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First published online September 26, 2008; 10.1104/pp.108.122176 Plant Physiology 148:1394-1411 (2008) © 2008 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Physiological and Transcriptomic Evidence for a Close Coupling between Chloroplast Ontogeny and Cell Cycle Progression in the Pennate Diatom Seminavis robusta1,[C],[W],[OA]Laboratory of Protistology and Aquatic Ecology, Department of Biology, Ghent University, B–9000 Gent, Belgium (J.G., V.D., M.J.J.H., S.D., P.V., K.V., K.S., V.A.C., W.V.); and Department of Plant Systems Biology, Flanders Institute for Biotechnology, and Department of Molecular Genetics, Ghent University, B–9052 Gent, Belgium (J.G., V.D., M.J.J.H., L.D.V., C.M., K.V., D.I., M.V.)
Despite the growing interest in diatom genomics, detailed time series of gene expression in relation to key cellular processes are still lacking. Here, we investigated the relationships between the cell cycle and chloroplast development in the pennate diatom Seminavis robusta. This diatom possesses two chloroplasts with a well-orchestrated developmental cycle, common to many pennate diatoms. By assessing the effects of induced cell cycle arrest with microscopy and flow cytometry, we found that division and reorganization of the chloroplasts are initiated only after S-phase progression. Next, we quantified the expression of the S. robusta FtsZ homolog to address the division status of chloroplasts during synchronized growth and monitored microscopically their dynamics in relation to nuclear division and silicon deposition. We show that chloroplasts divide and relocate during the S/G2 phase, after which a girdle band is deposited to accommodate cell growth. Synchronized cultures of two genotypes were subsequently used for a cDNA-amplified fragment length polymorphism-based genome-wide transcript profiling, in which 917 reproducibly modulated transcripts were identified. We observed that genes involved in pigment biosynthesis and coding for light-harvesting proteins were up-regulated during G2/M phase and cell separation. Light and cell cycle progression were both found to affect fucoxanthin-chlorophyll a/c-binding protein expression and accumulation of fucoxanthin cell content. Because chloroplasts elongate at the stage of cytokinesis, cell cycle-modulated photosynthetic gene expression and synthesis of pigments in concert with cell division might balance chloroplast growth, which confirms that chloroplast biogenesis in S. robusta is tightly regulated.
Diatoms, an extraordinarily diverse group of heterokontophyte microalgae (Kooistra et al., 2003
As in other groups of heterokontophyte algae, diatom chloroplasts originate from a secondary endosymbiosis, probably the engulfment of a red alga by a heterotrophic eukaryote (McFadden, 2001
Environmental factors mostly impinge on cell cycle control through cell cycle checkpoints at the G1/S or G2/M cell cycle phase transitions. Many universal core cell cycle genes that regulate these transitions have been found in the two sequenced diatom genomes (Armbrust et al., 2004
Here, we combined physiological experiments, cytological observations, and a cDNA-amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP)-based genome-wide transcriptome analysis to identify cell cycle-dependent checkpoints in chloroplast development and gene expression during synchronized growth. As a model species, we used Seminavis robusta (Danielidis and Mann, 2002
Cell and Chloroplast Division Are Both Arrested in Response to Darkness and Cell Cycle Inhibitor Treatments
Using light deprivation and two cell cycle inhibitors, we investigated whether a relationship exists between the cell cycle checkpoints and the chloroplast division cycle. For light deprivation, exponentially growing cultures were transferred to complete darkness for 24 h and compared with light-grown control cultures by flow cytometry (Fig. 1A
). The tetraploid peak (G2+M phase) present in the light-grown cultures was absent in the 24-h dark-treated cultures, indicating that in the latter the majority of cells were arrested in the G1 phase of the cell cycle. Microscopically, the light-grown cultures consisted of both dividing and nondividing cells (Fig. 1B). In contrast, the dark-arrested cultures only contained nondividing cells (Fig. 1C). These cells have their two chloroplasts undivided and located at the girdle sides of the cell (Fig. 1, D–G). In most cases, the ventral chloroplast had four subcentral lobes that, across the valves, reached the dorsal side of the cell (Fig. 1, F and G). Occasionally, some postcytokinetic doublet cells could also be found in the dark-arrested cultures. These doublet cells are at a stage after cytokinesis but before cell separation, during which the cell is devoted to frustule formation (Coombs et al., 1967a
Next, we studied chloroplast behavior upon treatment with chemical cell cycle inhibitors. First, hydroxyurea (HU) was applied to exponentially growing cultures, thereby inhibiting S-phase progression by depleting the cell of deoxynucleoside triphosphates (Young and Hodas, 1964 (Ikegami et al., 1978
Cytological Changes during Cell Cycle Progression in Synchronized Cultures Based on the uniform cell cycle arrest in dark-arrested cultures, we established a synchronization procedure to study cell cycle-modulated processes. To this end, exponentially growing cultures (12 h:12 h light:dark) were transferred into darkness for a period of 24 h and reilluminated for 12 h. Two monoclonal strains, designated F1-8B and F1-9A, were synchronized in this manner and were used for the transcriptome analysis described below. Reillumination resulted in the synchronous reactivation of cell cycle progression, starting from the G1 phase of the dark-arrested cells. Synchrony was evaluated by estimating the amount of dividing cells at hourly intervals, complemented by observations of chloroplast dynamics (Fig. 3 ). Dividing cells were operationally defined to include only doublet cells, characterized by the presence of a cleavage furrow, which is visible as an area of high contrast separating the chloroplast pairs (see Supplemental Fig. S3 for an illustration of the counting procedure). Immediately upon reillumination, all cells were in the G1 phase, containing undivided chloroplasts as previously shown. After 4 h, few cells with divided chloroplasts appeared in the cultures, and after 6 h, some cells were dividing. From 6 h onward, the cultures contained S-, G2-, and M-phase cells, in which the proportion of dividing cells progressively increased until 50% at the 9-h sampling point. At 9 h, the amount of dividing cells decreased as a consequence of daughter cell separation and initiation of the second cell division cycle.
The phenotypic cell cycle events during synchronization of the cultures were further characterized with confocal laser-scanning microscopy and an appropriate set of stains for the nucleus (SYBR Safe) and the cell wall (2-(4-pyridyl)-5-((4-(2-dimethylaminoethylamino-carbamoyl)methoxy)phenyl)oxazole [PDMPO]). Besides fluorescent cell wall labeling in diatoms (Shimizu et al., 2001
As shown previously by Chepurnov et al. (2002)
Before signs of mitosis appeared, but after chloroplast rearrangement, the first PDMPO signal was detected as an elliptically shaped thin band (Fig. 4F). This signal probably represents a girdle band (Supplemental Fig. S4) that is added to the girdle as a result of cell growth. Chloroplast reorganization was followed by karyokinesis (Fig. 4G) and cytokinesis (Fig. 4, H–K). Early on during cytokinesis, PDMPO fluorescence was initially detected inside two "vacuole-like" compartments located against the division plane running from pole to pole (Fig. 4H), while a PDMPO-stained cell wall was not yet visible. Since the fluorescence emission and intensity of PDMPO typically shift when the intracompartmental silica concentration increases above 3.2 mM (Shimizu et al., 2001
The microscopically derived indications of cell cycle phase-dependent chloroplast division were validated by transcript quantification of the bacterial cell division homolog FtsZ in synchronized S. robusta cultures. Therefore, a FtsZ gene fragment was amplified with a set of nested degenerate primers, cloned, and sequenced, enabling the design of a specific primer pair suited for real-time (RT) quantitative (Q) PCR (Supplemental Fig. S5). Three constitutively expressed genes were used for data normalization (see "Materials and Methods"), and RT-Q-PCR of the S. robusta FtsZ ortholog was done on two replicated synchronizations of strain F1-8B (Fig. 5 ). Both showed that FtsZ expression is modulated during synchronization. Its expression 5 to 8 h after reillumination increased 2.5- to 4-fold when compared with its average expression between 0 to 4 h. In both replicates, FtsZ was maximally expressed at 7 h after darkness, being 2 h before most cells were dividing.
cDNA-AFLP Expression Profiling during Cell Cycle Progression In parallel with the above-described sampling (Fig. 3) for cytological observations, samples were taken at 1-h intervals to conduct a cDNA-AFLP-based genome-wide transcript profiling to identify modulated gene expression profiles correlated with the cytological changes during the cell cycle. The complete data set, including annotations and expression data, is available online (Supplemental Table S1).
The cDNA-AFLP analysis resulted in 2,908 transcript-derived fragments (TDFs) that were scored quantitatively. A considerable amount of expression variation between the two strains originated from genotype-dependent DNA polymorphisms in the transcripts, resulting in the absence/presence of cDNA-AFLP fragments (see Supplemental Fig. S6 for an example of a cDNA-AFLP electropherogram; Vuylsteke et al., 2006
In total, 378 TDFs (41%) with reproducible expression profiles across the two genotypes were selected for sequencing. Since we were interested primarily in the progression of the cell cycle, proportionally more TDFs were selected from clusters C5 and C7, in which expression was up-regulated after reillumination (Supplemental Table S2). Good-quality sequences were found in 322 TDFs (85%), of which 100 had significant (E-value < 10–3) similarity (Table I) with genes in the in-house-constructed database (see "Materials and Methods"). Expression patterns of these annotated TDFs are presented in Supplemental Figure S9. Seventy-two TDFs showed homology with a gene with a putative allocated function, 18 were homologous with sequences without an allocated function (hypothetical proteins), and 10 TDFs matched with diatom orphan genes, for which no homologous counterparts exist (Table I). These latter genes were all confined to the late phases of the cell cycle, indicating that diatom-specific genes might be functionally associated with mitosis and cell separation. Based on the gene homology and the mapping of Gene Ontology (GO) labels and InterPro domains (see "Materials and Methods"; Supplemental Tables S3 and S4), the TDFs with annotated functions were classified into 11 distinct functional groups (Table I).
The majority of the GO-labeled TDFs were active in cellular and metabolic processes (Supplemental Fig. S10). TDFs involved in protein biosynthesis were dominant in S-phase cluster C5. Two genes were found to be involved in amino acid synthesis, namely N-acetyl-
Several genes of the chloroplast-localized fatty acid biosynthetic pathways (Ohlrogge and Browse, 1995
To drive the anabolic pathways of protein and fatty acid synthesis, the cell depends on an acetyl-CoA pool, which can be produced by the aerobic oxidation of carbohydrates (Fernie et al., 2004
Two TDFs (Sr051 and Sr095), a subunit of the vacuolar (V)-type H+-ATPase and a V-type H+-pyrophosphatase, are known to play a role in vacuolar transport. More particularly, they are responsible for the acidification or maintenance of the acidity of organelles (Maeshima, 2001
Fifteen TDFs were assigned to the functional category of photosynthesis (Table I). Using a β-Tubulin (Sr019), which plays a fundamental role in cytoskeleton-based cellular movements, was highly induced 4 h and maximally expressed 6 h after darkness. This induction (clustered within C5) slightly preceded chloroplast reorganization. Another TDF with similarity to a WD40-repeat protein (Sr018), putatively involved in cytoskeleton assembly, was analogously expressed; both genes were down-regulated 6 h after darkness but β-tubulin was again slightly induced at 8 h, in parallel with cell division (Supplemental Fig. S11). The involvement of microtubule-based cytoskeleton dynamics during chloroplast movement was expected and further validated by treatment of synchronized cultures with the microtubule inhibitor nocodazole. Nine hours after treatment, chloroplast division and reorganization were impaired when compared with untreated control cultures. Only after 26 h did chloroplast division and reorganization proceed, arresting the cells at G2+M phase (data not shown).
The microscopic observations (Fig. 4) showed that chloroplasts elongated after cell division initiation when they relocated to the girdle sides of the cell. To investigate whether this elongation is paralleled with chloroplast growth, we determined fucoxanthin pigment turnover and validated the FCP expression with RT-Q-PCR in synchronized cultures. In addition, these data were compared with those from synchronized cultures to which the cell cycle inhibitor aphidicolin had been added shortly before reillumination (Fig. 7 ). This was done to assess the dependence of pigment turnover and FCP expression on cell cycle progression versus light regulation.
Upon reillumination, fucoxanthin content per cell increased under both conditions, but the trend was more pronounced in the dividing cultures than in the S-phase-arrested cultures. This fucoxanthin accumulation in the dividing cultures was obvious after 5 h of light and decreased after 10 h, corresponding with cell separation (Fig. 3). In the S-phase-arrested cultures, the accumulation curve was more gradual, without a clear peak and with a smaller maximum. Although the difference between both profiles was obvious, a longitudinal ANOVA test was unable to prove its significance, which could be due to the small number of replicates. In parallel, in response to reillumination in both cultures, FCP expression was activated and subsequently down-regulated after 5 h in the arrested cultures, whereas in cell cycle-progressing cultures, its expression was maintained throughout the 13-h time course (Fig. 7). These findings suggest that chloroplast growth occurs in advance of chloroplast elongation at cytokinesis, while chloroplast light-harvesting complexes are regulated by both the cell cycle and light.
Regulation of Chloroplast Dynamics with Respect to Cell Cycle Progression and Frustule Silicification
In diatoms, chloroplast division and development have not yet been considered in relation to cell cycle regulation. For example, darkness was shown to arrest the cell cycle in several diatom species (Vaulot et al., 1986
As shown here for the pennate diatom S. robusta, chloroplast division and development are intimately linked with cell cycle progression. First, conditions that activate the G1-to-S cell cycle checkpoint (i.e. light deprivation, HU, or aphidicolin) arrest the development of chloroplasts at the plastokinesis stage without inducing aberrant cell morphologies. Second, both divided chloroplasts rotate from the girdle to the valves before karyokinesis is initiated. And, at last, the chloroplast division homolog FtsZ is expressed in concert with chloroplast division in a cell cycle phase-dependent manner, during the S/G2 phases. We conclude that the G1-to-S-checkpoint controls chloroplast division and relocation and enables their synchronous division in S. robusta cultures. Previous observations of chloroplast dynamics during the cell cycle in S. robusta had already shown that chloroplasts and the nucleus divide in a coordinated manner (Chepurnov et al., 2002
Since its initial discovery in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana; Osteryoung and Vierling, 1995
Control of chloroplast division is governed by conserved cell cycle regulators of bacterial origin (Adams et al., 2008
The molecular mechanism of chloroplast movement in diatoms is still unclear. In polyplastidic diatoms, the red alga C. merolae, and plants, chloroplast movements are known to be actin dependent (de Francisco and Roth, 1977
The intriguing question remains why pennate diatoms display this sometimes complicated cycle of repositioning the chloroplast during cell cycle progression. One possibility is that the position of the chloroplasts at the valves might create a disadvantage for cell movement needed for adequate reaction to environmental factors, such as light and nutrients (Cohn and Disparti, 1992
Girdle bands accommodate cell growth and, like frustules, are formed by polymerization of silica in a silica deposition vesicle (SDV) that is exocytosed (Pickett-Heaps et al., 1990
In many studies using phytoplankton cultures (for review, see Pirson and Lorenzen, 1966
The uniformly dark-induced G1-phase arrest in S. robusta appears unusual when compared with other diatoms. The centric diatom Thalassiosira weissflogii accumulates, besides G1-phase cells, 60% G2+M-phase cells (Olson et al., 1986
Based on the expression of the prereplication factor MCM5 and the occurrence of dividing chloroplasts, the duration of the G1 phase in S. robusta can be estimated to last for 4 h (33% of the total division time) during synchronization under the applied culture conditions. Since the last 3 h were dominated by separating cells, 5 h (41% of the total division time) are left to fulfill the S, G2, and M phases. Our results suggest that cell division during synchronization occurred faster (<12 h) than during normal exponential growth, even when compared with the highest recorded maximum division rate for S. robusta, being 16.6 h per division (approximately 1.5 divisions per day under continuous light at 200 µE). As suggested (Olson et al., 1986
The overall results from the cDNA-AFLP experiment confirm the hypothesis that several biological processes are under temporal transcriptional control during the cell cycle of diatoms, as shown previously in similar studies of higher plants and animals (Cho et al., 2001
Regulation of FCP expression is known to modulate light harvesting primarily during photoacclimation independent of developmental processes (Falkowski and LaRoche, 1991
In S. robusta, FCP expression was found to be light activated in the first place, confirming previous results in centric (Leblanc et al., 1999
A recent study by Ragni and Ribera d'Alcalà (2007)
Taking together our microscopic analysis, cDNA-AFLP results, and pigment accumulation patterns, we suggest that cell cycle modulation of photosynthetic light harvesting occurs in concert with chloroplast growth to prepare for its elongation at cytokinesis. Because chloroplasts in S. robusta elongate at the stage of cytokinesis, regulated synthesis of more functional light-harvesting complexes would be expected to provide a balanced growth of chloroplasts at this stage, thereby optimizing the cell's photosynthetic capacity during the subsequent G1 phase. Together with light acclimation and circadian regulation, cell cycle-modulated biosynthesis of the large amount of pigments that are contained within diatoms (Chan, 1978
Cell Culture and Image Acquisition
The Seminavis robusta strains F1-8B and F1-9A were selected from a first generation of siblings obtained by crossing the wild-type clones 75 and 80 (Chepurnov et al., 2002
The effect of darkness on cell morphology was tested on exponentially growing cultures of strain F1-8B (Chepurnov et al., 2008
DNA content was measured on intact fixed cells. Therefore, at least 10 mL of a culture was centrifuged for 10 min at 1,500g, and the cells were fixed in 10 mL of ice-cold methanol in the dark at 4°C (Vaulot et al., 1986
For the synchronization, each S. robusta strain was grown in two tissue culture flasks. Because of the difference in cell size, F1-8B and F1-9A culture flasks were inoculated with 7.5 x 105 and 1 x 106 cells, respectively, into 200 mL of medium. Cell density estimates of stock cultures were obtained by microscopically counting cells in a 100-µL aliquot of a suspended culture on a 96-well TC plate. Cultures inoculated for synchronization were grown for 2 d in a 12:12-h light:dark regime. At the end of day 2, the dark period was extended for another 12 h, arresting the cell culture at the G1 phase. A first sample was taken just before the light was switched on, followed by 12 samples taken every hour after reillumination. Just before sampling of each culture, six photographs were taken with the Axiovert 40 microscope and a connected digital camera (Canon Powershot G3). Images were used to count different cell types using the open-source software ImageJ (http://rsb.info.nih.gov/ij/index.html) and the cell counter plug-in. M-phase cells were easily identified and distinguished from interphase cells by the presence of a newly built cell wall, situated between the two valve-located chloroplasts. As soon as daughter cells were separating, they were counted as nondividing cells. In preparation for cell culture harvesting, the cells were concentrated by reducing the medium of the first flask to less than 50 mL by aspiration with a water pump and attached Pasteur pipette. After suspension through scraping (Sarstedt), the cells were added to the second bottle, from which the complete medium was aspirated. The collection of suspended cells from the two bottles was transferred to a 50-mL Falcon tube and centrifuged for 6 min at 1,500g. The supernatant was poured off, and the tube containing the pellet was frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at –80°C until RNA preparation.
Total RNA was extracted from each cell sample using the RNeasy Plant Mini Kit (Qiagen). Cell lysis was achieved by mechanical disruption in 600 µL of RNeasy Lysis buffer (Qiagen) by highest speed agitation with glass/zirconium beads (0.1 mm diameter; Biospec) on a bead mill (Retsch). All other steps for RNA extraction were done according to the manufacturer's instructions. RNA concentration and purity were assessed by spectrophotometry (Nanodrop ND-1000 spectrophotometer) and denaturing agarose gel electrophoresis. First- and second-strand cDNA synthesis and cDNA-AFLP analysis, with BstYI and MseI as restriction enzymes, were carried out according to Vuylsteke et al. (2007)
TDFs were purified from the gel, followed by amplification and subsequent sequencing as described by Vuylsteke et al. (2007)
Based on conserved amino acid regions of known FtsZ genes in P. tricornutum (JGI, v2.0 protein identifiers 14995 and 14426) and T. pseudonana (JGI, v3.0 protein identifiers 35728, 269655, and 15398), 12 oligonucleotide primers were designed with CODEHOP (CDH; Rose et al., 1998
RNA was isolated and quantified as before. Isolated RNA was treated with DNaseI (GE-Healthcare) to remove all contaminating genomic DNA. An aliquot of 0.5 µg of total RNA from each sample was used for cDNA synthesis. The reverse transcription was carried out in a total volume of 20 µL with oligo(dT) primers and the SuperScript II kit (Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer's instructions. A 0.5-µL aliquot of a 5-fold dilution of the cDNA (2.5 ng) served as template for each RT-Q-PCR. Primers for FCP quantification and normalization were designed using the Beacon Designer 7.0 (Premier Biosoft International; Supplemental Fig. S5) together with a stringent set of primer design criteria, including predicted melting temperatures of 58.0°C ± 2.0°C, primer lengths of 17 to 22 nucleotides, and amplicon lengths of 75 to 150 bp. Primer pairs were tested by RT-Q-PCR on a pooled cDNA sample under the same conditions as described below. Primer reliability was confirmed by the appearance of a single peak in the melting curve analysis performed by the PCR machine after completion of the amplification reaction.
Eight constitutively and moderately expressed cDNA-AFLP TDFs were selected as candidate genes to serve for internal reference during RT-Q-PCR. These TDFs were excised from the cDNA-AFLP gels, reamplified, and sequenced, and primer pairs were designed as before. The expression stability (M) of the putative normalization genes was analyzed with the geNORM program: genes with the lowest M value are the most stably expressed and were selected as normalization genes (Vandesompele et al., 2002
RT-Q-PCR was performed on the Lightcycler 480 (Roche) platform. Each sample was assayed in triplicate under the following conditions: 2.5 ng of template cDNA, 2.5 µL of the Lightcycler 480 SYBR Green I Master Mix (Roche Applied Science), and 2 µL of primers at concentration of 0.5 µM. The cycling conditions comprised 10 min of preincubation at 95°C and 45 cycles of 10 s at 95°C, 15 s at 58°C, and 15 s at 72°C. Amplicon dissociation curves (i.e. melting curves) were recorded by heating at 95°C for 5 s and at 65°C for 1 min. Samples were cooled at 40°C for 10 s. The relative comparison
S. robusta pigments were sampled from light/dark-synchronized cultures (see above) by filtering 25 mL of suspended culture over a preweighed 25-mm Whatman glass fiber filter. Filters were wrapped in aluminum foil, frozen in liquid nitrogen, and stored at –80°C. Before analysis, the filters were lyophilized for 8 h and weighed (0.1-mg accuracy) to calculate the dry weight of each sample. Pigments were extracted from the filters in 90% acetone by means of sonication (tip sonicator; 40 W for 30 s). Extracts were filtered over a 0.2-µm Alltech nylon syringe filter to remove particles and injected into a Agilent 1100 series HPLC system (ChemStation software) equipped with a Macherey-Nagel reverse-phase C18 column (Nucleodur C18 pyramid; 5 µm particle size). Pigments were analyzed according to the method of Wright and Jeffrey (1997) Sequence data from this article can be found in the GenBank/EMBL data libraries under accession numbers FJ388875 and GE343005 to GE343326.
The following material is available in the online version of this article.
We thank Bart Vanelslander for help with the sampling, Debbie Rombaut for help with the cDNA-AFLP, and Martine De Cock for help in preparing the manuscript. Received April 29, 2008; accepted September 18, 2008; published September 26, 2008.
1 This work was supported by the European Union Framework Program 6 Diatomics project (grant no. LSHG–CT–2004–512035), the Research Fund of Ghent University (Geconcerteerde Onderzoeksacties grant no. 12050398), the Belgian Coordinated Collections of Microorganisms Culture Collection project (grant no. C3/00/14; Belgian Federal Science Policy), Research Foundation-Flanders (postdoctoral fellowship to L.D.V.), and the Institute for the Promotion of Innovation through Science and Technology in Flanders (predoctoral fellowships to J.G., V.D., M.J.J.H., C.M., and K.V.).
2 Present address: SBAE Industries NV, Oostmoer 22A, 9950 Waarschoot, Belgium. The authors responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantphysiol.org) are: Wim Vyverman (wim.vyverman{at}ugent.be) and Jeroen Gillard (jeroen.gillard{at}ugent.be).
[C] Some figures in this article are displayed in color online but in black and white in the print edition.
[W] The online version of this article contains Web-only data.
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.108.122176 * Corresponding author; e-mail dirk.inze{at}psb.ugent.be.
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