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-Adrenoceptor and nNOS-derived NO interactions modulate
hypoglycemic pial arteriolar dilation in rats
Neuroanesthesia Research Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60607
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ABSTRACT |
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We examined the relative
contributions from nitric oxide (NO) and catecholaminergic pathways in
promoting cerebral arteriolar dilation during hypoglycemia (plasma
glucose
1.4 mM). To that end, we monitored the effects of
-adrenoceptor (
-AR) blockade with propranolol (Pro, 1.5 mg/kg
iv), neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) inhibition with
7-nitroindazole (7-NI, 40 mg/kg ip) or ARR-17477 (300 µM, via topical
application), or combined intravenous Pro + 7-NI or ARR-17477 on pial
arteriolar diameter changes in anesthetized rats subjected to
insulin-induced hypoglycemia. Additional experiments, employing
topically applied TTX (1 µM), addressed the possibility that the pial
arteriolar response to hypoglycemia required neuronal transmission.
Separately, Pro and 7-NI elicited modest but statistically
insignificant 10-20% reductions in the normal ~40% increase in
arteriolar diameter accompanying hypoglycemia. However, combined
Pro-7-NI was accompanied by a >80% reduction in the
hypoglycemia-induced dilation. On the other hand, the combination of
intravenous Pro and topical ARR-17477 did not affect the hypoglycemia response. In the presence of TTX, the pial arteriolar response to
hypoglycemia was lost completely. These results suggest that 1)
-ARs and nNOS-derived NO interact in contributing to
hypoglycemia-induced pial arteriolar dilation; 2) the
interaction does not occur in the vicinity of the arteriole; and
3) the vasodilating signal is transmitted via a neuronal pathway.
7-nitroindazole; ARR-17477; brain; propranolol; tetrodotoxin; vasodilation; nitric oxide; neuronal nitric oxide synthase
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INTRODUCTION |
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THE MECHANISMS
CONTRIBUTING to hypoglycemia-induced cerebral vasodilation remain
unsettled. To a large degree, the lack of consistency among published
reports may be a reflection of multiple mechanisms being involved in
the hypoglycemic response of cerebral vessels. Based on studies
employing pharmacological blockers, three prominent vasodilating
stimuli have been identified variously as contributing to hypoglycemic
cerebrovasodilation. These are adenosine, nitric oxide (NO), and
-adrenoceptor (
-AR) activation (8, 12, 14, 15, 23,
27). Which mechanism predominates may depend on a number of
factors, including animal age, hypoglycemic severity, species, state of
consciousness (i.e., anesthetized or awake), brain region, and/or
vessel segment (i.e., artery vs. arteriole). Moreover, the possibility
exists that interactions among the above vasodilating pathways may
occur to the extent that the effects of selective blockers may overlap
or blocking more than one of the pathways may be required to attenuate
the response.
In the present study, we addressed the hypothesis that
hypoglycemia-induced cerebral arteriolar dilation may involve
interactions among NO- and
-AR-related mechanisms. The rationale
behind this hypothesis derives from a number of published observations.
First, hypoglycemic "stress" is associated with increased activity
of central and peripheral catecholaminergic pathways. Several
intracerebral sites may be involved in this hypoglycemic effect,
including the locus coereleus (LC), hypothalamus, and medullary centers
(3, 18, 20, 21). Activation of neurons within those
structures can lead to initiation of sympathoadrenal activation and,
ultimately,
-AR activation. Second, NO generated via the activation
of the neuronal (n) nitric oxide synthase (NOS) isoform has been
reported to suppress the activity of sympathoexcitatory neurons arising in some of those structures (10, 28, 34-36). Third,
there is evidence that hypoglycemia can increase excitatory amino acid (EAA) release and receptor activity (4, 19). EAA receptor activation is a phenomenon that is often associated with an increased nNOS activity (see Ref. 16). Thus we considered the
possibility that blocking brain nNOS activity may produce two competing
influences on hypoglycemia-induced arteriolar dilation-increased
-AR
activation but diminished perivascular NO production. The end result
might be no change in the hypoglycemic response.
Using rats equipped with closed cranial windows, we examined the
effects of a
-AR blocker, an nNOS inhibitor, or a combination of the
two agents (given systemically) on pial arteriolar diameter changes in
rats subjected to fixed levels of "moderate" (i.e., precoma)
hypoglycemia (plasma glucose = 1.2-1.6 mM). We also sought to
examine whether such interactions occurred locally, within, or in the
vicinity of cerebral arterioles as opposed to occurring at an
intracerebral site that, in turn, transmits vasodilating signals to
distal arterioles. To that end, systemic administration of a
-AR
antagonist was combined with local application of an aqueous-soluble
nNOS-selective inhibitor. The results of those experiments indicated
that hypoglycemic pial arteriolar dilation was suppressed only in the
presence of combined systemic, but not local, administration of the two
blockers. This not only suggested that the arteriolar response involves
an interplay between the two pathways but also that the source of the
vasodilating signal arises distally and presumably is transmitted via a
neural pathway to the pial arteriole. The latter possibility was
supported in an additional group of rats given the nerve action
potential blocker TTX via topical application.
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METHODS |
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The study protocol was approved by the Institutional Animal Care
and Use Committee. Sprague-Dawley rats, 250-350 g, were used. All
rats were fasted overnight before study. Anesthesia was induced with
halothane, and the rat was paralyzed (curare), tracheotomized, and
mechanically ventilated. Surgical anesthesia for insertion of bilateral
femoral arterial and venous catheters consisted of 0.8% halothane-70%
N2O-30% O2. After catheterization, the animal was placed in a head holder, and the skull was exposed to permit placement of a closed cranial window. The cranial window design and
surgical implantation were described in detail in previous publications
(31, 33). The 11-mm-diameter acrylic windows were placed
over a 10-mm craniotomy and were fixed to the skull with cyanoacrylate
gel. The windows were equipped with three ports [inflow, outflow, and
intracranial pressure (ICP) monitoring]. After window placement, the
halothane was discontinued, and a loading dose of intravenous fentanyl
was given (10 µg/kg). Anesthesia during the study was intravenous
fentanyl (25 µg · kg
1 · h
1) plus
ventilation with 70% N2O-30% O2. Cannulas
were secured in the inflow, outflow, and ICP-monitoring ports of the
cranial window, and the space under the window was filled with
artificial cerebrospinal fluid (aCSF). The composition of the aCSF is
provided elsewhere (17, 33). The aCSF was suffused at 0.5 ml/min and was maintained at a temperature of 37°C, a
PCO2 of 40-45 mmHg, PO2 of 50-60 mmHg, and pH
7.35. The ICP was controlled at 5-10 mmHg by adjusting the height of the
outflow cannula. The reactivities of 25-50 µm pial arterioles on
the exposed cortical surface were assessed via measurement of diameter
changes. A microscope (Nikon) and color video camera (Sony) arrangement
was equipped with an epi-illumination, dark field system (Fryer,
Huntley, IL). The vessels were displayed on a video monitor, and
diameter measurements were made using a calibrated video microscaler (Optech).
In all experiments, initial diameter measurements were made after a
30-min period of cortical suffusion with drug-free aCSF (initiated at
1 h posthalothane). The rats were divided into groups based on
subsequent experimental manipulations. We examined the effects of
-AR blockade with propranolol (Pro, 1.5 mg/kg iv, n = 4), nNOS inhibition with 7-nitroindazole (7-NI, 40 mg/kg ip, n = 6), or combined Pro + 7-NI (n = 5) on pial arteriolar diameter changes in rats subjected to
hypoglycemia (plasma glucose = 1.2-1.6 mM). The 7-NI was
suspended in corn oil (32). Two additional groups were
included. In one group, Pro (1.5 mg/kg iv) was combined with the
aqueous-soluble nNOS-selective inhibitor ARR-17477 (300 µM via
cortical suffusion, n = 5). The other group served as a vehicle-treated control (n = 6). The controls actually
consisted of two groups (n = 3 each). In one group,
used as a time control for 7-NI, the rats received 1.0 ml of corn oil
intraperitoneally. In the other, saline was given intravenously at a
time point equivalent to the introduction of Pro. Because the diameter
changes accompanying hypoglycemia were identical in these two control
groups, the results were combined and are presented as a single group.
Because of solubility problems, 7-NI is unsuitable for topical
applications in aqueous media. Therefore, ARR-17477 was used as the
agent for producing local nNOS inhibition. The nNOS selectivities of
7-NI and ARR-17477, at the doses used in this study, were documented in
earlier reports (24, 32) and in preliminary experiments. In the latter case, the pial arteriolar dilations produced by topical
application of the endothelial NOS-dependent vasodilator ACh were
unaffected by 45-60 min of ARR-17477 (300 µM) suffusion or at
30-120 min after intraperitoneal 7-NI (40 mg/kg). We used the
well-documented capacity of nNOS-selective inhibition to attenuate cerebrovascular CO2 reactivity (29, 31, 32) to
judge whether systemic administration of 7-NI, on the one hand, and
topical application of ARR-17477, on the other, yielded similar
magnitude reductions in brain nNOS activity (at least in the vicinity
of the pial circulation). Thus, at the start of all experiments, the
reactivities of pial arterioles to hypercapnia (arterial
PO2 = 60-65 mmHg) were assessed. A
second CO2 response was performed 30 min after 7-NI (in the
7-NI and Pro + 7-NI groups) or 45 min after ARR-17477 (in the
Pro + ARR-17477 group) or vehicle (in the Pro or control groups). A
final series of experiments (n = 5) was used to examine
whether the hypoglycemia-induced pial arteriolar dilation was dependent
on signals transmitted along neuronal pathways. To that end, the sodium
channel blocker TTX (1 µM) was suffused (25). In these
experiments, the TTX was introduced ~60 min before insulin, and the
CO2 reactivity assessments were replaced by 5-min suffusions of the NO donor S-nitrosopenicillamine (SNAP, 1 µM), applied before and ~45 min after introduction of TTX. The SNAP was employed to confirm the absence of any direct actions of TTX on
pial arteriolar smooth muscle function.
The experimental time lines for all groups are represented
diagrammatically in Fig. 1. Insulin (5 IU) was injected intravenously at 20 min after the second hypercapnic
period (or SNAP suffusion) or at 10 min after administration of Pro.
That dose of insulin was sufficient to reduce plasma glucose in the
1.2-1.6 mM range within a period of ~45 min. When plasma glucose
reached ~1.5 mM, a slow infusion (50-100 µl/min) of 0.5%
dextrose was initiated to maintain plasma glucose within the
1.2-1.6 mM range for a minimum period of 20 min. During that
period, plasma was analyzed every 3-5 min to ensure that the
glucose level remained within the 1.2-1.6 mM range.
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Mean arterial blood pressure (MABP) was continuously monitored, and rectal temperature was servocontrolled at 37°C. Arterial blood samples were taken at 30- to 60-min intervals for measurement of PO2, PCO2, pH, and plasma glucose. Additional arterial samples, for analysis of plasma glucose only, were obtained immediately before insulin injection and starting at 15-20 min postinsulin at 5-min intervals. The blood gas/pH analyses were performed on a Radiometer-Copenhagen (model ABL) blood gas/pH analyzer, and the glucose analysis was performed on a Yellow Springs Instruments 2300 STAT glucose analyzer (Yellow Springs, OH). At the termination of the experiments, the rats were killed with a halothane overdose.
The SNAP and Pro were obtained from Sigma (St. Louis, MO). 7-NI was from ICN Biologics (Aurora, OH). TTX was obtained from Research Biochemicals (Natick, MA), and ARR-17477 was a gift from Astra Arcus (Rochester, NY). For comparisons of pial arteriolar diameter changes within a given experiment, a repeated-measures ANOVA with a post hoc Tukey analysis was used. For statistical comparisons of diameter changes between groups, we employed a one-way ANOVA with a post hoc Tukey analysis. All values are reported as means ± SE. Statistical significance was taken at the P < 0.05 level.
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RESULTS |
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Arterial blood variables.
The key arterial blood variables measured at the start and near the end
of each experiment are summarized in Table
1. With the exception of periods of
imposed hypercapnia, no significant variations in
PO2, PCO2, pH, or MABP
were observed in any of the groups over the course of each experiment.
It should be noted, however, that MABP was maintained at control levels
via blood replacement (0.5-1 ml) from a donor rat after Pro
administration. Under normal circumstances, MABP would be expected to
fall in the presence of Pro.
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Pial arteriolar diameter changes.
The initial pial arteriolar diameters measured in rats given vehicle
only, 7-NI only, Pro only, combined 7-NI + Pro, ARR-17477, and TTX
were 32.9 ± 0.9, 42.0 ± 3.7, 32.1 ± 0.6, 34.2 ±
0.9, 28.1 ± 1.0, and 39.6 ± 5.3 µm, respectively. The
diameter changes (relative to the initial value) measured at 45-60
min after introduction of vehicle, 7-NI, ARR-17477, or TTX are
summarized in Fig. 2. In the Pro,
7-NI + Pro, and the ARR-17477 + Pro groups, the changes given in
Fig. 2 were derived from measurements made just before Pro
administration. A significant reduction in diameter (P < 0.05 vs. baseline) was seen in rats treated with 7-NI (
7 and
10% in the 7-NI and 7-NI + Pro groups, respectively). A similar
reduction was observed in the rats given ARR-17477 topically (
7%).
The nNOS inhibitor-associated diameter changes were not, however, significantly different from the diameter change (
2.5%) measured in
the vehicle control group. TTX administration was accompanied by a more
pronounced vasoconstriction (
14 ± 4.2% diameter change, P < 0.05 vs. initial value). That value was also
significantly different from the change measured in the control group.
The stability of the TTX effect was indicated by data showing that the
diameter reduction at 15 min of TTX suffusion (
12.4 ± 2.4%)
was statistically similar to that seen at 45 min. The long-term
stability of the TTX effect was supported in two additional rats, used
as time controls, where the TTX suffusion was extended for 1 h
under normoglycemic conditions. No further changes were observed beyond
those measured at 45 min (data not shown). Addition of Pro was
accompanied by no significant change in diameter in any of the groups
where the drug was administered. That is, relative to the diameter
measured at the time of Pro administration, the diameter changes at 15 min post-Pro (and 5 min before insulin administration) were
3.4 ± 2.9% (Pro alone),
0.7 ± 0.7% (7-NI + Pro), and 1.2 ± 1.1% (ARR-17477 + Pro).
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-ARs to interact at a site or sites separate from the immediate
environment of the pial arterioles and that the vasodilating signal is
transmitted via neural pathways. The latter possibility was examined in
experiments involving topical application of TTX. The dependence of
hypoglycemia-induced pial arteriolar dilation on neural transmission
was revealed by the finding that TTX almost completely prevented the
hypoglycemic response (Fig. 5). The effect of TTX could not be
attributed to any direct actions on the arterioles because the
vasodilations elicited by the NO donor and direct vascular smooth
muscle relaxant SNAP were unaffected by TTX (36.1 ± 0.6 and
33.5 ± 7.6% diameter increases before and 30 min after TTX, respectively).
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DISCUSSION |
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The results of these experiments addressing mechanisms of
hypoglycemia-induced pial arteriolar dilation can be summarized as
follows. First, neither global nNOS nor
-AR blockade, when performed
in separate experiments, induced a significant reduction in the
vasodilating response. Second, combined systemic administration of
nNOS +
-AR blockers was accompanied by a substantial repression of
hypoglycemia-induced pial arteriolar relaxation. Third, topical application of an nNOS blocker, when combined with a systemically administered
-AR antagonist, did not significantly alter
hypoglycemic cerebral vasodilation. Fourth, local application of an
agent that prevents impulse conduction along nerves (TTX) was
associated with a substantial attenuation of the pial arteriolar
response to hypoglycemia.
These results suggest that
-ARs and nNOS-derived NO contribute to
hypoglycemia-induced pial arteriolar dilation in a complex and
interactive manner. Moreover, the interaction does not appear to occur
locally within the pial circulation. We suspect that these results may
reflect a capacity for NO to repress sympathetic neuronal activity.
Thus, when NOS is inhibited, any stress, like hypoglycemia, is going to
elicit a more profound sympathetic activation.
When comparing present results with previous experimental findings, one
must bear in mind that, in the majority of the reports published to
date regarding the effects of hypoglycemia on cerebral hemodynamics,
cerebral blood flow (CBF) was measured. Therefore, some restraint
should be observed when attempting to equate the pial arteriolar
dilations of the present study with the hypoglycemia-induced increases
in CBF seen in earlier reports. In one such study, in adult rats,
Hollinger and Bryan (12) reported that the component of
increased sympathetic activity responsible for hypoglycemic cerebral
hyperemia is
-AR activation. However, the sympathetic/
-AR activation component of that hypoglycemia-induced CBF increase appears
to reside within intracerebral structures and not in the periphery.
That is, in a follow-up study, Bryan and co-workers (5)
reported that, although hypoglycemia elicits an increased release of
catecholamines into the circulation, plasma catecholamine levels
measured before and after hypoglycemia did not correlate with the CBF
changes. Therefore, results to date, including those of the present
study, imply a role for intracerebral sympathetic activation in
hypoglycemia-induced cerebral vasodilation. More specifically, the
activation seems to involve
-ARs localized in regions containing
nNOS but separate from responding arterioles (at least pial arterioles).
A number of brain regions have been identified in which both nNOS and
-ARs are expressed. These include the rostral ventrolateral medulla
(RVLM), the LC, and the hypothalamus (22, 34). More importantly, and with relevance to the present study, NO, presumably via cGMP, has been reported to reduce the activity of sympathetic neurons in those regions. That action may be direct (i.e., via cGMP-dependent protein kinase-mediated phosphorylations; see Ref. 34) or indirect, through the increased release of
inhibitory neurotransmitters (e.g., GABA; see Ref. 37).
Also, NO/cGMP-associated repression of sympathetic neuronal activity
may involve actions on the
-AR itself (1). Hypoglycemia
has been linked to increased noradrenergic activity in the regions
listed earlier (20, 21). Hypoglycemia has also been
reported to increase cerebral EAA release (4, 6) and to
enhance N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor binding (19). Activation of NMDA receptors in neurons
containing nNOS will increase NO production (7). Moreover,
NMDA receptor activation has been linked to increased NO generation in
the RVLM, LC, and hypothalamus (2, 30). Therefore, we
might speculate that, while nNOS inhibition might potentiate
hypoglycemia-induced arteriolar relaxation by increasing
-AR
stimulation and activity, that effect may be counteracted by the
reduction in NO production. The combination of increased
-AR
stimulation and reduced NO generation could explain why we did not see
an increased response in the presence of a nNOS inhibitor alone.
The absence of any influence of Pro, by itself, is somewhat more
difficult to explain. It is unlikely that this relates to a
"disinhibition" mechanism akin to that suggested earlier in relation to NO influences on sympathetic/
-AR activity. For example, the literature indicates that cerebral
-AR activation leads to enhanced EAA release (11, 26), which, in turn, would be
expected to increase nNOS activity. The explanation may actually be
simpler. That is, the capacity for NO to reduce
-AR function in
hypoglycemia may be of such a magnitude so as to render the arteriolar
response insensitive to
-AR blockade. As long as sufficient NO
continues to be generated, vasodilation will be supported during
hypoglycemia. Thus only when both systems are blocked will a loss of
arteriolar reactivity be observed.
Although the present investigation suggests a rather novel mechanism
regarding hypoglycemia-induced dilation of rat pial arterioles in vivo,
it does not resolve the controversy raised by the divergent findings in
the literature. Thus adenosine receptor blockade has been reported to
attenuate the vasodilating response in anesthetized newborn pigs
(27) and adult rats (23) under conditions of severe hypoglycemia and loss of spontaneous EEG activity (plasma glucose <1 mM), but not moderate hypoglycemia (plasma glucose 1-3
mM; see Ref. 23). On the other hand, in awake adult rats, there is evidence to indicate a role for adenosine in the vasodilation accompanying moderate (plasma glucose = 2-3 mM) hypoglycemia
(14). A similar level of disagreement exists concerning
the participation of NO in the cerebrovascular response to
hypoglycemia. Nonselective inhibition of NOS was found to reduce the
vasodilation accompanying hypoglycemia in the anesthetized piglet
(15) and in the awake goat (8) but not the
awake rat (13). Activation of
-ARs was found to play a
major and regionally selective role in the CBF increases accompanying
hypoglycemia in the awake rat (12) but not in the
unanesthetized goat (9). Some of the lack of agreement in
these reports may be a function of species and animal age as well as
the selectivities of the antagonists used [e.g., caffeine is a poorly
selective adenosine antagonist (14), whereas 8-phenyltheophylline derivatives are highly selective (23,
27)]. Another, and perhaps more likely, explanation for
differences in experimental findings relates to the level of
hypoglycemia studied. Thus, even in the moderate hypoglycemia range
(1-3 mM), similar to findings in rats exposed to another
stressor-hypoxia (25), different factors may contribute
depending on whether the plasma glucose lies at the upper or lower end
of that range. One must also give consideration to the prospect that
combinations of stressors, like immobilization plus hypoglycemia (e.g.,
Refs. 8, 9, 12-14), as opposed to hypoglycemia imposed in the
presence of anesthesia, may alter the relative contributions from NO-,
-AR-, or adenosine-related pathways. On the other hand, the presence of anesthesia may limit the magnitude of the hypoglycemia-related increase in neuronal activity. That could influence whether and to what
extent nNOS or
-AR blockers alter hypoglycemic vasodilation. That
is, one cannot ignore the possibility that the roles of NO and
-AR
activation in promoting pial arteriolar dilation more directly relate
to a capacity to enhance the increased neuronal activity initiated by
hypoglycemia rather than to direct effects on the vessels. In that
case, an anesthesia-induced limitation on the hypoglycemia-related
increase in neuronal activity could minimize the individual effects of
the pharmacological inhibitors used.
In conclusion, the present findings point to a mechanism of
hypoglycemia-induced cerebral (pial) arteriolar dilation that is
complex and interactive. Our data suggested a process involving the
combined effects of nNOS-derived NO and
-ARs. The results further
implied a mechanism whereby the interaction between these two pathways
occurs at a site (or sites) not in the immediate vicinity of the
arterioles and where the vasodilating signal is transmitted via neural pathways.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We express gratitude to Susan Anderson for expert technical assistance and to Dr. David Reif (Astra Arcus) for supplying the ARR-17477.
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FOOTNOTES |
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This work was supported by National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Grants HL-52595 and HL-56162.
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: D. A. Pelligrino, Neuroanesthesia Research Laboratory, Univ. of Illinois at Chicago, MBRB (M/C 513), 900 South Ashland Ave., Chicago, IL 60607 (E-mail: dpell{at}uic.edu).
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Received 26 April 2000; accepted in final form 14 August 2000.
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