Atherosclerosis Elsevier Publishing
Company,
UTILIZATION RAT
Amsterdam
OF MEDIUM-
AORTA,
AND
THE
345
- Printed in The Netherlands
AND LONG-CHAIN
EFFECT
FATTY
OF DL-CARNITINE
ACIDS BY NORMAL ON THEIR
UTILIZATION
S. HASHIMOTO
AND S. DAYTON
Center, Research Service and Medical Service, Wadsworth Hospital, Veterans Administration Los Angeles, Calif. 90073, and Department of Medicine, UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, Calif. 90024 (U.S.A.) (Received
September
28th, 1970)
SUMMARY
Utilization
of medium-
and long-chain
effect of carnitine on their utilization
Total uptake of fatty acid, measured COs, lipid, and water-soluble
fatty acids by normal rat aorta and the
were examined
products,
was maximal
steadily with increasing chain length up to palmitate. and the degree of unsaturation
and laurate were most completely
amounting
to 99, 97 and 85%
of myristate,
ed in the same terms, was approximately
Further increase in chain length
oxidized
to COs, the fraction
palmitate,
oxidized
oleate, and linoleate, express-
54%. Added carnitine stimulated
stearate, and oleate only slightly.
of oxidation
of i4C into
and decreased
of the total uptake of fatty acids; stearate was lowest
with 33%. Extent of oxidation
completeness
with octanoate
had no effect on total uptake of fatty acid. Octanoate,
decanoate,
tion of palmitate,
in v&o.
as the sum of incorporation
Even with carnitine
of these acids did not approach
the oxidaadded the
that of the shorter chain
fatty acids. Incorporation
of 14C from radioactive
aortic lipids was investigated. aortic lipid was: phosphatide distributed
evenly
between
palmitate,
Order of incorporation > triglyceride phosphatide
oleate and linoleate into the of palmitate
> cholesteryl
and triglyceride.
and linoleate into
ester. With oleate, 14C was Incorporation
lesteryl ester was the greatest with oleate and lowest with linoleate.
into
Radioactivity
choin
aortic free fatty acid was lowest with linoleate.
This study was supported in part by a grant from The Arthur Dodd Fuller Foundation and by Research Grant HE-03734 from the National Institutes of Health. U.S. Public Health Service. Atherosclerosis,
1971, 13: 345-354
S. HASHIMOTO, S. DAYTON
346
Key words:
Carnitine
- Esterijcation
- Long-chain
fatty
acids
- Medium-chain
fatty
acids - Oxidation
INTRODUCTION Development
of atherosclerosis
cigarette
smokingr.
(FFA)sJ.
This relationship
atherosclerosis.
Common
to each
It has been suggested
The possibility
remains
is the elevation
that elevated
production
that FFA
wall to atherogenesis
the arterial
free fatty
acid
of FFA in the etiology of
plasma FFA might contribute
the study of fatty
to
by the liver?.
might in some more direct fashion predispose
and, therefore,
of fatty
acids into various
tide by arterial homogenates of approximately
the
acid metabolism
lipid components
metabolism
of arteriess.
is seemingly
Fatty
of chain
that fatty
acid contributes
acids are oxidized,
in
length
in arterial
tissues
and lysophosphaRespiratory
little to the energy
of palmitate
to influen-
however, and the rate of oxidation
on the chain length as suggested
than of palmitateii.
esterification
of cholesterol
This is suggested also by the inability
dependent
of arterial
has been studied by several investigators7,*. 1 suggests
ce glucose metabolismlo.
influence
stress and
wall is of interest.
Incorporation
octanoate
of plasma
of very low density lipoproteins
from several species has been studied 576. Esterification quotient
with diabetes,
suggests the possible importance
this disease by stimulating vascular
has been associated
This report
describes
and unsaturation
of fatty
by the greater
oxidation
a more detailed
study
acids on their
oxidation
tissues, and the effects of carnitine
of
on the
on the utilization
and
of these
acids. MATERIALS AND METHODS Incubation containing
3%
decanoate,
medium consisted albumin,
5.9 mM
[1-r%]myristate,
[I-iJC]linoleate.
Molar specific
activities
per pequiv
linoleic acid (Amersham/Searle) DL-carnitine noted).
(Calbiochem)
Bovine
albumin
was added,
water, and lyophilized
of fatty
acids except
Nuclear. mM
(except
acids and other contaminants,
Aorta from each animal was rapidly
from below the aortic arch to the diaphragm,
dialyzed stunned removed
washed with ice-cold saline, and stripped
The intima plus media was opened along the longitudinal
1971, 13: 345-354
as
with charcoal according to the proced-
Male Wistar rats weighing 250 g on the average were fasted overnight,
Atherosclerosis,
When
prior to use.
by a blow on the head, and decapitated. of fat and adventitia.
or
to the same
acid. All of the fatty was 0.10
[1-1X]-
[I-r%]oleate
approximately
from New England
its concentration
was treated
buffer (pH 7.4)
[I-r%]octanoate,
[1-r%]stearate,
were adjusted
of free fatty
phosphate
and 0.75 mM
were purchased
(Pentex)
ure of CHEN~~ for the removal against
glucose
[1-r*C]palmitate,
1.0 * 10s counts/min
value,
of 3 ml Krebs-Ringer
axis
UTILIZATION OF MEDIUM- AND LONG-CHAIN FATTY ACIDS BY NORMAL RAT AORTA
347
and transferred to ice-cold saline. Three such thoracic aortic segments were collected, blotted, and added to a flask of incubation medium (mentioned above) containing a labeled fatty acid. The flask was stoppered with a serum cap, oxygenated with the aid of hypodermic needles, and shaken for 3 h at 37°C. We have shown previously that the tissues remain metabolically active during this periodrr. Three separate experiments were done, all of which involved the same treatment of animals and the same incubation medium except as noted. Fatty
acid oxidation
to CO2
0.2 ml 5 N NaOH was added to the center well of a flask before incubation.
After 3 h, 0.2 ml 6 N HCl was added to the incubation medium and the flask was shaken for an additional 0.5 h. COs trapped by NaOH was removed and BaCOs was prepared after addition of non-radioactive NaHCOa. Incorporation
of 14C into aortic liPid and water-soluble
jwoducts
After incubation aortic segments were washed three times with fresh 0.9% saline containing 3% albumin, and left overnight in 20 ml chloroform-methanol (2: 1, v/v) containing 200 pg of non-radioactive carrier (the same fatty acid used in the incubation medium), and 200 ,ug each of cholesterol and dipalmitoyl lecithin (Mann Research)*. Control segments were dipped in the incubation medium and processed. Aortic lipid was isolated from the chloroform-methanol extract by the method of FOLCH et al.13. Steps were included in this procedure to measure water-soluble products in tissue arising from the oxidation of fatty acids. As an insurance against loss
of volatile fatty acids, the distillate was also collected during the concentration of an aortic lipid extract. The amount of radioactivity in the distillate was approximately 3 y0 of the total radioactivity of the lipid when medium-chain fatty acids were used as a substrate. Chloroform-methanol extract was separated into two phases with the addition of aqueous H&04 (1:2000) (ref. 14).The aqueous phase was back-washed with chloroform which was then added to the organic phase. Extraction procedure was tested for recovery of [ 1-r%]octanoic acid. Complete recovery in the organic phase was obtained. The organic phase was concentrated to dryness in a flash evaporator under vacuum at 60°C. This procedure was tested with [1-rJC]octanoic acid; very little radioactivity (< 1 O/J was found in the distillate. Lipid residue was assayed for radioactivity. The aqueous layer was neutralized, evaporated to dryness with ethanol and assayed for radioactivity. of [I-14C]fatty acid into lipid components After incubation with [1-rJC]palmitate, [I-rQZ]oleate or [1-r%]linoleate, aortic
Incorporation
* Non-radioactive carriers were added in order to measure radioactivitv of aortic linid comnonents. However, the radioassay procedure which we used was subsequently found to yield consistently low values for phosphatide radioactivity. Only total lipid i4C and water-soluble 14C radioactivity values are reported from this experiment. Incorporation of i4C into individual lipid fractions was restudied in the last experiment. Atherosclerosis
1971, 13: 345-354
348
S. HASHIMOTO,
S. DAYTON
segments were washed three times with ice-cold Krebs-Ringer phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) and left overnight in chloroform-methanol (2:1, v/v) containing non-radioactive carriers mentioned above. Chloroforn-methanol solution was concentrated and added to a thin plate coated with Silica Gel G (60 g/100 ml). Residual lipid, especially phosphatide which may adhere to glassis, was dissolved in chloroform-methanol (1~4, v/v) and added to the same spot on the thin-layer plate. The plate was developed in 16% diethyl ether-l o/0 acetic acid-83%
light petroleum. After the first develop-
ment the upper third of the plate was sprayed with 0.04% dichloro-fluorescein and viewed with ultraviolet light. Cholesteryl ester area was scraped into a counting vial. The plate was then developed a second time in the same direction using the same solvent mixture, in order to improve separation of the slower-moving components. After spraying and viewing with ultraviolet light the other lipid component areas were scraped into counting vials for radioactive assay. By this procedure recoveries of radioactive cholesteryl palmitate, tripalmitin, palmitic acid, cholesterol and dipalmitoyl lecithin were 94-100 %. Radioactivity
measurements were made on a Packard liquid scintillation
spectrometer. Lipid was dissolved in toluene containing 0.4 o/o 2,5-diphenyloxazole (PPO) and 0.1% 1,4-bis-2(5-phenyloxazolyl)-benzene (POPOP). Water-soluble acid salts were dissolved in toluene containing 1 y. acetic acid, 0.4% PPO and 0.1 y. POPOP. Counting efficiencies for lipid and fatty acid salt were 50% and 39%, respectively. Barium carbonate and scrapings from thin-layer plates were suspended in a thixotropic gel consisting of 43 g Hyamine 10 X (Rohm and Haas), 26 g Thixcin R (Baker Chemical Company), 3.45 g PPO, and 86 mg POPOP in 1 1 of tolueners. Counting efficiency was 42 %. Net COs radioactivity was taken as the difference between the gross counts of incubation flasks with and without aortas; this corrected simultaneously for background and for possible volatile acidic contaminants in the radioactive fatty acids. Radioactivity data were converted to “m,uatoms” of carbon 1 of the added fatty acid substrate. mpAtoms is equal to the gram atomic weight - 10-s. The rationale for expressing the data in this way is to base results on the radioactive carboxyl carbon and circumvent the uncertainty as to the fate of the remaining carbons of the fatty acid molecule. RESULTS
The effect of carnitine on the oxidation of [1-r%]palmitate is shown in Table 1. Several concentrations of DL-carnitine were used in this preliminary experiment. CO2 production was increased by 20% on an average in the presence of carnitine. In subsequent experiments 0.10 mM of carnitine was used. Utilization of medium- and long-chain fatty acids by normal rat aorta and the effect of Dr.-carnitine are shown in Table 2. The extent of stimulation of 14COs production from palmitate, stearate and oleate by camitine was small and in some experiments barely detectable; maximumstimulation was 33% in one of the stearate experAtherosclerosis,
1971, 13: 345-354
UTILIZATION
TABLE EFFECT
OF MEDIUM-
AND LONG-CHAIN
FATTY ACIDS BY NORMAL RAT AORTA
349
1 OF DL-CARNITINE
ON THE
OXIDATION
OF [l-‘4c]PALMITATE
BY RAT AORTIC
TISSUE
Incubation medium consisted of 3 ml Krebs-Ringer phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) containing 5.9 mM glucose, 3% albumin, 0.75 mM [I-14Clpalmitate (specific activity 1.06 10s counts/min per pequiv), and varying concentrations of carnitine. Tissues were shaken at 37°C under oxygen for 3 h. 14COs production in the presence of carnitine was significantly higher (P < 0.05) than the controls. DL-Carnitim
14co2
(mMl
(mpnoles/50
0 0 0 0.01 0.10 1.00
23.7 25.6 22.0 28.3 29.3 25.7
10.00
31.1
TABLE EFFECT
mg defatted dv.y tissue)
2 OF CARNITINE
ON THE
OXIDATION
OF FATTY
ACIDS
Incubation medium consisted of 3 ml Krebs-Ringer phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) containing 5.9 mM glucose, 3% albumin, 0.75 mM [1-i4C]fatty acid. When DL-carnitine was added the concentration was 0.1 mM. Tissues were shaken at 37°C under 0s for 3 h. Substrate
Octanoate Decanoate Laurate
Carnitine
0
+b
0
o+ +
Myristate
0
Palmitate
:
Stearate Oleate Linoleate
14C02 recovered (m,uatomsa of i4C/50 mg defatted dry tissue)
o+ ot i+ +
& m,u Atoms: gram atomic b With carnitine.
weight
expt. 7
expt. 2
expt. 3
447 430 221 306 64 79 58 64 28 32 18 24 30 31 35 27
276 129 298 270 63 52 50 44 22 25 10 11 20 21 24 31
312 290 162 150 46 58 27 36 27 33 13 16 25 28 32 30
. 10-s. Atherosclerosis,
1971, 13: 345-354
350
S. HASHIMOTO,
TABLE
3
INCORPORATION
Conditions
OF
14c
INTO
are the same
.Substrate
LIPID
AND
as mentioned
WATER-SOLUBLE
in Table
Decanoate
Laurate
Myristate
Palmitate
Stearate
,Oleate
Linoleate
PRODUCTS
2.
1% recovered (mpatomsb of r4C/50 mg dry &fatted tissue)
E@t.
,Octanoate
lipid
water-soluble Products
total
1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2
1.2a 2.9 2.0 1.6 5.7 8.2 4.6 4.8 10.6 9.6 10.2 12.6 21.1 33.8 19.7 30.0 35.1 27.2 24.6 28.3 31.5 -
1.4 3.7 2.0 1.3 1.5 1.9 1.9 1.4 0.6 0.5 0.2 0.8 0.2 0.7 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.4 0.4 0.2 0.5
2.6 6.6 4.0 2.9 7.2 10.1 6.5 6.2 11.2 10.1 10.4 13.4 21.3 34.5 20.2 30.5 35.6 27.6 25.0 28.5 32.0 -
3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4
32.6 26.5 30.5 32.7 33.6 30.1 22.6 20.8 17.2 16.4
0 0.2 0.4 0.4 0.3 0.3 0.8 1.2 0.5 0.5
32.6 26.7 30.9 33.1 33.9 30.4 23.4 22.0 17.7 16.9
a Each value is the difference between 3 h and “zero” b mpAtoms: gram atomic weight . 10-s.
iments.
Incorporation
with increasing oleate
increase
on the incorporation
to stearate.
of 14C into lipid and water-soluble
Incorporation
of fatty
did not affect the radioactivity
there was less incorporation lipid. 1971,
values.
fatty acids into COs decreased
of the acid from octanoate
in chain length of the substrate
Atherosclerosis,
time incubation
steadily
Oxidation
of
to COa was higher than with stearate.
acids are given in Table 3. In general,
soluble products. length
of i4C from saturated
chain length
and linoleate Data
fatty
S. DAYTON
13: 345-354
little radioactivity
acids into lipids increased up to myristate.
products
from
was found in water-
Further
with progressive increases in chain
of lipid, nor did monounsaturation.
However,
of linoleic acid than of steraic or oleic acid into arterial
UTILIZATION
TABLE
OF MEDIUM-
AND
LONG-CHAIN
FATTY
ACIDS
BY NORMAL
RAT AORTA
351
4
INCORPORATION
OF
Substrate
14c
INTO
LIPID,
WATER-SOLUBLE
PRODUCTS
AND
COsa
14C recovered
(mpatomsb of 14C/ 50 mg dry defatted tissue) lipid
1.9 5.8 10.8 26.2 28.8 30.2 31.7 19.2
octanoate
Decanoate Laurate Myristate Palmitate Stearate Oleate Linoleate.
f & f f + f * +
0.7c 1.4 1.1 5.9 3.9 2.7 1.5 2.5
water-soluble products
co2
total
2.1 1.7 0.5 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.4 0.8
345 f 74 227 & 56 57* 8 455 13 26& 3 14* 3 25* 4 304 5
349
+ * * h * + * f
1.0 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.3
235 68 72 55 44 57 50
a Data from Tables 2 and 3 were combined. b mpAtoms: gram atomic weight . 10-s. c Mean * standard deviation.
TABLE
5
INCORPORATION
OF
14c
INTO
LIPID
COMPONENTS
Conditions are the same as mentioned in Table 2. 14C recovered (mpatomsa
(l-14C]Palmitate
[l-‘4C]Oleate ,[l-qLinoleate
of
14C/50 mg dry defatted tissue)
phosphatide
diglyceride and cholesterol
free fatty acid
triglyceride
cholesteryl ester
total
16.0 15.2 15.6 10.3 7.3 7.2 9.5 6.5 13.5 14.9 14.4 15.7
0.8 0.3 0.3 0.4 0.6 0.3 0.4 0.4 1.3 1.0 1.1 1.0
8.2 9.0 8.1 9.4 8.7 7.2 8.7 7.8 1.7 1.5 1.2 1.3
11.6 6.9 12.7 5.7 7.5 9.4 11.1 9.3 1.2 1.4 1.1 1.0
0.7 0.6 0.9 0.7 1.4 1.5 2.0 1.4 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.3
37.3 32.0 37.6 26.5 25.5 25.6 31.7 25.4 17.9 19.0 18.0 19.3
B m,uAtoms: gram atomic weight
. 10-s.
If the two sets of data (Tables 2 and 3) are considered
together
in Table 4 and
total uptake of a given fatty acid is taken as the sum of products measured*, seen that the medium-chain the extent
of 85-99%
* Our earlier experiment’1
fatty
of the total
acids, octanoate uptake,
through
laurate,
while the longer
yielded negligible radioactivity
in non-lipid,
chain fatty
water-insoluble
Atherosclerosis,
it can be
are oxidized
to
acids are
material.
1971, 13: 345-354
352
S. HASHIMOTO,
oxidized to the extent proportion
of 33-64 “/b.Conversely,
of the total
medium-chain
fatty
uptake fatty
The incorporation
the
oleate and linoleate into various aortic The distribution
varied with the fatty acid. With palmitate
was found in phosphatide
pally found in phosphatide
amounting
ation into sterol ester was the greatest was minimal
was confined
of 1% among
Linoleate
was distri-
radioactivity
to 75 y0 of the total radioactivity.
was princi1% incorpor-
with oleate and least with linoleate.
in triglyceride
and free fatty
these
and linoleate most of the
while with oleate the radioactivity
buted evenly between the two esterified fractions.
incorporation
for a greater
acids. Thus,
As seen in Table 5 the bulk of the radioactivity
free fatty acid and phosphatide.
lipid components
accounted
acids.
of 1% from palmitate,
lipids was investigated.
radioactivity
esterification
with longer chain fatty
acids are utilized for energy more readily and more completely
than are the long-chain
to triglyceride,
(27-36%)
S. DAYTON
Linoleate
acid fractions.
DISCUSSION
Influence compared
of carnitine
on the oxidation
to other tissueszr. Whereas
of long-chain
4-fold stimulatory
fatty
acids was small as
effects have been reported in
heart sliceszr, the effect in aortic tissue is so small as to be unconvincing. we have no information
explaining
Unequal oxidation and in mitochondria is the necessity carnitines oxidationsr.
of different fatty acids has been reported in other tissuesr7-19
crossing
fatty
oxidation
membrane
of palmitate,
carnitine.
The extent
difference
in the rates of oxidation
given for this phenomenon
acids (but not medium-chain
the mitochondrial
Our results are only partly consistent
by the stimulated
At this time
of aortic tissue.
of various organs 20. An explanation
of long-chain
before
the unique behavior
of stimulation
with this interpretation
stearate
(20%)
acids) to form acyl
to the site of fatty
and oleate
was not sufficient
of medium-chain
fatty
acid
as indicated
in the presence to account
of
for the
acids and long-chain
fatty
acids. Preferential reported
esterification
in liverr7Js,
late well with the subcellular The activating
of long chain fatty
adipose22 and intestinal distribution
enzymes for long-chain
tion of glycerophosphate for medium-chain
while the activating
of fatty acids in the incubation
acids (octanoate,
decanoate
products
-was
and laurate)
much greater
acids. The above could result from the higher concentration acids not bound
to albumin
vigorous rate of oxidation Atherosclerosis,
in the incubation
acids in the metabolic
1971, 13: 345-354
mediumss.
with
of medium-chain The significance
process has been discussed by
of medium-chain
albu-
than with long-chain
fatty
fatty
enzyme
medium containing
fatty
unbound
enzymes.
Despite this the total uptake of 14C-sum
in COs, lipid and water-soluble fatty
and esterifying
corre-
acids is found in the mitochondrionar.
min were the same in all these experiments. medium-chain
of the activating
here has been
observations
fatty acids30 and the enzyme for the esterifica-
are found in the microsomer7,
fatty
Molar concentrations of radioactivity
acids as observed
tissuesra923. These
SPECTOR~~.
fatty acids would also contribute
of The
sizably
UTILIZATION
OF MEDIUM-
AND LONG-CHAIN
FATTY ACIDS BY NORMAL RAT AORTA
353
towards greater uptake of these acids by disturbing the equilibrium between the intraarterial and extra-arterial
concentrations
of fatty acid in the direction of uptake.
Patterns of incorporation of 1% from palmitate and from linoleate into aortic lipid components were similar to those observed by others in that phosphatide fraction was the major product of these acids 5,692s. When oleate was used as a substrate, however, the radioactive label was evenly distributed between triglyceride and phosphatide. PORTMAN AND ALEXANDER3Z have shown with aortic homogenates that phosphatide synthesis occurs predominantly by the acylation of lysophosphatide. If this pathway is dominant in whole aorta as well our results reflect the selectivity of the enzyme, for the patterns of incorporation of palmitate, oleate and linoleate are qualitatively similar to that obtained by LANDS33 with liver mitochondria using lysolecithin and the CoA derivatives of these acids as substrates. Incorporation of oleate into cholesteryl ester is of particular interest because of the preferential accumulation of cholesteryl oleate in atheromata. In studies with atherosclerotic aorta, BOWYER et al .6,2’J have reported that esterifying systems discriminate in favor of oleate and that hydrolyzing systems discriminate against oleate; they have suggested that this discrimination accounts for the unique composition of cholesteryl ester in the atheroma. The data of the present experiment indicate that preferential synthesis of cholesteryl oleate is not pathological, being characteristic of normal vascular tissue. The relatively low amount of radioactivity in aortic free fatty acid when linoleate was used as substrate indicates that this acid is utilized much more rapidly following uptake by the tissue than is palmitate or oleate. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We acknowledge with gratitude the expert laboratory assistance of L. Berg and the help of Mrs. M. Skawienski and Miss N. Chin in preparing the manuscript.
REFERENCES MOSES, C., Atherosclerosis, Lea and Febiger, Philadelphia, 1963. FURMAN, R. H., Endocrine factors in atherosclerosis. In: F. G. SCHETTLER AND G. S. BOYD (Eds.), Atherosclerosis, Elsevier, New York, 1969, Chap. 6, p. 375. KERSHBAUM, A., S. BELLET, J. JIMENEZ AND L. J. FEINBERG, Differences in effects of cigar and cigarette smoking on free fatty acid mobilization and catecholamine excretion, J. Am. Med. Assoc., 1966, 195: 1095. STEINBERG, D., Fatty acid mobilization-mechanisms of regulation and metabolic consequences. In: G. POPJAK (Organizer) AND J. K. GRANT (Ed.), Biochemical Symposia: 24, The Control o,f Lipid Metabolism, Academic Press, New York, 1963, p. 111. STEIN, Y. AND 0. STEIN, Incorporation of fatty acids into lipids of aortic slices of rabbits, dogs, rats and baboons, J. Atheroscler. Res., 1962, 2: 400. BOWYER, D. E., A. N. HOWARD AND G. A. GRESHAM, Lipid synthesis in perfused normal and atherosclerotic aortas, Biochem. J., 1967, 103: 54. ABDULLA, Y. H., C. C. ORTON AND C. W. M. ADAMS, Cholesterol esterification by transacylation in human and experimental atheromatous lesions, J. Atheroscler. Res., 1968, 8: 967. PORTMAN, 0. W., Incorporation of fatty acids into phospholipids by cell free and subcellular fractions of squirrel monkey and rat aorta, J. Atheroscler. Res., 1967, 7: 617.
Atherosclerosis,
197 1, 13: 345-354
354
S. HASHIMOTO,
S. DAYTON
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