuevo reactivo bioluminiscente que se aplicó a la monitorización de biomarcadores de DNA a tiempo real y final de la RPA basada en la transferencia de energía de resonancia de bioluminiscencia (BRET), eliminando la necesidad de una fuente de excitación.
Todas las estrategias permitieron un reconocimiento especifico de la variante de interés, incluso en muestras que contenían tan solo 20 copias de DNA genómico diana. Se consiguieron resultados sensibles (límite de detección 0.5% variante/total), reproducibles (desviación estándar relativa < 19%), de manera sencilla (3 etapas o menos), rápida (tiempos cortos de 30-200 min) y permitiendo el análisis simultaneo de varios genes. Como prueba de concepto, estas estrategias se aplicaron a la detección e identificación en muestras clínicas de biomarcadores asociados a cáncer colorrectal y enfermedades cardiológicas. Los resultados se validaron por comparación con los métodos de referencia NGS y PCR, comprobándose que se mejoraban los requerimientos técnicos y la relación coste-eficacia. En conclusión, las investigaciones llevadas a cabo posibilitaron desarrollar herramientas de genotipado con propiedades analíticas competitivas y versátiles, aplicables a diferentes escenarios sanitarios, desde hospitales a entornos con pocos recursos. Estos resultados son prometedores al dar respuesta a la demanda de tecnologías alternativas para el diagnóstico molecular personalizado.[CA] La medicina actual es dirigeix cap a un enfocament més personalitzat basant-se en el diagnòstic molecular del pacient a través de l'estudi de biomarcadors específics. Aplicant aquest principi molecular, el diagnòstic, pronòstic i selecció de la teràpia es recolzen en la identificació de variacions específiques del genoma humà, com variacions d'un únic nucleòtid (SNV). Per a detectar aquests biomarcadors, es disposa d'una àmplia oferta de tecnologies. No obstant això, molts dels mètodes en ús presenten limitacions com un elevat cost, complexitat, temps d'anàlisis llargues o requereixen de personal i equipament especialitzat, la qual cosa impossibilita la seua incorporació massiva en la majoria dels sistemes sanitaris. Per tant, existeix la necessitat d'investigar i desenvolupar solucions analítiques que aporten informació sobre les variants genètiques i que es puguen implementar en diferents escenaris de l'àmbit de la salut amb prestacions competitives i econòmicament viables.
L'objectiu principal d'aquesta tesi ha sigut desenvolupar estratègies innovadores per a resoldre el repte de la detecció múltiple de variants genètiques que es troben en forma minoritària en mostres biològiques de pacients, cobrint les demandes associades a l'entorn clínic. Les tasques d'investigació es van centrar en la combinació de reaccions de discriminació al·lèlica amb amplificació selectiva de DNA i al desenvolupament de sistemes òptics de detecció versàtils.
Amb la finalitat d'atendre l'ampli ventall de necessitats, en el primer capítol, es presenten resultats que milloren les prestacions analítiques de la reacció en cadena de la polimerasa (PCR) mitjançant la incorporació d'una etapa al termociclat i d'un agent bloquejant amplificant selectivament les variants minoritàries que van ser monitoritzades mitjançant fluorescència a temps real. En el segon capítol, es va aconseguir la discriminació al·lèlica combinant el lligament d'oligonucleòtids amb l'amplificació de la recombinasa polimerasa (RPA), que en operar a temperatura constant va permetre una detecció tipus point-of-care (POC). La identificació de SNV es va dur a terme mitjançant hibridació en format micromatriu, utilitzant la tecnologia Blu-Ray com a plataforma d'assaig i detecció. En el tercer capítol, es va integrar la RPA amb la reacció d'hibridació al·lel específica en cadena (AS-HCR), en format matriu per a genotipar SNV a partir de DNA genòmic en un xip. La lectura dels resultats es va realitzar mitjançant un telèfon intel·ligent. En l'últim capítol, es presenta la síntesi d'un nou reactiu bioluminescent que es va aplicar al monitoratge de biomarcadors de DNA a temps real i final de la RPA basada en la transferència d'energia de ressonància de bioluminescència (BRET), eliminant la necessitat d'una font d'excitació.
Totes les estratègies van permetre un reconeixement específic de la variant d'interès, fins i tot en mostres que només contenien 20 còpies de DNA genòmic diana. Es van aconseguir resultats sensibles (límit de detecció 0.5% variant/total), reproduïbles (desviació estàndard relativa < 19%), de manera senzilla (3 etapes o menys), ràpida (temps curts de 30-200 min) i permetent l'anàlisi simultània de diversos gens. Com a prova de concepte, aquestes estratègies es van aplicar a la detecció i identificació en mostres clíniques de biomarcadors associats a càncer colorectal i a malalties cardiològiques. Els resultats es van validar per comparació amb els mètodes de referència NGS i PCR, comprovant-se que es milloraven els requeriments tècnics i la relació cost-eficàcia. En conclusió, les investigacions dutes a terme van possibilitar desenvolupar eines de genotipat amb propietats analítiques competitives i versàtils, aplicables a diferents escenaris sanitaris, des d'hospitals a entorns amb pocs recursos. Aquests resultats són prometedors en donar resposta a la demanda de tecnologies alternatives per al diagnòstic molecular personalitzat.[EN] Current medicine is moving towards a more personalized approach based on the patients' molecular diagnosis through the study of specific biomarkers. Diagnosis, prognosis and therapy selection, applying this molecular principle, rely on identifying specific variations in the human genome, such as single nucleotide variations (SNV). A wide range of technologies is available to detect these biomarkers. However, many of the employed methods have limitations such as high cost, complexity, long analysis times, or requiring specialized personnel and equipment, making their massive incorporation in most healthcare systems impossible. Therefore, there is a need to research and develop analytical solutions that provide information on genetic variants that can be implemented in different health scenarios with competitive and economically feasible performances.
The main objective of this thesis has been to develop innovative strategies to solve the challenge of multiple detection of genetic variants that are found in a minority amount in patient samples, covering the demands associated with the clinical setting. Research tasks focused on the combination of allelic discrimination reactions with selective DNA amplification and the development of versatile optical detection systems.
In order to meet the wide range of needs, in the first chapter, the analytical performances of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) were improved by incorporating a thermocycling step and a blocking agent to amplify selectively minority variants that were monitored by real-time fluorescence. In the second chapter, allelic discrimination was achieved by combining oligonucleotide ligation with recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA), which operates at a constant temperature, allowing point-of-care (POC) detection. SNV identification was carried out by hybridization in microarray format, using Blu-Ray technology as the assay platform and detector. RPA was integrated with allele-specific hybridization chain reaction (AS-HCR), in an array format to genotype SNV from genomic DNA on a chip in the third chapter. The reading of the results was performed using a smartphone. In the last chapter, a new bioluminescent reagent was synthesized. It was applied to real-time and endpoint DNA biomarker monitoring based on bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET), eliminating the need for an excitation source.
All the strategies allowed specific recognition of the target variant, even in samples containing as few as 20 copies of target genomic DNA. Sensitive (limit of detection 0.5% variant/total), reproducible (relative standard deviation < 19%), simple (3 steps or less), fast (short times of 30-200 min) results were achieved, allowing simultaneous analysis of several genes. As proof of concept, these strategies were applied to detect and identify biomarkers associated with colorectal cancer and cardiological diseases in clinical samples. The results were validated by comparison with reference methods such as NGS and PCR, proving that the technical requirements and cost-effectiveness were improved. In conclusion, the developed research made it possible to develop genotyping tools with competitive analytical properties and versatile, applicable to different healthcare scenarios, from hospitals to limited-resource environments. These results are promising since they respond to the demand for alternative technologies for personalized molecular diagnostics.The authors acknowledge the financial support received from the Generalitat Valenciana PROMETEO/2020/094, GRISOLIA/2014/024 PhD Grant and GVA-FPI-2017 PhD grant, the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness MINECO projects CTQ2016-75749-R and PID2019-110713RB-I00 and European Regional Development Fund (ERDF).Lázaro Zaragozá, A. (2022). Study of Strategies for Genetic Variant Discrimination and Detection by Optosensing [Tesis doctoral]. Universitat Politècnica de València. https://doi.org/10.4995/Thesis/10251/185216TESISCompendi
A review of the development of Polymerase Chain Reaction technique and its uses in Scientific field
PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction) is a scientific term and technique in molecular biology which able to generate copies of a specific DNA from two short oligodeoxynucleotide sequences (also called primers) by a polymerase-dependent repetitive thermal reaction. PCR technique brought a revolution in science especially in molecular biology since its first discovery back in 1984 as its simplicity and not a time-consuming trait. Over the past decades, PCR techniques have been modified to make it suitable for the application in each scientific field. PCR nowadays is involved in almost all studies that required DNA fragments manipulation including in food and medical analysis. By taking advantage of this revolutionary technique and if developed and used well, it would become very beneficial for humanity in many aspect
Adaptive laboratory evolution of a genome-reduced Escherichia coli.
Synthetic biology aims to design and construct bacterial genomes harboring the minimum number of genes required for self-replicable life. However, the genome-reduced bacteria often show impaired growth under laboratory conditions that cannot be understood based on the removed genes. The unexpected phenotypes highlight our limited understanding of bacterial genomes. Here, we deploy adaptive laboratory evolution (ALE) to re-optimize growth performance of a genome-reduced strain. The basis for suboptimal growth is the imbalanced metabolism that is rewired during ALE. The metabolic rewiring is globally orchestrated by mutations in rpoD altering promoter binding of RNA polymerase. Lastly, the evolved strain has no translational buffering capacity, enabling effective translation of abundant mRNAs. Multi-omic analysis of the evolved strain reveals transcriptome- and translatome-wide remodeling that orchestrate metabolism and growth. These results reveal that failure of prediction may not be associated with understanding individual genes, but rather from insufficient understanding of the strain's systems biology
Acute Myeloid Leukemia
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is the most common type of leukemia. The Cancer Genome Atlas Research Network has demonstrated the increasing genomic complexity of acute myeloid leukemia (AML). In addition, the network has facilitated our understanding of the molecular events leading to this deadly form of malignancy for which the prognosis has not improved over past decades. AML is a highly heterogeneous disease, and cytogenetics and molecular analysis of the various chromosome aberrations including deletions, duplications, aneuploidy, balanced reciprocal translocations and fusion of transcription factor genes and tyrosine kinases has led to better understanding and identification of subgroups of AML with different prognoses. Furthermore, molecular classification based on mRNA expression profiling has facilitated identification of novel subclasses and defined high-, poor-risk AML based on specific molecular signatures. However, despite increased understanding of AML genetics, the outcome for AML patients whose number is likely to rise as the population ages, has not changed significantly. Until it does, further investigation of the genomic complexity of the disease and advances in drug development are needed. In this review, leading AML clinicians and research investigators provide an up-to-date understanding of the molecular biology of the disease addressing advances in diagnosis, classification, prognostication and therapeutic strategies that may have significant promise and impact on overall patient survival
Novel molecular techniques for diagnostics and cancer biology
Molecular biology is reliant on a large set of increasingly complex methods. The development of high-throughput DNA sequencing almost 20 years ago kicked off a revolution in method development due to its incredible versatility. Besides determining the genomic DNA sequence itself, sequencing has been used to profile gene expression, investigate binding of proteins to DNA and RNA, trace cell lineages, screen for genes involved in biological processes, assay 3D organization of chromatin, and much more. Most of these methods have been immensely useful in cancer biology, helping us to understand the mechanisms of this complex disease and find new ways to battle it. But sequencing is not necessary if the mere presence or absence of a nucleic acid is impotant. In order to be able to rapidly diagnose viral diseases, crucial during pandemics such as the recent COVID-19, simpler methods are more useful. Various nucleic acid detection methods have been developed for molecular diagnostics, which can provide an answer within minutes. In this thesis, the fields of high-throughput sequencing, cancer biology, and molecular viral diagnostics are reviewed, since the work presented here consists of three projects dealing with these different topics.
In Paper I, we present a novel method for detecting low frequency variants in DNA. Such variants are important in applications such as genetic heterogeneity or minimal residual disease in cancer. However, their detection is hampered by the errors in sequencing data. To circumvent this, one approach is to attach double-stranded unique molecular identifier sequences (dsUMIs) to the ends of each DNA fragment before sequencing. This allows to compare reads originating from the same original molecule and form consensus sequences, removing most errors in the process. However, protocols that achieve this are challenging to perform. We developed a novel, simplified library preparation approach called one pot double-stranded UMI sequencing (OPUSeq) that adds dsUMIs to DNA in the same reaction as the PCR. We demonstrate that OPUSeq efficiently removes errors in sequencing data and can be used to detect variants down to 0.01% variant allele frequency. Using OPUSeq, we also found a novel type of artifact that arises when fragmentase enzyme mix is used in library preparation.
In Paper II, we investigated the existence of genetic factors that regulate cell state plasticity in cancer. Cancer cells are known to be capable of phenotypic cell state transitions that help them evade treatment. In certain cancer cell line models, such as the chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) K562, the cells are observed to adopt and switch between different states even in the absence of any specific stimuli. As our model system, we used the heterogeneous expression of CD24 protein in K562 as a marker for differential cell states. We designed two orthogonal genome-wide CRISPR-Cas9 knockout screening approaches to look for genes which regulate the spontaneous transitions between CD24-positive and CD24-negative states. We performed both screens and combined the data to produce a list of 49 plasticity regulator candidate genes. We further showed that seven of these genes are differentially expressed between CML patients exhibiting early molecular response to imatinib and those who do not, indicating a connection between plasticity and drug resistance. Finally, we validate one of the plasticity impeding candidates, ALDOB, by generating a single knockout model and demonstrating the increased ability of these cells to undergo state transitions.
In Paper III, we present a protocol for detection of SARS-CoV-2 RNA in unextracted patient samples using reverse transcription loop mediated isothermal amplification (RT-LAMP) with non-commercial enzymes. This protocol provides an alternative diagnostic method for situations where RT-LAMP and RNA extraction reagents are scarce. First, we showed how reverse transcriptases (RT) and strand-displacing polymerases necessary for RT-LAMP can be expressed and purified in-house. We tested different enzymes and LAMP primer sets and optimized the reaction conditions. Benchmarking showed that our in-house mix performs similarly to or even better than commercial alternatives. Finally, we tested our protocol on heat-inactivated, unextracted nasopharyngeal samples from patients and found that it exhibited good specificity as well as good sensitivity in samples with moderate to high viral load
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