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    • Review Article21
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    • Fliesler, Steven J2
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    • Thematic Review Series
      Open Access

      Deep-lipidotyping by mass spectrometry: recent technical advances and applications

      Journal of Lipid Research
      Vol. 63Issue 7100219Published online: April 27, 2022
      • Wenpeng Zhang
      • Ruijun Jian
      • Jing Zhao
      • Yikun Liu
      • Yu Xia
      Cited in Scopus: 10
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        In-depth structural characterization of lipids is an essential component of lipidomics. There has been a rapid expansion of mass spectrometry methods that are capable of resolving lipid isomers at various structural levels over the past decade. These developments finally make deep-lipidotyping possible, which provides new means to study lipid metabolism and discover new lipid biomarkers. In this review, we discuss recent advancements in tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) methods for identification of complex lipids beyond the species (known headgroup information) and molecular species (known chain composition) levels.
        Deep-lipidotyping by mass spectrometry: recent technical advances and applications
      • Thematic Review Series: Seeing 2020: Lipids and Lipid-Soluble Molecules in the Eye Thematic Review Series Thematic Review Series: Seeing 2020: Lipids and Lipid-Soluble Molecules in the Eye
        Open Access

        Very long chain fatty acid-containing lipids: a decade of novel insights from the study of ELOVL4

        Journal of Lipid Research
        Vol. 62100030Published online: February 5, 2021
        • Gyening Kofi Yeboah
        • Ekaterina S. Lobanova
        • Richard S. Brush
        • Martin-Paul Agbaga
        Cited in Scopus: 0
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          Lipids play essential roles in maintaining cell structure and function by modulating membrane fluidity and cell signaling. The fatty acid elongase-4 (ELOVL4) protein, expressed in retina, brain, Meibomian glands, skin, testes and sperm, is an essential enzyme that mediates tissue-specific biosynthesis of both VLC-PUFA and VLC-saturated fatty acids (VLC-SFA). These fatty acids play critical roles in maintaining retina and brain function, neuroprotection, skin permeability barrier maintenance, and sperm function, among other important cellular processes.
          Very long chain fatty acid-containing lipids: a decade of novel insights from the study of ELOVL4
        • Thematic Review Series Thematic Review Series: The Science of FH
          Open Access

          Existing and emerging therapies for the treatment of familial hypercholesterolemia

          Journal of Lipid Research
          Vol. 62100060Published online: March 11, 2021
          • Robert S. Rosenson
          Cited in Scopus: 0
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            Familial hypercholesterolemia (FH), an autosomal dominant disorder of LDL metabolism that is characterized by elevated LDL-cholesterol, is commonly encountered in patients with atherosclerotic coronary heart disease. Combinations of cholesterol-lowering therapies are often used to lower LDL-cholesterol in patients with FH; however, current treatment goals for LDL-cholesterol are rarely achieved in patients with homozygous FH (HoFH) and are difficult to achieve in patients with heterozygous FH (HeFH).
            Existing and emerging therapies for the treatment of familial hypercholesterolemia
          • Thematic Review Series Thematic Review Series: The Science of FH
            Open Access

            Lipoprotein metabolism in familial hypercholesterolemia

            Journal of Lipid Research
            Vol. 62100062Published online: March 3, 2021
            • Kévin Chemello
            • Javier García-Nafría
            • Antonio Gallo
            • Cesar Martín
            • Gilles Lambert
            • Dirk Blom
            Cited in Scopus: 0
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              Familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) is one of the most common genetic disorders in humans. It is an extremely atherogenic metabolic disorder characterized by lifelong elevations of circulating LDL-C levels often leading to premature cardiovascular events. In this review, we discuss the clinical phenotypes of heterozygous and homozygous FH, the genetic variants in four genes (LDLR/APOB/PCSK9/LDLRAP1) underpinning the FH phenotype as well as the most recent in vitro experimental approaches used to investigate molecular defects affecting the LDL receptor pathway.
              Lipoprotein metabolism in familial hypercholesterolemia
            • Thematic Review Series Thematic Review Series: Lipidomics: Lipidomics in Disease
              Open Access

              The lipidome in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease: actionable targets

              Journal of Lipid Research
              Vol. 62100073Published online: April 9, 2021
              • Carlos J. Pirola
              • Silvia Sookoian
              Cited in Scopus: 0
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                Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) has become the most prevalent chronic liver disease. Recent technological advances, combined with OMICs experiments and explorations involving different biological samples, have uncovered vital aspects of NAFLD biology. In this review, we summarize recent work by our group and others that expands what is known about the role of lipidome in NAFLD pathogenesis. We discuss how pathway and enrichment analyses were performed by integrating a list of query metabolites derived from text-mining existing NAFLD-lipidomics studies, resulting in the identification of nine Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes dysregulated pathways, including biosynthesis of unsaturated fatty acids, butanoate metabolism, synthesis and degradation of ketone bodies, sphingolipid, arachidonic acid and pyruvate metabolism, and numerous nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug pathways predicted from The Small Molecule Pathway Database.
                The lipidome in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease: actionable targets
              • Thematic Review Series Thematic Review Series: Lipidomics: Lipidomics in Disease
                Open Access

                The lipid biology of sepsis

                Journal of Lipid Research
                Vol. 62100090Published online: May 31, 2021
                • Kaushalya Amunugama
                • Daniel P. Pike
                • David A. Ford
                Cited in Scopus: 0
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                  Sepsis, defined as the dysregulated immune response to an infection leading to organ dysfunction, is one of the leading causes of mortality around the globe. Despite the significant progress in delineating the underlying mechanisms of sepsis pathogenesis, there are currently no effective treatments or specific diagnostic biomarkers in the clinical setting. The perturbation of cell signaling mechanisms, inadequate inflammation resolution, and energy imbalance, all of which are altered during sepsis, are also known to lead to defective lipid metabolism.
                  The lipid biology of sepsis
                • Thematic Review Series Thematic Review Series: Lipidomics: Lipidomics in Disease
                  Open Access

                  Clinical lipidomics: realizing the potential of lipid profiling

                  Journal of Lipid Research
                  Vol. 62100127Published online: September 25, 2021
                  • Thomas G. Meikle
                  • Kevin Huynh
                  • Corey Giles
                  • Peter J. Meikle
                  Cited in Scopus: 0
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                    Dysregulation of lipid metabolism plays a major role in the etiology and sequelae of inflammatory disorders, cardiometabolic and neurological diseases, and several forms of cancer. Recent advances in lipidomic methodology allow comprehensive lipidomic profiling of clinically relevant biological samples, enabling researchers to associate lipid species and metabolic pathways with disease onset and progression. The resulting data serve not only to advance our fundamental knowledge of the underlying disease process but also to develop risk assessment models to assist in the diagnosis and management of disease.
                    Clinical lipidomics: realizing the potential of lipid profiling
                  • Thematic Review Series Thematic Review Series: The Science of FH
                    Open Access

                    The PCSK9 discovery, an inactive protease with varied functions in hypercholesterolemia, viral infections, and cancer

                    Journal of Lipid Research
                    Vol. 62100130Published online: October 1, 2021
                    • Nabil G. Seidah
                    Cited in Scopus: 0
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                      In 2003, the sequences of mammalian proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) were reported. Radiolabeling pulse-chase analyses demonstrated that PCSK9 was synthesized as a precursor (proPCSK9) that undergoes autocatalytic cleavage in the endoplasmic reticulum into PCSK9, which is then secreted as an inactive enzyme in complex with its inhibitory prodomain. Its high mRNA expression in liver hepatocytes and its gene localization on chromosome 1p32, a third locus associated with familial hypercholesterolemia, other than LDLR or APOB, led us to identify three patient families expressing the PCSK9 variants S127R or F216L.
                      The PCSK9 discovery, an inactive protease with varied functions in hypercholesterolemia, viral infections, and cancer
                    • Thematic Review Series Thematic Review Series: The Science of FH
                      Open Access

                      Genetic testing for familial hypercholesterolemia—past, present, and future

                      Journal of Lipid Research
                      Vol. 62100139Published online: October 16, 2021
                      • Marta Futema
                      • Alison Taylor-Beadling
                      • Maggie Williams
                      • Steve E. Humphries
                      Cited in Scopus: 0
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                        In the early 1980s, the Nobel Prize winning cellular and molecular work of Mike Brown and Joe Goldstein led to the identification of the LDL receptor gene as the first gene where mutations cause the familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) phenotype. We now know that autosomal dominant monogenic FH can be caused by pathogenic variants of three additional genes (APOB/PCSK9/APOE) and that the plasma LDL-C concentration and risk of premature coronary heart disease differs according to the specific locus and associated molecular cause.
                        Genetic testing for familial hypercholesterolemia—past, present, and future
                      • Thematic Review Series: Seeing 2020: Lipids and Lipid-Soluble Molecules in the Eye Thematic Review Series Thematic Review Series: Seeing 2020: Lipids and Lipid-Soluble Molecules in the Eye
                        Open Access

                        Fatty acid oxidation and photoreceptor metabolic needs

                        Journal of Lipid Research
                        Vol. 62100035Published online: February 5, 2021
                        • Zhongjie Fu
                        • Timothy S. Kern
                        • Ann Hellström
                        • Lois E.H. Smith
                        Cited in Scopus: 0
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                          Photoreceptors have high energy demands and a high density of mitochondria that produce ATP through oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) of fuel substrates. Although glucose is the major fuel for CNS brain neurons, in photoreceptors (also CNS), most glucose is not metabolized through OXPHOS but is instead metabolized into lactate by aerobic glycolysis. The major fuel sources for photoreceptor mitochondria remained unclear for almost six decades. Similar to other tissues (like heart and skeletal muscle) with high metabolic rates, photoreceptors were recently found to metabolize fatty acids (palmitate) through OXPHOS.
                          Fatty acid oxidation and photoreceptor metabolic needs
                        • Thematic Review Series Thematic Review Series: Seeing 2020: Lipids and Lipid-Soluble Molecules in the Eye
                          Open Access

                          Bisretinoid phospholipid and vitamin A aldehyde: shining a light

                          Journal of Lipid Research
                          Vol. 62100042Published online: February 5, 2021
                          • Hye Jin Kim
                          • Janet R. Sparrow
                          Cited in Scopus: 0
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                            Vitamin A aldehyde covalently bound to opsin protein is embedded in a phospholipid-rich membrane that supports photon absorption and phototransduction in photoreceptor cell outer segments. Following absorption of a photon, the 11-cis-retinal chromophore of visual pigment in photoreceptor cells isomerizes to all-trans-retinal. To maintain photosensitivity 11-cis-retinal must be replaced. At the same time, however, all-trans-retinal has to be handled so as to prevent nonspecific aldehyde activity.
                            Bisretinoid phospholipid and vitamin A aldehyde: shining a light
                          • Thematic Review Series Thematic Review Series: Seeing 2020: Lipids and Lipid-Soluble Molecules in the Eye
                            Open Access

                            Signaling roles of phosphoinositides in the retina

                            Journal of Lipid Research
                            Vol. 62100041Published online: February 5, 2021
                            • Raju V.S. Rajala
                            Cited in Scopus: 0
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                              The field of phosphoinositide signaling has expanded significantly in recent years. Phosphoinositides (also known as phosphatidylinositol phosphates or PIPs) are universal signaling molecules that directly interact with membrane proteins or with cytosolic proteins containing domains that directly bind phosphoinositides and are recruited to cell membranes. Through the activities of phosphoinositide kinases and phosphoinositide phosphatases, seven distinct phosphoinositide lipid molecules are formed from the parent molecule, phosphatidylinositol.
                              Signaling roles of phosphoinositides in the retina
                            • Thematic Review Series Thematic Review Series: Seeing 2020: Lipids and Lipid-Soluble Molecules in the Eye
                              Open Access

                              Retinoids in the visual cycle: role of the retinal G protein-coupled receptor

                              Journal of Lipid Research
                              Vol. 62100040Published online: February 5, 2021
                              • Elliot H. Choi
                              • Anahita Daruwalla
                              • Susie Suh
                              • Henri Leinonen
                              • Krzysztof Palczewski
                              Cited in Scopus: 0
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                                Driven by the energy of a photon, the visual pigments in rod and cone photoreceptor cells isomerize 11-cis-retinal to the all-trans configuration. This photochemical reaction initiates the signal transduction pathway that eventually leads to the transmission of a visual signal to the brain and leaves the opsins insensitive to further light stimulation. For the eye to restore light sensitivity, opsins require recharging with 11-cis-retinal. This trans-cis back conversion is achieved through a series of enzymatic reactions composing the retinoid (visual) cycle.
                                Retinoids in the visual cycle: role of the retinal G protein-coupled receptor
                              • Thematic Review Series Thematic Review Series: Seeing 2020: Lipids and Lipid-Soluble Molecules in the Eye
                                Open Access

                                Lipid conformational order and the etiology of cataract and dry eye

                                Journal of Lipid Research
                                Vol. 62100039Published online: February 5, 2021
                                • Douglas Borchman
                                Cited in Scopus: 0
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                                  Lens and tear film lipids are as unique as the systems they reside in. The major lipid of the human lens is dihydrosphingomylein, found in quantity only in the lens. The lens contains a cholesterol to phospholipid molar ratio as high as 10:1, more than anywhere else in the body. Lens lipids contribute to maintaining lens clarity, and alterations in lens lipid composition due to age are likely to contribute to cataract. Lens lipid composition reflects adaptations to the unique characteristics of the lens: no turnover of lens lipids or proteins; the lowest amount of oxygen of any tissue; and contains almost no intracellular organelles.
                                  Lipid conformational order and the etiology of cataract and dry eye
                                • Thematic Review Series Thematic Review Series: Seeing 2020: Lipids and Lipid-Soluble Molecules in the Eye
                                  Open Access

                                  Docosanoid signaling modulates corneal nerve regeneration: effect on tear secretion, wound healing, and neuropathic pain

                                  Journal of Lipid Research
                                  Vol. 62100033Published online: February 5, 2021
                                  • Thang L. Pham
                                  • Haydee E.P. Bazan
                                  Cited in Scopus: 0
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                                    The cornea is densely innervated, mainly by sensory nerves of the ophthalmic branch of the trigeminal ganglia (TG). These nerves are important to maintain corneal homeostasis, and nerve damage can lead to a decrease in wound healing, an increase in corneal ulceration and dry eye disease (DED), and neuropathic pain. Pathologies, such as diabetes, aging, viral and bacterial infection, as well as prolonged use of contact lenses and surgeries to correct vision can produce nerve damage. There are no effective therapies to alleviate DED (a multifunctional disease) and several clinical trials using ω-3 supplementation show unclear and sometimes negative results.
                                    Docosanoid signaling modulates corneal nerve regeneration: effect on tear secretion, wound healing, and neuropathic pain
                                  • Thematic Review Series Thematic Review Series: Seeing 2020: Lipids and Lipid-Soluble Molecules in the Eye
                                    Open Access

                                    The emerging roles of the macular pigment carotenoids throughout the lifespan and in prenatal supplementation

                                    Journal of Lipid Research
                                    Vol. 62100038Published online: February 5, 2021
                                    • Paul S. Bernstein
                                    • Ranganathan Arunkumar
                                    Cited in Scopus: 0
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                                      Since the publication of the Age-Related Eye Disease Study 2 (AREDS2) in 2013, the macular pigment carotenoids lutein (L) and zeaxanthin (Z) have become well known to both the eye care community and the public. It is a fascinating aspect of evolution that primates have repurposed photoprotective pigments and binding proteins from plants and insects to protect and enhance visual acuity. Moreover, utilization of these plant-derived nutrients has been widely embraced for preventing vision loss from age-related macular degeneration.
                                      The emerging roles of the macular pigment carotenoids throughout the lifespan and in prenatal supplementation
                                    • Thematic Review Series Thematic Review Series: Seeing 2020: Lipids and Lipid-Soluble Molecules in the Eye
                                      Open Access

                                      Sphingolipids as critical players in retinal physiology and pathology

                                      Journal of Lipid Research
                                      Vol. 62100037Published online: February 5, 2021
                                      • M. Victoria Simon
                                      • Sandip K. Basu
                                      • Bano Qaladize
                                      • Richard Grambergs
                                      • Nora P. Rotstein
                                      • Nawajes Mandal
                                      Cited in Scopus: 0
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                                        Sphingolipids have emerged as bioactive lipids involved in the regulation of many physiological and pathological processes. In the retina, they have been established to participate in numerous processes, such as neuronal survival and death, proliferation and migration of neuronal and vascular cells, inflammation, and neovascularization. Dysregulation of sphingolipids is therefore crucial in the onset and progression of retinal diseases. This review examines the involvement of sphingolipids in retinal physiology and diseases.
                                        Sphingolipids as critical players in retinal physiology and pathology
                                      • Thematic Review Series Thematic Review Series: Seeing 2020: Lipids and Lipid-Soluble Molecules in the Eye
                                        Open Access

                                        Cholesterol homeostasis in the vertebrate retina: biology and pathobiology

                                        Journal of Lipid Research
                                        Vol. 62100057Published online: March 1, 2021
                                        • Sriganesh Ramachandra Rao
                                        • Steven J. Fliesler
                                        Cited in Scopus: 7
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                                          Cholesterol is a quantitatively and biologically significant constituent of all mammalian cell membrane, including those that comprise the retina. Retinal cholesterol homeostasis entails the interplay between de novo synthesis, uptake, intraretinal sterol transport, metabolism, and efflux. Defects in these complex processes are associated with several congenital and age-related disorders of the visual system. Herein, we provide an overview of the following topics: (a) cholesterol synthesis in the neural retina; (b) lipoprotein uptake and intraretinal sterol transport in the neural retina and the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE); (c) cholesterol efflux from the neural retina and the RPE; and (d) biology and pathobiology of defects in sterol synthesis and sterol oxidation in the neural retina and the RPE.
                                          Cholesterol homeostasis in the vertebrate retina: biology and pathobiology
                                        • Thematic Review Series Thematic Review Series: Seeing 2020: Lipids and Lipid-Soluble Molecules in the Eye
                                          Open Access

                                          Lipid metabolism dysregulation in diabetic retinopathy

                                          Journal of Lipid Research
                                          Vol. 62100017Published online: January 5, 2021
                                          • Julia V. Busik
                                          Cited in Scopus: 0
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                                            Lipid metabolic abnormalities have emerged as potential risk factors for the development and progression of diabetic complications, including diabetic retinopathy (DR). This review article provides an overview of the results of clinical trials evaluating the potential benefits of lipid-lowering drugs, such as fibrates, omega-3 fatty acids, and statins, for the prevention and treatment of DR. Although several clinical trials demonstrated that treatment with fibrates leads to improvement of DR, there is a dissociation between the protective effects of fibrates in the retina, and the intended blood lipid classes, including plasma triglycerides, total cholesterol, or HDL:LDL cholesterol ratio.
                                            Lipid metabolism dysregulation in diabetic retinopathy
                                          • Thematic Review Series Thematic Review Series: The Science of FH
                                            Open Access

                                            FH through the retrospectoscope

                                            Journal of Lipid Research
                                            Vol. 62100036Published online: February 5, 2021
                                            • Gilbert R. Thompson
                                            Cited in Scopus: 0
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                                              After training as a gastroenterologist in the UK, the author became interested in lipidology while he was a research fellow in the USA and switched careers after returning home. Together with Nick Myant, he introduced the use of plasma exchange to treat familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) homozygotes and undertook non-steady state studies of LDL kinetics, which showed that the fractional catabolic rate of LDL remained constant irrespective of pool size. Subsequent steady-state turnover studies showed that FH homozygotes had an almost complete lack of receptor-mediated LDL catabolism, providing in vivo confirmation of the Nobel Prize-winning discovery by Goldstein and Brown that LDL receptor dysfunction was the cause of FH.
                                              FH through the retrospectoscope
                                            • Thematic Review Series Thematic Review Series: Seeing 2020: Lipids and Lipid-Soluble Molecules in the Eye
                                              Open Access

                                              Overview of how N32 and N34 elovanoids sustain sight by protecting retinal pigment epithelial cells and photoreceptors

                                              Journal of Lipid Research
                                              Vol. 62100058Published online: March 1, 2021
                                              • Nicolas G. Bazan
                                              Cited in Scopus: 0
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                                                The essential fatty acid DHA (22:6, omega-3 or n-3) is enriched in and required for the membrane biogenesis and function of photoreceptor cells (PRCs), synapses, mitochondria, etc. of the CNS. PRC DHA becomes an acyl chain at the sn-2 of phosphatidylcholine, amounting to more than 50% of the PRC outer segment phospholipids, where phototransduction takes place. Very long chain PUFAs (n-3, ≥ 28 carbons) are at the sn-1 of this phosphatidylcholine molecular species and interact with rhodopsin. PRC shed their tips (DHA-rich membrane disks) daily, which in turn are phagocytized by the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), where DHA is recycled back to PRC inner segments to be used for the biogenesis of new photoreceptor membranes.
                                                Overview of how N32 and N34 elovanoids sustain sight by protecting retinal pigment epithelial cells and photoreceptors
                                              • Thematic Review Series
                                                Open Access

                                                Introduction to the Thematic Review Series: Seeing 2020: lipids and lipid-soluble molecules in the eye

                                                Journal of Lipid Research
                                                Vol. 62100007Published online: December 8, 2020
                                                • Steven J. Fliesler
                                                Cited in Scopus: 0
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                                                  In 2010, this journal published a series of review articles in a Thematic Issue entitled “Lipids and Lipid Metabolism in the Eye.” Over the ensuing decade, a number of significant advances have been made that are pertinent to this broad topic, which prompted us to launch a follow-up Thematic Issue to present updates on several of the topics reviewed in that prior issue as well as to expand into new areas that previously had not been addressed. In addition to considering the conventional classes of lipids (e.g., glycerophospholipids, sphingolipids, fatty acids, and sterols), we also wanted to address some key lipid-soluble molecules (e.g., retinoids, bisretinoids, and carotenoids) that play important physiological roles in ocular tissues.
                                                  Introduction to the Thematic Review Series: Seeing 2020: lipids and lipid-soluble molecules in the eye
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