Team:Wisconsin-Madison/lemon

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<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent"><strong><span style="font-size:24px">Why</span> Produce Limonene?</strong></p><br />
<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent"><strong><span style="font-size:24px">Why</span> Produce Limonene?</strong></p><br />
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<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent2">The goal of this project is to engineer Escherichia coli to produce a compound called limonene. Limonene is a 10 carbon monoterpene and is found naturally in the oils of citrus fruits.  It is used as a cleaning agent, solvent, food additive and is even finding a place in new medical applications. Limonene also possesses the chemical properties of an ideal biofuel, sparking interest specifically in its application as a jet fuel due to its low freezing point. Currently, we are limited to extracting limonene directly from citrus fruits which prevents its collection in quantities large enough to be useful as a biofuel. E coli. could be used to produce limonene more effectively and efficiently.</p>
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<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent2"> Limonene is a 10-carbon monoterpene found in the oils of citrus fruits.  It is used as a cleaning agent, solvent, and food additive, and recent research has shown it has potential anti-cancer applications. Limonene also possesses the chemical properties of an ideal biofuel; its low freezing point, combustibility, and high energy density make it a potential jet fuel replacement. Currently, industrial production is restricted to direct extraction from citrus fruits, preventing collection in quantities large enough to be useful as a biofuel. Other organisms, such as <i> Escherichia coli </i>, could be used to produce limonene more effectively and efficiently.</p>
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<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent2">In this research, a strain of E. coli will be bioengineered to produce limonene by inserting the genes for the necessary biochemical pathways. Our strain contains the genes coding for the Mevalonate pathway ,a synthesized Geranyl Diphosphate Synthase (GPPS) gene, and a synthesized and codon optimized Limonene Synthase gene. The plasmid, pBba5c, contains the genes for the mevalonate pathway in an operon under a lac inducible promoter. During our research we used the Gibson cloning method to take out the ispA gene and put in the GPPS gene into the pBba5c plasmid, creating pBba5c-GPPS for better production of Limonene. This strain would theoretically be able to produce Limonene using common media.</p>
 
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<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent"><strong><span style="font-size:24px">The</span> Mevalonate Pathway</strong></p><br />
<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent"><strong><span style="font-size:24px">The</span> Mevalonate Pathway</strong></p><br />
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<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent2">5 mL cultures of each strain (listed below) were grown overnight at 37 C in LB, then normalized to an OD600 of 1 and diluted 1:100 into 40 mL cultures. They were then grown up to an OD600 of 0.2 and the promoters in the pBba5C vector were induced with 1 mM IPTG. 10 mL of dodecane was used to overlay the culture. This overlay was used as an organic layer for the limonene to diffuse into. These cultures were then grown for 18 hours, spun down, and 1mL of the dodecane overlay was diluted in ethyl acetate and sampled in a GC/MS. </p>
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<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent2">The mevalonate pathway, found in plants and fungi, produces 3-isopentenyl pyrophosphate (IPP) and dimethylallyl pyrophosphate (DMAPP) from acetyl-CoA. IPP and DMAPP are the building blocks of the isoprenoids, a group of organic molecules with a wide array of functions. These compounds are normally synthesized in small amounts, preventing large-scale production; by moving the mevalonate pathway into <i>E. coli</i> this limitation can be circumvented. The Keasling lab at UC-Berkeley used this approach to produce the isoprenoid amorphadiene, which can be converted into the antimalarial drug artemisinin. This breakthrough brought the price of artemisinin down dramatically for treatment in the developing world.</p>
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2012/d/da/Mevalonate_Pathway_and_more_finalfinal.png" width="800px">
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<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent2">In this research, a strain of E. coli will be bioengineered to produce limonene by inserting the genes for the necessary biochemical pathways. Our strain contains the genes coding for the Mevalonate pathway ,a synthesized Geranyl Diphosphate Synthase (GPPS) gene, and a synthesized and codon optimized Limonene Synthase gene. The plasmid, pBba5c, contains the genes for the mevalonate pathway in an operon under a lac inducible promoter. During our research we used the Gibson cloning method to take out the ispA gene and put in the GPPS gene into the pBba5c plasmid, creating pBba5c-GPPS for better production of Limonene. This strain would theoretically be able to produce Limonene using common media.</p>
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<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent2">We have constructed a strain containing the mevalonate pathway, a codon-optimized geranyl diphosphate synthase (GPPS), and a codon-optimized limonene synthase gene. The plasmid pBba5c contains the genes for the mevalonate pathway under a lactose-inducible promoter. The plasmid originally contained the unnecessary <i>ispA</i> gene; we used the Gibson cloning method to replace <i>ispA</i> with the GPPS gene. The resulting plasmid, pBba5c-GPPS, should theoretically allow higher production of limonene.</p>
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<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent2">5 mL cultures of each strain (listed below) were grown overnight at 37 C in LB, then normalized to an OD600 of 1 and diluted 1:100 into 40 mL cultures.  They were then grown up to an OD600 of 0.2 and the promoters in the pBba5C vector were induced with 1 mM IPTG. 10 mL of dodecane was used to overlay the culture. This overlay was used as an organic layer for the limonene to diffuse into.  These cultures were then grown for 18 hours, spun down, and 1mL of the dodecane overlay was diluted in ethyl acetate and sampled in a GC/MS. </p>
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<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent2">Five milliliter cultures of each strain (listed below) were grown overnight at 37°C in LB, then normalized to an OD600 of 1 and diluted 1:100 into 40 mL cultures of LBThese were then grown to an OD600 of 0.2 and the promoters in the pBba5C vector induced with 1 mM IPTG. A 10 mL overlay of dodecane was used to trap any limonene produced.  These cultures were then grown for 18 hours, centrifuged, and 1mL of the dodecane overlay diluted in ethyl acetate and analyzed by GC/MS. </p>
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    <td><b>Strain</b></td>  <td><b>Purpose</b></td>
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     <td>pBba5c + J23102-RFP (J23102 promoter only as a negative control)</td>
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     <td>pBba5c + J23102-RFP</td> <td>J23102 promoter only as a negative control</td>
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     <td>pBba5c + J23102-LimS1 (Production strain)</td>
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     <td>pBba5c + J23102-LIMS1</td> <td>Production strain</td>
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     <td>pBba5c + J23102-CO_LimS (Production Strain)</td>
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     <td>pBba5c + J23102-CO_LIMS1</td> <td>Production Strain</td>
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     <td>pBba5c + pTRC-ADS (pTRC-ADS is the amorphadiene synthase)</td>
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     <td>pBba5c + pTRC-ADS</td> <td>pTRC-ADS is the amorphadiene synthase</td>
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     <td>pBba5c-GPPS + J23102-RFP (Negative control)</td>
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     <td>pBba5c-GPPS + J23102-RFP</td> <td>Negative control</td>
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     <td>pBba5c-GPPS + J23102-LimS1 (Production strain)</td>
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     <td>pBba5c-GPPS + J23102-LIMS1</td> <td>Production strain</td>
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     <td>pBba5c-GPPS + J23102-CO_LimS (Production strain</td>
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     <td>pBba5c-GPPS + J23102-CO_LIMS1</td> <td>Production strain</td>
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     <td>pBba5c-GPPS + J23102-pTRC-ADS (Testing the GPPS-ispA swap with gibson)</td>
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     <td>pBba5c-GPPS + J23102-pTRC-ADS</td> <td>Testing the GPPS-ispA swap with gibson</td>
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<a href="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2012/c/c7/UWMlimoneneRetent.png"><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2012/c/c7/UWMlimoneneRetent.png" width="800px"></a>
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<p align="center">In figures A, C, and D, the large black limonene peak is a doped limonene standard included as a positive control for the GC/MS assay. The blue and purple lines cannot be seen, because they are along the baseline; i.e. no limonene is being produced. J23102 (empty) in figures A, B, and D is the promoter run as a negative control. Figure B demonstrates the decrease in amorphadiene between the regular pBbA5c and the pBbA5c with the GPPS swapped in for the ispA gene.</p>
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<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent2">As seen in this GC/MS data, we were not able to produce any limonene. There was a small peak located where limonene was supposed to be, but unfortunately that peak also showed up in our empty promoter strain as well. In order to troubleshoot the lack of production of limonene, we tried to produce amorphadiene, which shares the same precursor molecules as limonene up until GPP. The ispA gene synthesizes (FPP), the precursor to amorphadiene. When we created the modified pBba5C gene, the one with GPP synthase, we swapped out this ispA gene. So by using these two pBba5C strains, we could troubleshoot the production of limonene by testing the mevalonate pathway located within the pBba5C vector. In the GC/MS data, our pathway does create amorphadiene when amorphadiene synthase is included in the bacterial strain with pBba5C. Thus, our mevalonate pathway seems to be functioning correctly. However, we also tested pBba5C-GPPS with the amorphadiene synthase, which should create no amorphadiene, as a negative control. There was still a peak found in the GC/MS data, but this is because the Escherichia coli genome naturally contains the ispA gene. This peak was much smaller than the peak made by the strain containing the ispA gene in the plasmid. This tells us that our pBba5C-GPPS construct seems to be correctly functioning as well. </p>
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<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent2">As seen in this GC/MS data, limonene was not produced. There was a small peak located where limonene was expected, but this peak also appeared in the empty promoter strain as well. In order to the strain's production capacity, we replaced the limonene synthase with amorphadiene synthase. The <i>ispA</i> gene produces farnesyl pyrophosphate (FPP), the precursor to amorphadiene. Both the pBbA5c with <i>ispA</i> and GPPS were used to troubleshoot the mevalonate pathway by attempting to generate amorphadiene. In the GC/MS data, both strains created amorphadiene when amorphadiene synthase was included in the strain. Thus, we surmise that the mevalonate pathway is functioning correctly. The pBba5C-GPPS strain with amorphadiene synthase should not create amorphadiene, as <i>ispA</i> has been replaced with GPPS; however, because the <i> E. coli </i> genome naturally contains <ispA</i>, some amount may still be produced. The amorphadiene peak associated with the pBbA5c-GPPS was much smaller than the peak generated by the pBbA5c-ispA construct, as expected. However, this does not prove that the GPPS is working as anticipated.</p>
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<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent"><strong><span style="font-size:24px">The</span> Conclusion</strong></p><br />
<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent"><strong><span style="font-size:24px">The</span> Conclusion</strong></p><br />
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<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent2">As stated in the last section, it seems as though the mevalonate pathway is functioning correctly. This leads us to think that something is wrong with our limonene synthase gene, or the extraction protocol. Neither the codon optimized or classic versions are producing limonene, and we are unsure why. There are a number of things that can go wrong from transcription through a functioning protein, and we needed a way to troubleshoot. This led us to an idea that our PI’s lab had engineered upstairs: a translational coupling cassette. With this cassette we could determine if limonene synthase (codon and non-codon optimized) was being translated. </p>
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<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent2">The data shows that the mevalonate pathway is functioning correctly. This indicates that the problem is either limonene synthase or GPPS. To further assess the production strains, a growth curve was run to determine if cell viability was being affected by the synthetic pathway.</p>
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<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent" font-size:20px;><strong>Reference: </strong></p>
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<ul>“Engineering a mevalonate pathway in Escherichia coli for production of terpenoids”</ul>
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<ul>Keasling et al., 2003</ul>
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<p align="center">Growth curves are organized either by base mevalonate vector or by version of limonene synthase. pBAD33 mimics pBbA5c, acting as an empty vector. Four replicates of each strain were grown on a 96-well plate; error bars indicate standard deviation.</p>
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<ul>“Monoterpene biosynthesis in lemon”</ul>
 
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<ul>Verhoeven et al., 2002</ul>
 
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<ul>“Biosynthesis of plant isoprenoids: perspectives for microbial engineering”</ul>       
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<ul>Keasling et al., 2009</ul>
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The growth curves show two important things. The naturally-occurring limonene synthase shows a growth defect in comparison to the synthesized codon-optimized limonene synthase. More notably, the pBbA5c with <i>ispA</i> greatly inhibits cell growth. A possible explanation for this is the toxicity of FPP, as the pBbA5c-GPPS did not inhibit cell growth in comparison to the pBbA5c-ispA. Since <i>ispA</i> is native to <i> E. coli </i>, it should be translated more efficiently than the other enzymes in the mevalonate pathway, including GPPS. To further pursue this hypothesis it would be beneficial to insert GPPS and <i>ispA</i> into the Translation Coupling Cassette (TCC) and compare their translation efficiency. We are focusing on GPPS as the issue as our TCC research shows that the codon-optimized limonene synthase is being translated (See TCC page for further explanation). However, successful translation does not show that it is functional in the cell. This will be be assessed by <i>in vitro</i> assay, as described on the TCC project page. With this additional data we can work to further improve the production capacity of our strain.
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<p align="left" class="classtheinlinecontent" font-size:20px;><strong>References: </strong></p>
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<ul><b>Dunlop</b> <b><i>et. al,</b></i> 2011.Engineering microbial biofuel tolerance and export using efflux pumps. Molecular Systems Biology. 7:487:487
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<ul><b>Kirby</b> <b><i>et. al,</b></i> 2009. Biosynthesis of plant isoprenoids: perspectives for microbial engineering. Annual Review of Plant Biology. 60:335-355
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</ul>       
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<ul><b>Lücker</b> <b><i>et. al,</b></i> 2002. Monoterpene biosynthesis in lemon (citrus lemon). European Journal of Biochemistry. 269:13:3160-3171
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</ul>
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<ul><b>Martin</b> <b><i>et. al,</b></i> 2003. Engineering a mevalonate pathway in <i>Escherichia coli</i> for production of terpenoids. Nature Biotechnology. 21:7:796-802
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Latest revision as of 00:43, 4 October 2012


Engineering a limonene production pathway of E.coli


Why Produce Limonene?


Limonene is a 10-carbon monoterpene found in the oils of citrus fruits. It is used as a cleaning agent, solvent, and food additive, and recent research has shown it has potential anti-cancer applications. Limonene also possesses the chemical properties of an ideal biofuel; its low freezing point, combustibility, and high energy density make it a potential jet fuel replacement. Currently, industrial production is restricted to direct extraction from citrus fruits, preventing collection in quantities large enough to be useful as a biofuel. Other organisms, such as Escherichia coli , could be used to produce limonene more effectively and efficiently.




The Mevalonate Pathway


The mevalonate pathway, found in plants and fungi, produces 3-isopentenyl pyrophosphate (IPP) and dimethylallyl pyrophosphate (DMAPP) from acetyl-CoA. IPP and DMAPP are the building blocks of the isoprenoids, a group of organic molecules with a wide array of functions. These compounds are normally synthesized in small amounts, preventing large-scale production; by moving the mevalonate pathway into E. coli this limitation can be circumvented. The Keasling lab at UC-Berkeley used this approach to produce the isoprenoid amorphadiene, which can be converted into the antimalarial drug artemisinin. This breakthrough brought the price of artemisinin down dramatically for treatment in the developing world.





We have constructed a strain containing the mevalonate pathway, a codon-optimized geranyl diphosphate synthase (GPPS), and a codon-optimized limonene synthase gene. The plasmid pBba5c contains the genes for the mevalonate pathway under a lactose-inducible promoter. The plasmid originally contained the unnecessary ispA gene; we used the Gibson cloning method to replace ispA with the GPPS gene. The resulting plasmid, pBba5c-GPPS, should theoretically allow higher production of limonene.



The Production Assay


Five milliliter cultures of each strain (listed below) were grown overnight at 37°C in LB, then normalized to an OD600 of 1 and diluted 1:100 into 40 mL cultures of LB. These were then grown to an OD600 of 0.2 and the promoters in the pBba5C vector induced with 1 mM IPTG. A 10 mL overlay of dodecane was used to trap any limonene produced. These cultures were then grown for 18 hours, centrifuged, and 1mL of the dodecane overlay diluted in ethyl acetate and analyzed by GC/MS.



Strain Purpose
pBba5c + J23102-RFP J23102 promoter only as a negative control
pBba5c + J23102-LIMS1 Production strain
pBba5c + J23102-CO_LIMS1 Production Strain
pBba5c + pTRC-ADS pTRC-ADS is the amorphadiene synthase
pBba5c-GPPS + J23102-RFP Negative control
pBba5c-GPPS + J23102-LIMS1 Production strain
pBba5c-GPPS + J23102-CO_LIMS1 Production strain
pBba5c-GPPS + J23102-pTRC-ADS Testing the GPPS-ispA swap with gibson


In figures A, C, and D, the large black limonene peak is a doped limonene standard included as a positive control for the GC/MS assay. The blue and purple lines cannot be seen, because they are along the baseline; i.e. no limonene is being produced. J23102 (empty) in figures A, B, and D is the promoter run as a negative control. Figure B demonstrates the decrease in amorphadiene between the regular pBbA5c and the pBbA5c with the GPPS swapped in for the ispA gene.



As seen in this GC/MS data, limonene was not produced. There was a small peak located where limonene was expected, but this peak also appeared in the empty promoter strain as well. In order to the strain's production capacity, we replaced the limonene synthase with amorphadiene synthase. The ispA gene produces farnesyl pyrophosphate (FPP), the precursor to amorphadiene. Both the pBbA5c with ispA and GPPS were used to troubleshoot the mevalonate pathway by attempting to generate amorphadiene. In the GC/MS data, both strains created amorphadiene when amorphadiene synthase was included in the strain. Thus, we surmise that the mevalonate pathway is functioning correctly. The pBba5C-GPPS strain with amorphadiene synthase should not create amorphadiene, as ispA has been replaced with GPPS; however, because the E. coli genome naturally contains , some amount may still be produced. The amorphadiene peak associated with the pBbA5c-GPPS was much smaller than the peak generated by the pBbA5c-ispA construct, as expected. However, this does not prove that the GPPS is working as anticipated.



The Conclusion


The data shows that the mevalonate pathway is functioning correctly. This indicates that the problem is either limonene synthase or GPPS. To further assess the production strains, a growth curve was run to determine if cell viability was being affected by the synthetic pathway.





Growth curves are organized either by base mevalonate vector or by version of limonene synthase. pBAD33 mimics pBbA5c, acting as an empty vector. Four replicates of each strain were grown on a 96-well plate; error bars indicate standard deviation.



The growth curves show two important things. The naturally-occurring limonene synthase shows a growth defect in comparison to the synthesized codon-optimized limonene synthase. More notably, the pBbA5c with ispA greatly inhibits cell growth. A possible explanation for this is the toxicity of FPP, as the pBbA5c-GPPS did not inhibit cell growth in comparison to the pBbA5c-ispA. Since ispA is native to E. coli , it should be translated more efficiently than the other enzymes in the mevalonate pathway, including GPPS. To further pursue this hypothesis it would be beneficial to insert GPPS and ispA into the Translation Coupling Cassette (TCC) and compare their translation efficiency. We are focusing on GPPS as the issue as our TCC research shows that the codon-optimized limonene synthase is being translated (See TCC page for further explanation). However, successful translation does not show that it is functional in the cell. This will be be assessed by in vitro assay, as described on the TCC project page. With this additional data we can work to further improve the production capacity of our strain.

References:


    Dunlop et. al, 2011.Engineering microbial biofuel tolerance and export using efflux pumps. Molecular Systems Biology. 7:487:487

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