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1.
Cardiovasc Res ; 91(3): 429-36, 2011 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21441244

ABSTRACT

AIMS: The aims of the study were to determine the effects of anisosmotic bathing solution on selected properties of I(Ks), the slowly activating delayed-rectifier K(+) current important for repolarization of the action potential in cardiac cells. METHODS AND RESULTS: Guinea-pig ventricular myocytes were voltage-clamped using either the ruptured-patch or perforated-patch technique, and the amplitude, time course, and voltage dependence of I(Ks) were determined before [isosmotic (1T)] and during superfusion of hyposmotic (<1T) or hyperosmotic (>1T) bathing solution. Hyposmotic solution increased the amplitude of I(Ks), and hyperosmotic solution decreased it. Anisosmotic-induced changes in I(Ks) amplitude were complete in 2-5 min, well-maintained, reversible, and not accompanied by significant changes in I(Ks) time course and voltage dependence. There was little difference in the results obtained with the ruptured-patch technique and those obtained with the perforated-patch technique. The amplitude of I(Ks) was sensitive to small (±10%) changes in osmolarity, maximally increased by hyposmotic solution with T < 0.7, and strongly decreased by hyperosmotic solution with T > 1.5. Experimental data on a plot of relative (1T = 1.0) I(Ks) amplitude vs. the reciprocal of relative osmolarity are well-described by a Hill equation that has a lower asymptote of 0.0, an upper asymptote of 2.0, and a slope factor of 1.87 ± 0.07. CONCLUSION: Modulation of I(Ks) amplitude by anisosmotic solution is independent of patch configuration, unaccompanied by changes in current gating, and well-described by a Hill dose-response relation that predicts relatively strong responses of I(Ks) to small perturbations in external osmolarity.


Subject(s)
Delayed Rectifier Potassium Channels/metabolism , Heart Ventricles/metabolism , Ion Channel Gating , Myocytes, Cardiac/metabolism , Potassium/metabolism , Action Potentials , Animals , Guinea Pigs , Kinetics , Models, Cardiovascular , Osmotic Pressure , Patch-Clamp Techniques
2.
J Membr Biol ; 238(1-3): 69-80, 2010 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21104181

ABSTRACT

Electroporation induced by high-strength electrical fields has long been used to investigate membrane properties and facilitate transmembrane delivery of molecules and genes for research and clinical purposes. In the heart, electric field-induced passage of ions through electropores is a factor in defibrillation and postshock dysfunction. Voltage-clamp pulses can also induce electroporation, as exemplified by findings in earlier studies on rabbit ventricular myocytes: Long hyperpolarizations to ≤-110 mV induced influx of marker ethidium and irregular inward currents that were as large with external NMDG(+) as Na(+). In the present study, guinea pig ventricular myocytes were bathed with NMDG(+), Na(+) or NMDG(+) + La(3+) solution (36°C) and treated with five channel blockers. Hyperpolarization of myocytes in NMDG(+) solution elicited an irregular inward current (I (ep)) that reversed at -21.5 ± 1.5 mV. In myocytes hyperpolarized with 200-ms steps every 30 s, I (ep) occurred in "episodes" that lasted for one to four steps. Boltzmann fits to data on the incidence of I (ep) per experiment indicate 50% incidence at -129.7 ± 1.4 mV (Na(+)) and -146.3 ± 1.6 mV (NMDG(+)) (slopes ≈-7.5 mV). I (ep) amplitude increased with negative voltage and was larger with Na(+) than NMDG(+) (e.g., -2.83 ± 0.34 vs. -1.40 ± 0.22 nA at -190 mV). La(3+) (0.2 mM) shortened episodes, shifted 50% incidence by -35 mV and decreased amplitude, suggesting that it inhibits opening/promotes closing of electropores. We compare our findings with earlier ones, especially in regard to electropore selectivity. In the Appendix, relative permeabilities and modified excluded-area theory are used to derive estimates of electropore diameters consistent with reversal potential -21.5 mV.


Subject(s)
Electroporation , Heart Ventricles/cytology , Myocytes, Cardiac/metabolism , Animals , Electrophysiology , Guinea Pigs , Heart Ventricles/drug effects , Heart Ventricles/metabolism , Lanthanum/pharmacology , Membrane Potentials/drug effects , Myocytes, Cardiac/drug effects
3.
Pflugers Arch ; 458(3): 471-80, 2009 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19139916

ABSTRACT

The objective of the study was to investigate the role of tyrosine phosphorylation in the regulation of KCNQ1/KCNE1 channels. Large whole-cell time- and voltage-dependent K(+) currents were present in human embryonic kidney 293 cells cotransfected with human KCNQ1 and KCNE1 but not in control nontransfected cells. The time- and voltage-dependent current had biophysical properties typical of cardiac KCNQ1/KCNE1 current and was almost completely abolished by KCNQ1 blocker chromanol 293B (50 microM). Both KCNQ1/KCNE1 and KCNQ1 current were inhibited in a voltage-independent manner by tyrosine kinase (PTK) inhibitor tyrphostin A25 (100 microM), but not by PTK-inactive tyrphostin A1 (100 microM), suggesting involvement of tyrosine phosphorylation in maintaining channel activity. This view was strengthened by the finding that phosphotyrosyl phosphatase inhibitor monoperoxo(picolinato)-oxo-vanadate(V) (200 microM) reversed the inhibition of current by tyrphostin A25. However, the channel-pertinent tyrosine phosphorylation modulated by these compounds does not appear to be on the channel itself because inhibition of current by tyrphostin A25 was unaffected by single and multiple mutations of KCNQ1 cytoplasmically accessible tyrosine residues. Inhibition by tyrphostin A25 was unaffected by intracellularly applied diC8 phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (diC8 PIP(2); 25 microM), and based on the results obtained from cell surface biotinylation experiments, it was not due to loss of channels from the membrane. We conclude that tyrphostin A25 inhibits KCNQ1/KCNE1 current by lowering tyrosine phosphorylation on unidentified nonchannel protein(s) that directly or indirectly regulate the open probability of the KCNQ1 pore in a PIP(2)-independent manner.


Subject(s)
Ion Channel Gating/physiology , KCNQ1 Potassium Channel/physiology , Kidney/physiology , Membrane Potentials/physiology , Potassium Channels, Voltage-Gated/physiology , Potassium/metabolism , Protein-Tyrosine Kinases/metabolism , Cell Line , Feedback/physiology , Humans , Mutation
4.
Pflugers Arch ; 456(3): 489-500, 2008 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18097684

ABSTRACT

The objective of this study was to investigate the involvement of tyrosine phosphorylation in the hyposmotic stimulation of cardiac I Ks, a slowly activating delayed-rectifier K+ current that promotes repolarization of the action potential. The current was recorded from whole-cell-configured guinea-pig ventricular myocytes before, during, and after their exposure to solution whose osmolarity was 0.75 times normal. Exposure to hyposmotic solution caused a near-doubling of the amplitude of I Ks, with little change in the voltage dependence of current activation. Stable, hyposmotically stimulated I Ks (I Ks,Hypo) was decreased by broadspectrum tyrosine kinase (TK) inhibitors tyrphostin A23 (IC50 approximately 5 microM) and tyrphostin A25 (IC50 15.8 +/- 1.6 microM) but not by TK-inactive tyrphostin analogs, suggesting that tyrosine phosphorylation is important for maintenance of the current. In agreement with that view, we found that the TK-inhibitor action on I Ks,Hypo was strongly antagonized by vanadate compounds known to inhibit phosphotyrosyl phosphatase. When myocytes were pretreated with TK inhibitors, the stimulation of I Ks was attenuated in a concentration-dependent manner. The attenuation was not due to concomitant attenuation of a stimulation of tyrosine phosphorylation because neither the stimulation of I Ks nor its rate of decay following removal of hyposmotic solution was affected by pretreatment with vanadates. We suggest that the stimulation of I Ks by hyposmotic solution is dependent on a basal tyrosine phosphorylation that modulates a swelling-induced I Ks-stimulatory signal and/or the receptivity of Ks channels to that signal.


Subject(s)
Delayed Rectifier Potassium Channels/metabolism , Myocytes, Cardiac/enzymology , Protein-Tyrosine Kinases/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Action Potentials , Animals , Cell Size , Delayed Rectifier Potassium Channels/drug effects , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , ErbB Receptors/metabolism , Genistein/pharmacology , Guinea Pigs , Heart Ventricles/enzymology , In Vitro Techniques , Kinetics , Myocytes, Cardiac/drug effects , Osmotic Pressure , Phosphorylation , Protein Kinase Inhibitors/pharmacology , Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases/antagonists & inhibitors , Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases/metabolism , Protein-Tyrosine Kinases/antagonists & inhibitors , Pyrimidines/pharmacology , Quinazolines , Signal Transduction/drug effects , Tyrphostins/pharmacology , Vanadates/pharmacology , src-Family Kinases/metabolism
5.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1758(10): 1641-52, 2006 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16836976

ABSTRACT

Exposure of cardiac myocytes to hyposmotic solution stimulates slowly-activating delayed-rectifying K(+) current (I(Ks)) via unknown mechanisms. In the present study, I(Ks) was measured in guinea-pig ventricular myocytes that were pretreated with modulators of cell signaling processes, and then exposed to hyposmotic solution. Pretreatment with compounds that (i) inhibit serine/threonine kinase activity (10-100 microM H89; 200 microM H8; 50 microM H7; 1 microM bisindolylmaleimide I; 10 microM LY294002; 50 microM PD98059), (ii) stimulate serine/threonine kinase activity (1-5 microM forskolin; 0.1 microM phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate; 10 microM acetylcholine; 0.1 microM angiotensin II; 20 microM ATP), (iii) suppress G-protein activation (10 mM GDPbetaS), or (iv) disrupt the cytoskeleton (10 microM cytochalasin D), had little effect on the stimulation of I(Ks) by hyposmotic solution. In marked contrast, pretreatment with tyrosine kinase inhibitor tyrphostin A25 (20 microM) strongly attenuated both the hyposmotic stimulation of I(Ks) in myocytes and the hyposmotic stimulation of current in BHK cells co-expressing Ks channel subunits KCNQ1 and KCNE1. Since attenuation of hyposmotic stimulation was not observed in myocytes and cells pretreated with inactive tyrphostin A1, we conclude that TK has an important role in the response of cardiac Ks channels to hyposmotic solution.


Subject(s)
Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases/physiology , GTP-Binding Proteins/physiology , Myocytes, Cardiac/drug effects , Osmotic Pressure , Potassium Channels/drug effects , Protein Kinase C/physiology , Protein-Tyrosine Kinases/physiology , 1-(5-Isoquinolinesulfonyl)-2-Methylpiperazine/pharmacology , Animals , Cell Line , Chromans/pharmacology , Colforsin/pharmacology , Cricetinae , Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases/antagonists & inhibitors , Cytochalasin D/pharmacology , Cytoskeleton/drug effects , Cytoskeleton/physiology , GTP-Binding Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , Guinea Pigs , Indoles/pharmacology , Isoquinolines/pharmacology , KCNQ1 Potassium Channel/drug effects , KCNQ1 Potassium Channel/physiology , Maleimides/pharmacology , Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases/physiology , Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases/physiology , Potassium Channels/physiology , Protein Kinase C/antagonists & inhibitors , Protein-Tyrosine Kinases/antagonists & inhibitors , Sulfonamides/pharmacology , Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate/pharmacology , Tyrphostins/pharmacology
6.
Br J Pharmacol ; 148(5): 724-31, 2006 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16715119

ABSTRACT

1. The rapidly activating delayed-rectifying K+ current (I(Kr)) in heart cells is an important determinant of repolarisation, and decreases in its density are implicated in acquired and inherited long QT syndromes. The objective of the present study on I(Kr) in guinea-pig ventricular myocytes was to evaluate whether the current is acutely regulated by tyrosine phosphorylation. 2. Myocytes configured for ruptured-patch or perforated-patch voltage-clamp were depolarised with 200-ms steps to 0 mV for measurement of I(Kr) tail amplitude on repolarisations to -40 mV. 3. I(Kr) in both ruptured-patch and perforated-patch myocytes was only moderately (14-20%) decreased by 100 microM concentrations of protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) inhibitors tyrphostin A23, tyrphostin A25, and genistein. However, similar-sized decreases were induced by PTK-inactive analogues tyrphostin A1 and daidzein, suggesting that they were unrelated to inhibition of PTK. 4. Ruptured-patch and perforated-patch myocytes were also treated with promoters of tyrosine phosphorylation, including phosphotyrosyl phosphatase (PTP) inhibitor orthovanadate, exogenous c-Src PTK, and four receptor PTK activators (insulin, insulin-like growth factor-1, epidermal growth factor, and basic fibroblast growth factor). None of these treatments had a significant effect on the amplitude of I(Kr). 5. We conclude that Kr channels in guinea-pig ventricular myocytes are unlikely to be regulated by PTK and PTP.


Subject(s)
Heart/drug effects , Phosphorylation/drug effects , Protein Kinase Inhibitors/pharmacology , Protein-Tyrosine Kinases/pharmacology , Shab Potassium Channels/metabolism , Animals , Electrophysiologic Techniques, Cardiac , Guinea Pigs , Myocytes, Cardiac/drug effects , Patch-Clamp Techniques/methods , Protein Kinase Inhibitors/analogs & derivatives , Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases/pharmacology , Vanadates/pharmacology
7.
J Physiol ; 573(Pt 2): 469-82, 2006 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16581870

ABSTRACT

The objective of this study was to investigate the involvement of tyrosine phosphorylation in the regulation of the cardiac slowly activating delayed-rectifier K(+) current (I(Ks)) that is important for action potential repolarization. Constitutive I(Ks) recorded from guinea-pig ventricular myocytes was suppressed by broad-spectrum tyrosine kinase (TK) inhibitors tyrphostin A23 (IC(50), 4.1+/-0.6 microm), tyrphostin A25 (IC(50), 12.1+/-2.1 microm) and genistein (IC(50), 64+/-4 microm), but was relatively insensitive to the inactive analogues tyrphostin A1, tyrphostin A63, daidzein and genistin. I(Ks) was unaffected by AG1478 (10 microm), an inhibitor of epidermal growth factor receptor TK, and was strongly suppressed by the Src TK inhibitor PP2 (10 microm) but not by the inactive analogue PP3 (10 microm). The results of experiments with forskolin, H89 and bisindolylmaleimide I indicate that the suppression of I(Ks) by TK inhibitors was not mediated via inhibition of (I(Ks)-stimulatory) protein kinases A and C. To evaluate whether the suppression was related to lowered tyrosine phosphorylation, myocytes were pretreated with TK inhibitors and then exposed to the phosphotyrosyl phosphatase inhibitor orthovanadate (1 mm). Orthovanadate almost completely reversed the suppression of I(Ks) induced by broad-spectrum TK inhibitors at concentrations around their IC(50) values. We conclude that basal I(Ks) is strongly dependent on tyrosine phosphorylation of Ks channel (or channel-regulatory) protein.


Subject(s)
Myocytes, Cardiac/enzymology , Potassium Channels, Inwardly Rectifying/physiology , Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases/physiology , Protein-Tyrosine Kinases/physiology , Animals , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Guinea Pigs , Heart Ventricles/drug effects , In Vitro Techniques , Isoflavones/pharmacology , Membrane Potentials/drug effects , Membrane Potentials/physiology , Myocytes, Cardiac/drug effects , Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases/antagonists & inhibitors , Protein-Tyrosine Kinases/antagonists & inhibitors , Ventricular Function
8.
Appl Bioinformatics ; 4(2): 155-6, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16128619

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: Cell electrophysiology simulation environment (CESE) is an integrated environment for performing simulations with a variety of electrophysiological models that have Hodgkin-Huxley and Markovian formulations of ionic currents. CESE is written in Java 2 and is readily portable to a number of operating systems. CESE allows execution of single-cell models and modification and clamping of model parameters, as well as data visualisation and analysis using a consistent interface. Model creation for CESE is facilitated by an object-oriented approach and use of an extensive modelling framework. The Web-based model repository is available. AVAILABILITY: CESE and the Web-based model repository are available at http://cese.sourceforge.net/.


Subject(s)
Action Potentials/physiology , Cell Membrane/physiology , Cell Physiological Phenomena , Computer Simulation , Electrophysiology/methods , Membrane Potentials/physiology , Models, Biological , Patch-Clamp Techniques/methods
9.
Br J Pharmacol ; 143(8): 943-51, 2004 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15545291

ABSTRACT

Tyrosine kinase (TK) inhibitors genistein and tyrphostin A23 (A23) inhibited Ca(2+) currents in guinea-pig ventricular myocytes investigated under standard whole-cell conditions (K(+)-free Tyrode's superfusate; EGTA-buffered (pCa-10.5) Cs(+) dialysate). However, the inhibitors (100 microM) also induced membrane currents that reversed between -40 and 0 mV, and the objective of the present study was to characterize these currents. Genistein-induced current behaved like Cl(-) current, and was unaffected by either the addition of divalent cations (0.5 mM Cd(2+); 3 mM Ni(2+)) that block the Na(+)-Ca(2+) exchanger (NCX), or the removal of external Na(+) and Ca(2+). A23-induced current was independent of Cl(-) driving force, and strongly suppressed by addition of Cd(2+) and Ni(2+), and by removal of either external Na(+) or Ca(2+). These and other results suggested that A23 activated an NCX current driven by submembrane Na(+) and Ca(2+) concentrations higher than those in the bulk cytoplasm. Improved control of intracellular Na(+) and Ca(2+) concentrations was obtained by suppressing cation influx (10 microM verapamil) and raising dialysate Na(+) to 7 mM and dialysate pCa to 7. Under these conditions, stimulation by A23 was described by the Hill equation with EC(50) 68 +/- 4 microM and coefficient 1.1, tyrphostin A25 was as effective as A23, and TK-inactive tyrphostin A1 was ineffective. Phosphotyrosyl phosphatase inhibitor orthovanadate (1 mM) antagonized the action of 100 microM A23. The results suggest that activation of cardiac NCX by A23 is due to inhibition of genistein-insensitive TK.


Subject(s)
Myocytes, Cardiac/drug effects , Protein Kinase Inhibitors/pharmacology , Protein-Tyrosine Kinases/antagonists & inhibitors , Sodium-Calcium Exchanger/biosynthesis , Tyrphostins/pharmacology , Animals , Guinea Pigs , In Vitro Techniques , Myocytes, Cardiac/enzymology , Protein-Tyrosine Kinases/metabolism
10.
Am J Physiol Cell Physiol ; 287(5): C1396-403, 2004 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15475519

ABSTRACT

There have been periodic reports of nonclassic (4-aminopyridine insensitive) transient outward K+ current in guinea pig ventricular myocytes, with the most recent one describing a novel voltage-gated inwardly rectifying type. In the present study, we have investigated a transient outward current that overlaps inward Ca2+ current (I(Ca,L)) in myocytes dialyzed with 10 mM K+ solution and superfused with Tyrode's solution. Although depolarizations from holding potential (Vhp) -40 to 0 mV elicited relatively small inward I(Ca,L) in these myocytes, removal of external K+ or addition of 0.2 mM Ba2+ more than doubled the amplitude of the current. The basis of the enhancement of I(Ca,L) was the suppression of a large transient outward K+ current. Similar enhancement was observed when Vhp was moved to -80 mV and test depolarizations were preceded by short prepulses to -40 mV. Investigation of the time and voltage properties of the outward K+ transient indicated that it was inwardly rectifying and unlikely to be carried by voltage-gated channels. The outward transient was attenuated in myocytes dialyzed with high-Mg2+ solution, accelerated in myocytes dialyzed with 100 microM spermine solution, and abolished with time in myocytes dialyzed with ATP-free solution. These and other findings suggest that the outward transient is a component of classic "time-independent" inwardly rectifying K+ current.


Subject(s)
Membrane Potentials/physiology , Muscle Cells/physiology , Potassium Channels, Inwardly Rectifying/physiology , Animals , Calcium/metabolism , Guinea Pigs , Patch-Clamp Techniques , Potassium/metabolism , Ventricular Function
11.
Eur J Pharmacol ; 491(2-3): 111-20, 2004 May 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15140627

ABSTRACT

The objective of this study on guinea-pig and rabbit ventricular myocytes was to evaluate the sensitivities of swelling-activated Cl- current (ICl(swell)) and cAMP-dependent cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator (CFTR) Cl- current (ICl(CFTR)) to block by dideoxyforskolin and verapamil. The currents were recorded from whole-cell configured myocytes that were dialysed with a Cs+-rich pipette solution and superfused with either isosmotic Na+-, K+-, Ca2+-free solution that contained 140 mM sucrose or hyposmotic sucrose-free solution. Forskolin-activated ICl(CFTR) was inhibited by reference blocker anthracene-9-carboxylic acid but unaffected by < or = 200 microM dideoxyforskolin and verapamil. However, dideoxyforskolin and verapamil had strong inhibitory effects on outwardly-rectifying, inactivating, distilbene-sensitive ICl(swell); IC50 values were approximately 30 microM, and blocks were voltage-independent and reversible. The results establish that dideoxyforskolin and verapamil can be used to distinguish between ICl(CFTR) and ICl(swell) in heart cells, and expand the pharmacological characterization of cardiac ICl(swell).


Subject(s)
Chloride Channels/antagonists & inhibitors , Cyclic AMP/antagonists & inhibitors , Myocytes, Cardiac/drug effects , Animals , Chloride Channels/metabolism , Cyclic AMP/metabolism , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Guinea Pigs , Heart Ventricles/drug effects , Heart Ventricles/metabolism , Male , Myocytes, Cardiac/metabolism , Rabbits
12.
Br J Pharmacol ; 140(5): 863-70, 2003 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14530219

ABSTRACT

The objective of this study was to determine the concentration-dependent effects of nisoldipine, a dihydropyridine Ca2+ channel blocker, on K+ currents in guinea-pig ventricular myocytes. Myocytes in the conventional whole-cell configuration were bathed in normal Tyrode's solution or K+-free Tyrode's solution for the measurement of the effects of 0.01-100 microM nisoldipine on rapidly activating delayed-rectifier K+ current (I(Kr)), slowly activating delayed-rectifier K+ current (I(Ks)), inwardly rectifying K+ current (I(K1)), and reference L-type Ca2+ current (I(Ca,L)). Nisoldipine inhibited I(Kr) with an IC(50) of 23 microM, and I(Ks) with an IC(50) of 40 microM. The drug also had weak inhibitory effects on inward- and outward-directed I(K1); the IC(50) determined for outward-directed current was 80 microM. Investigation of nisoldipine action on I(Ks) showed that inhibition occurred in the absence of previous pulsing, and with little change in the time courses of activation and deactivation. However, the drug-induced inhibition was significantly weaker at >or =+30 mV than at +10 mV.5 We estimate that nisoldipine is about 30 times less selective for delayed-rectifier K+ channels than for L-type Ca2+ channels in fully polarised guinea-pig ventricular myocytes, and several orders less selective in partially depolarised myocytes.


Subject(s)
Myocytes, Cardiac/drug effects , Nisoldipine/pharmacology , Potassium Channels, Inwardly Rectifying/antagonists & inhibitors , Animals , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Guinea Pigs , Male , Membrane Potentials/drug effects , Membrane Potentials/physiology , Myocytes, Cardiac/physiology , Potassium Channel Blockers/pharmacology , Potassium Channels, Inwardly Rectifying/physiology
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