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First published online June 5, 2003; 10.1104/pp.102.017855 Plant Physiology 132:1272-1282 (2003) © 2003 American Society of Plant Biologists The Eukaryotic Translation Initiation Factor 4E Controls Lettuce Susceptibility to the Potyvirus Lettuce mosaic virus1Interactions Plante-Virus, Institut de Biologie Végétale Moléculaire, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, Boîte Postale 81, F33883 Villenave d'Ornon cedex, France (V.N., S.G.-R., M.-P.D., T.C., O.L.G.); and Unité de Génétique et d'Amélioration des Fruits et Légumes, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, Boîte Postale 94, F84143 Montfavet cedex, France (R.S., M.M., B.M., C.C.)
The eIF4E and eIF(iso)4E cDNAs from several genotypes of lettuce (Lactuca sativa) that are susceptible, tolerant, or resistant to infection by Lettuce mosaic virus (LMV; genus Potyvirus) were cloned and sequenced. Although Ls-eIF(iso)4E was monomorphic in sequence, three types of Ls-eIF4E differed by point sequence variations, and a short in-frame deletion in one of them. The amino acid variations specific to Ls-eIF4E1 and Ls-eIF4E2 were predicted to be located near the cap recognition pocket in a homology-based tridimensional protein model. In 19 lettuce genotypes, including two near-isogenic pairs, there was a strict correlation between these three allelic types and the presence or absence of the recessive LMV resistance genes mo11 and mo12. Ls-eIF4E1 and mo11 cosegregated in the progeny of two separate crosses between susceptible genotypes and an mo11 genotype. Finally, transient ectopic expression of Ls-eIF4E restored systemic accumulation of a green fluorescent protein-tagged LMV in LMV-resistant mo12 plants and a recombinant LMV expressing Ls-eIF4E° from its genome, but not Ls-eIF4E1 or Ls-eIF(iso)4E, accumulated and produced symptoms in mo11 or mo12 genotypes. Therefore, sequence correlation, tight genetic linkage, and functional complementation strongly suggest that eIF4E plays a role in the LMV cycle in lettuce and that mo11 and mo12 are alleles coding for forms of eIF4E unable or less effective to fulfill this role. More generally, the isoforms of eIF4E appear to be host factors involved in the cycle of potyviruses in plants, probably through a general mechanism yet to be clarified.
Disease is a remarkable but exceptional outcome of the interaction between a plant and a microorganism: In most cases, microorganisms are excluded by active or passive host defenses. Two well-known active defense mechanisms of plants against pathogen attack are the hypersensitive reaction (Pontier et al., 1998
There are many instances where recessive resistance genes are used to
control agronomically important pathogens, especially potyviruses for which
they have even been estimated to represent about 40% of the known resistance
genes (Provvidenti and Hampton,
1992
In several potyviruses, the central domain of the VPg is involved in the
ability to overcome resistances associated with recessive genes. However, the
phenotypes of the corresponding resistances differ depending on the host and
potyvirus partners. For instance, the central domain of VPg has been shown to
be involved in the control of Pea seedborne mosaic virus accumulation
in single cells by the pea (Pisum sativum) sbm-1 gene
(Keller et al., 1998
Whatever the mechanism(s) involved in these different resistance
phenotypes, it has been speculated that VPg carries out some of its functions
in the viral cycle by interacting with host factors. In the yeast two-hybrid
system and in other in vitro assays, the VPg of Turnip mosaic virus
(TuMV) and of TEV interact with the eukaryotic translation initiation factor
eIF4E and its isoform eIF(iso)4E from Arabidopsis, tomato (Lycopersicon
esculentum), and tobacco (Wittmann et
al., 1997
Conceptually, as it does for cellular mRNAs, eIF4E could participate in
potyvirus RNA translation by interacting with the 5' VPg that replaces a
5' cap structure in these RNAs. A point mutation in the TuMV VPg that
abolishes its interaction with eIF(iso)4E is associated with a loss of viral
infectivity (Léonard et al.,
2000
In lettuce (Lactuca sativa), the recessive
mo11 and mo12 genes are associated
with reduced accumulation and lack of symptoms (tolerance) or absence of
accumulation (resistance) of common isolates of the potyvirus Lettuce
mosaic virus (LMV; Ryder,
1970 We have investigated the possible role of eIF4E and eIF(iso)4E in the compatibility between lettuce and LMV. For this purpose, eIF4E and eIF(iso)4E cDNAs were sequenced from a set of susceptible, tolerant, or resistant lettuce genotypes, the genetic cosegregation between mo11 and eIF4E was tested, and the ability of ectopically expressed eIF4E to functionally restore full LMV susceptibility in tolerant or resistant lettuce genotypes was evaluated.
Cloning and Sequence Analysis of the Lettuce eIF4E and eIF(iso)4E cDNAs A multiple alignment of the nucleotide sequences of the eIF4E coding regions from different plant species and of their human (Homo sapiens) and murine (Mus musculus) counterparts revealed a higher degree of conservation in the central domain of each of these proteins than in the N- and C-terminal regions (data not shown). The central region of the eIF4E cDNA from the susceptible lettuce genotype Salinas was PCR amplified using oligonucleotides 4E193f and 4E408r (all oligonucleotide sequences are given in the "Materials and Methods" section), designed in reference to seven plant eIF4E sequences, including three sequences in Arabidopsis. This product was cloned, and all of the eight clones sequenced yielded the same 169-bp sequence. This sequence information was used to design the oligonucleotides Ls4E250f and Ls4E255r for 3'- and 5'-RACE amplification of the cDNA ends, respectively. Finally, the oligonucleotides Ls4E3f and Ls4E813r were used to PCR amplify the nearly full-length eIF4E cDNA, including the entire coding region, before cloning in pGEM-T Easy and sequencing. The assembled eIF4E cDNA nucleotide sequence was determined from at least five independent clones at each position. No variability was observed between the cDNA clones sequenced. The full-length sequence (GenBank accession no. AF530162) was 1,032 nucleotides in length, with a single open reading frame from positions 21 to 710, encoding a protein with a calculated molecular mass of 26.1 kD (Fig. 1). The closest matches obtained after a BLAST search in GenBank with the full-length nucleotide sequence were the eIF4E cDNAs from tomato (accession no. AF259801, E = 5.1027), rice (Oryza sativa; U34597, E = 5.1027) and Arabidopsis (Y10548, E = 8.1026), and the closest matches with the predicted translation product were the eIF4E amino acid sequences from Arabidopsis (E = 3.1081), tomato (E = 3.1080), and maize (Zea mays; AF076954, E = 4.1078), confirming that the cDNA cloned was the eIF4E cDNA. The identity between the predicted amino acid sequence and 11 eIF4E sequences from plants, vertebrates, and insects ranged between 40% and 70% (data not shown).
Similarly, a near full-length eIF(iso)4E cDNA was obtained from the susceptible genotype Salinas by a combination of 3'- and 5'-RACE PCR. The 3' region of the cDNA was amplified by PCR using an oligo(dT)-containing primer and the degenerate oligonucleotide 4E198f, designed from a conserved central region of the eIF4E genes from tomato, tobacco, and Arabidopsis. The oligonucleotide Ls(iso)4E680r was designed from the sequence of the 3'-RACE product and used in the 5'-RACE system (Invitrogen) to amplify the complete cDNA lacking the 3' non-coding region. The 5'RACE products were cloned into pGEM-T Easy and sequenced. The assembled sequence (GenBank accession no. AF530163) contained a single open reading frame encoding a protein of 193 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 22.0 kD. The closest matches obtained after a BLAST search in GenBank with the full-length nucleotide sequence were the eIF(iso)4E cDNAs from wheat (accession no. M95819, E = 6.1020), Arabidopsis (Y10547, E = 2.1013), and maize (AF076955, E = 5.108), and the closest matches with the predicted translation product were the eIF(iso)4E amino acid sequences from wheat (M95819, E = 7.1077), rice (AAK27811, E = 8.1070), and maize (AF076955, E = 1.1069), confirming that the cDNA cloned was the eIF(iso)4E cDNA. The eIF4E and eIF(iso)4E coding regions were 55.3% identical in nucleotide sequence and 46.8% identical in amino acid sequence. Similar levels of identity in nucleotide and amino acid sequences between the isoforms of eIF4E were found in Arabidopsis (53.9% and 41.2%, respectively), maize (62.9% and 48.9%), rice (59.9% and 46.5%), and wheat (60.2% and 47.7%).
The region encompassing nucleotide positions 20 to 787, which includes the entire coding region of the eIF4E cDNA, was PCR amplified as described above, cloned, and sequenced for the seven additional lettuce genotypes Floribibb (mo11), Mantilia (mo11), Malika (mo11), Salinas 88 (mo12), Vanguard (susceptible), Vanguard 75 (mo12), and 87-20M (susceptible). All sequences were highly conserved, but some of them contained mutations when compared with the sequence from Salinas (Table I; Fig. 1). On the basis of their patterns of variation, the sequences were classified into three types. Type 0 sequences (Vanguard and 87-20M) have coding regions identical to that found in Salinas. Type 1 sequences (Floribibb, Malika, and Mantilia) have a silent C to T substitution at position 299, a deletion of nucleotides 344 to 349, and a non-silent G to T substitution at position 576. Type 2 sequences (Salinas 88 and Vanguard 75) have a non-silent G to C substitution at position 228 and a C to T substitution at position 730 in the 3'-non-coding region. This last sequence variation was also found in the susceptible genotype 87-20M. Types 0, 1, and 2 of lettuce eIF4E were named Ls-eIF4E°, Ls-eIF4E1, and Ls-eIF4E2, respectively.
Therefore, within this limited set of eight lettuce genotypes, there was a strict correlation between Ls-eIF4E1 and the presence of mo11 and between Ls-eIF4E2 and the presence of mo12, whereas the susceptible genotypes all had Ls-eIF4E°. This correlation was maintained even in the case of two independent pairs of genotypes nearly isogenic for mo12, Salinas, and Salinas 88 on one hand, and Vanguard and Vanguard 75 on the other hand. To confirm and extend this correlation, the central domain of the Ls-eIF4E cDNA from 11 additional lettuce genotypes was PCR amplified using oligonucleotides Ls4E83f and Ls4E442r and sequenced (Table I). Again, a complete correlation was observed in this central region between the type of Ls-eIF4E and the presence of mo11 or mo12 in the following genotypes: Fiona, Girelle, Jessy, and Mariska (Ls-eIF4E°, susceptible), Alizé, Classic, Oriana, and Presidio (Ls-eIF4E1 and mo11), and Autumn Gold and Desert Storm (Ls-eIF4E2 and mo12). The sequence of the eIF(iso)4E coding region from the susceptible genotypes Salinas and Vanguard and from their nearly isogenic mo12 genotypes Salinas 88 and Vanguard 75 was also determined. No difference was detected between the eIF(iso)4E coding sequences from these four genotypes. An identical sequence was also found in the mo11 genotype Mantilia. This suggests that eIF(iso)4E sequence variations are not directly correlated with the mo1-related phenotypes.
A 3D model of the Ls-eIF4E protein was predicted based on the known 3D
structures of human (Hs-eIF4E) and murine (Mm-eIF4E) cap-bound eIF4E molecules
(Marcotrigiano et al., 1999
Figure 2 shows the predicted
3D structure of Ls-eIF4E° and, superimposed to visualize the predicted
structural differences, those of Ls-eIF4E1 and
Ls-eIF4E2. According to this model, the amino acids that differ
between the three Ls-eIF4E types were all predicted to be at or near the
surface of the protein. All mapped near the cap recognition pocket, on the
face of eIF4E opposite to the eIF4G-binding site
(Fig. 2). Ala-70-Pro, the only
amino acid different between Ls-eIF4E° and Ls-eIF4E2, was
predicted to be part of the loop between beta-sheets 1 and 2
(Marcotrigiano et al., 1997
With the objective to strengthen the correlation between sequence variation
in the eIF4E cDNA and LMV resistance controlled by
mo11, the genetic linkage between mo11
and the six-nucleotide deletion found at positions 344 to 349 in
Ls-eIF4E1 was studied in two F2 progenies
Mariska (susceptible) x Mantilia (mo11) and Girelle
(susceptible) x Mantilia (mo11). A cleaved amplified
polymorphic sequence (CAPS) marker, eIF4E-PagI, was defined on the
Ls-eIF4E cDNA in relation with the presence of a PagI
restriction site generated by the six-nucleotide deletion in the
Ls-eIF4E1 cDNA. Ten to 15 d after inoculation of 36
F2 plants with LMV-0, 10 plants showed no symptoms, whereas the
remaining 26 presented typical mosaic symptoms caused by LMV. This ratio, 10
resistant to 26 susceptible, is consistent with the segregation of a single
recessive gene coding for LMV resistance (
Leaf infiltration with a suspension of Agrobacterium tumefaciens
transformed with a binary plasmid containing an expression cassette between
T-DNA borders (agro-infiltration) allows localized, transient expression of a
foreign protein in plant tissues (Bechtold
et al., 1993
We have shown previously that mo12 prevents systemic
accumulation of LMV-0-GFP, a green fluorescent protein-tagged LMV-0
(German-Retana et al., 2000
The pattern and timing of viral accumulation were not detectably changed in susceptible plants of the genotype Salinas in leaf areas upon agro-infiltration with any of the three types of Ls-eIF4E. Stereomicroscopic observation under UV light showed comparable GFP fluorescence intensity in Salinas leaves agro-infiltrated with the Ls-eIF4E°, Ls-eIF4E1, or Ls-eIF4E2 constructs (Fig. 4, EG). GUS activity was readily detected in all infiltrated areas (data not shown), confirming the success of agro-infiltration for foreign protein expression.
In Salinas 88 (mo12), no systemic spread of GFP-tagged
LMV-0 was observed up to 2 weeks after inoculation, as expected from previous
results (Candresse et al.,
2002
All three forms of Ls-eIF4E restored to some extent the ability of
LMV-0-GFP to spread into agro-infiltrated areas distant from the inoculation
site. To determine whether the Ls-eIF4E alleles differed quantitatively in
this ability, we counted the GFP spots in each agro-infiltrated area
(Table II). The analysis of the
number of fluorescent spots confirmed the visual observation that all three
types of Ls-eIF4E resulted in complementation for LMV-0-GFP systemic
accumulation, both when the numbers of spots per agro-infiltrated area and the
number of areas containing fluorescent spots were considered. For these two
parameters, the
To test the ability of Ls-eIF4E to restore LMV susceptibility in mo11 genotypes of lettuce, the infectivity of LMV-0-4E° was evaluated. This viral construct is derived from the nonresistance breaking isolate LMV-0 and contains the Ls-eIF4E° coding region as a translational fusion between the viral P1 and Hc-Pro domains that is proteolytically processed in vivo to yield the free proteins. Similarly, LMV-0-4E1 and LMV-0-iso4E contain the Ls-eIF4E1 and the Ls-eIF(iso)4E coding regions, respectively. LMV-0-4E°, LMV-0-4E1, and LMV-0-iso4E were inoculated to three susceptible genotypes (Trocadéro, Salinas, and Vanguard), three mo11 genotypes (Floribibb, Malika, and Mantilia) and two mo12 genotypes (Salinas 88 and Vanguard 75), and symptoms were scored visually (Fig. 5; data not shown). As expected, LMV-0 caused symptoms only in the susceptible varieties. This was also the case of LMV-0-4E1 and LMV-0-iso4E. However, symptoms appeared in all plants inoculated with LMV-0-4E°. The timing of symptoms appearance in mo11 and mo12 genotypes inoculated with LMV-0-4E° was similar to that in susceptible plants infected with LMV-0: A faint vein clearing became evident in emerging leaves 10 to 12 d after inoculation, followed by mosaic symptoms 2 to 3 d later (data not shown).
Accumulation of LMV-0-4E°, LMV-0-4E1, and LMV-0-iso4E was assayed by ELISA (Table III; data not shown). The accumulation of nonrecombinant LMV was not detected in mo11 genotypes and was strongly reduced in mo12 genotypes compared with susceptible genotypes, consistent with the general idea that mo11 is associated with stronger LMV resistance than mo12. The same situation was observed for LMV-0-4E1 and LMV-iso4E, except no virus accumulation was detected in mo12 genotypes. On the other hand, LMV-0-4E° accumulated in all three categories of genotypes. These results, and the persistence of the Ls-eIF4E insert in the replicating virus during the course of the experiments, were confirmed by back inoculation and by RT-PCR (data not shown). LMV-0-4E° had a similar or slightly decreased accumulation in susceptible plants compared with nonrecombinant LMV, indicating that its ability to infect mo11 and mo12 plants was probably not due to a nonspecific enhancement of virus accumulation by the Ls-eIF4E° insert.
Together, these results indicate that expression of Ls-eIF4E° rendered LMV able to accumulate and produce symptoms in mo11 and mo12 genotypes, unlike that of Ls-eIF4E1 or Ls-eIF(iso)4E.
In this paper, we report the isolation of three alleles of the lettuce translation initiation factor eIF4E in their cDNA form. Sequence covariation, genetic cosegregation of one of these alleles, and functional complementation using two independent assays make evidence that two of these alleles correspond to the recessive LMV resistance genes mo11 and mo12, respectively. A direct role of Ls-eIF(iso)4E sequence variations in lettuce mo1-regulated response to LMV was ruled out because no variation in sequence could be observed in this gene when lettuce genotypes differing in their behaviors against LMV where examined, and Ls-eIF(iso)4E ectopic expression did not restore LMV susceptibility. The immediate consequence of this conclusion is to confirm that mo11 and mo12 are alleles of a single gene as it has been suggested (Ryder, 1970
The involvement of eIF4E in the ability of LMV to successfully infect and
produce symptoms in lettuce is reminiscent to the recent demonstration that
the homologous protein is involved in recessive PVY resistance in pepper
(Ruffel et al., 2002
The translation initiation factor 4E is an essential component of the
eukaryotic mRNA translation machinery and possibly also has a role in other
processes of the cell cycle (Strudwick and
Borden, 2002
Although in Arabidopsis eIF(iso)4E defects block several potyviruses
(Lellis et al., 2002 Functional complementation for systemic accumulation of LMV-0-GFP in mo12 plants was readily observed after agro-infiltration of each of the three Ls-eIF4E allelic types. However, Ls-eIF4E°, the allele found in susceptible lettuce genotypes, was more efficient in that than were Ls-eIF4E1 or Ls-eIF4E2. The ability of Ls-eIF4E1 to complement for LMV susceptibility in mo12 plants when expressed by agro-infiltration but not from the viral genome may reflect essential differences in the two expression systems used (agro-infiltration allows expression before virus replication) and properties assayed (systemic down-load versus the whole process of infection).
The ability of Ls-eIF4E2 to complement systemic LMV accumulation
upon agro-infiltration in an mo12 background suggests that
quantitative expression can at least partially overcome the qualitative effect
of mutations. A quantitative effect of Ls-eIF4E sequence variations in the LMV
cycle can be related to the tolerance rather than resistance phenotype
observed against LMV-0 in mo12 plants
(Dinant and Lot, 1992
How eIF4E and/or its isoform are involved in the cycle of potyviruses in
plants is not understood currently. Candidate pathways include initiation of
viral RNA translation, circularization of viral RNA before replication, or
eIF4E sequestration related to host gene shut off
(Aranda and Maule, 1998
In conclusion, although an increasing number of resistance genes against
plant pathogens are being cloned and characterized, most of them are dominant
and related to the hypersensitive reaction or to extreme resistance, a
phenotype related to the hypersensitive reaction and leading to virtual
immunity to viruses in plants (Bendahmane
et al., 1999
Plant Material and Viral Constructs
All plants were grown under greenhouse conditions. The LMV-susceptible
lettuce (Lactuca sativa) genotypes Fiona, Girelle, Jessy, Mariska,
Salinas, Vanguard, Trocadéro, and the early flowering accession 87-20M
(Ryder, 1996
All experiments were made with LMV-0, an LMV isolate unable to produce
symptoms in mo11 and mo12 plants
(Revers et al., 1997 F1 hybrids between Mantilia (mo11/mo11) and the susceptible genotypes Mariska and Girelle were self-pollinated to obtain F2 progenies. The parental lines, the F1 hybrids, and the F2 individuals were evaluated under greenhouse conditions for LMV resistance. Plants were rub inoculated 3 weeks after sowing at the five- to six-leaves stage. Symptoms were recorded 10 to 15 d after inoculation. These conditions ensured symptom appearance in 100% of Mariska and Girelle, whereas no symptoms were visible in Mantilia.
Total RNA was extracted from 100 to 200 mg of leaf tissues using TRI Reagent (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis). Total cDNA was synthesized from 5 µg of total RNA using 15 units of AMV RT (Amersham Biosciences, Uppsala) and 1 µM oligo(dT) in a total volume of 50 µL, incubated for 1 h at 42°C. PCR amplification was routinely performed using 1 µL of the total cDNAs in 50-µL reactions containing 0.5 units of Extra-Pol I Taq DNA polymerase (Eurobio, Les Ulis, France) or Platinum Taq DNA Polymerase High Fidelity (Invitrogen), using 1 µM oligonucleotide primers. For these reactions, 40 cycles (30 s of denaturation at 95°C, 30 s of annealing at different temperatures according to the primers used, and 1 min of elongation at 72°C) were performed in a thermal cycler (iCycler, Bio-Rad) after an initial denaturation of the RNA-cDNA duplex at 95°C for 2 min. The SMART RACE cDNA amplification kit (CLONTECH) was used according to the recommendations provided by the supplier to amplify the cDNA 5' and 3' ends of eIF4E, and, similarly, the 3'- and 5'-RACE Systems (Invitrogen) were used to amplify the 5' and 3' ends of eIF(iso)4E cDNA. The oligonucleotides used are listed in Table IV.
The pGEM-T Easy vector system (Promega, Madison, WI) was used to clone cDNAs after PCR amplification. Automated DNA sequencing of cloned fragments or PCR products was performed at Genaxis (St-Cloud, France) or Genome Express (Grenoble, France), using ABI PRISM 373XL or 377 sequencers (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA).
Total RNA was extracted from leaves of genotypes Mantilia, Mariska, and from the F1 hybrids and the F2 progenies as described above. From each RNA preparation, an eIF4E cDNA fragment of about 442 to 448 bp was amplified by RT-PCR using the oligonucleotides Ls4E250f and Ls4E697r (Table IV). The amplified cDNAs were subjected to digestion by the PagI endonuclease (Fermentas, Vilnius, Lithuania). The digestion products were resolved by electrophoresis in a 1.5% (w/v) agarose gel. Digestion at an additional PagI site present in all three types of Ls-eIF4E sequences provided an internal control for PagI activity by generating a 35-bp fragment not visualized in this electrophoresis system and a 407- to 413-bp fragment further digested in Ls-eIF4E1 to yield two fragments of 312 and 95 bp.
For transient expression in planta by agro-infiltration
(Bechtold et al., 1993
The following eIF4E cDNA and protein sequences were retrieved from
GenBank: human (Homo sapiens; NM_004846, XM_017925), mouse (Mus
musculus) (M61731), Spodoptera frugiperda (AF281654), rice
(Oryza sativa; U34597), maize (Zea mays; AF076954), wheat
(Triticum aestivum; Z12616), tomato (Lycopersicon
esculentum; AF259801), and Arabidopsis (Y10548, NM_102695 and NM_102699).
The eIF(iso)4E sequences were: rice (U34598), maize (AF076955), and
Arabidopsis (Y10547). Homology-based database searches were made in GenBank
using the program BLAST (Altschul et al.,
1990
The 3D structures of cap-bound eIF4E of human (Hs-eIF4E) and mouse
(Mm-eIF4E) were retrieved from the Protein Data Bank
(http://www.rcsb.org/pdb)
with the codes 1IPB and 1EJH, respectively. Comparative protein modeling was
elaborated online using Swiss-model and Swiss-PdbViewer
(Guex and Peitsch, 1997
We are grateful to the excellence of Thierry Mauduit for plant care, to Kathryn Mayo for improving the English of the manuscript, and to Sandrine Ruffel and Drs. Thierry Delaunay, Thierry Michon, Frédéric Revers, and Christophe Robaglia for their stimulating comments and discussions. Received November 18, 2002; returned for revision January 30, 2003; accepted March 14, 2003.
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at http://www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.102.017855.
1 This work was partially supported by the Etablissement Public
Régional Aquitaine (ref. no. 20000307004). * Corresponding author; e-mail legall{at}bordeaux.inra.fr; fax 33557122384.
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