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Haplogroup K2

Haplogroup K2, also known as K-M526 and formerly known as K(xLT) and MNOPS,[5] is a human Y-DNA haplogroup.

Haplogroup K2
Possible time of origin47,000-50,000 years BP[1]
Possible place of originCentral Asia[2] or Southeast Asia[3][4]
AncestorK
DescendantsK2a (M2308); K2b (MPS); K2c; K2d; K2e.
Defining mutationsrs2033003 (M526)

Relative to its age, the internal structure of K2 is extremely complex, and subclades of it are carried by males native to regions including Australasia, Oceania, Southeast Asia, South Asia, East Asia, Central Asia, the Americas, Europe, and the Horn of Africa. Many of its branches are very common, the most numerically important being R in Europe and South Asia and O in East and Southeast Asia (as well as recent immigrants to other continents). Haplogroups N and Q, while they are less common overall, are also very widespread, in northern Eurasia and the Americas respectively. M and S are almost entirely restricted to Oceania and eastern Indonesia, where they occur at high frequency.

Rare subclades outside of these major lineages are known mainly from Island Southeast Asia (including the Andaman Islands and the Philippines).

Basal paragroup K2* has been identified among native Australians, about 27% of them carry basal K-M526∗.[6]

K2a* has been found only in Upper Paleolithic remains from western Siberia and the Balkans, known respectively as "Ust'-Ishim man" and "Oase-1".[7] The only primary branch of K2a, known as K-M2313*, has been documented in two living individuals, who have ethnic ties to South Asia and South East Asia respectively: a Telugu from India and an ethnic Malay from Singapore. In addition, K-Y28299, which appears to be a primary branch of K-M2313, has been found in three living individuals from India.[8] Another subclade, NO (M214)* – which for a time was thought to be synonymous with K2a (M2308)* – has not been identified in living individuals or remains.

Basal paragroup K2b* has not been identified among living males but was found in Upper Paleolithic Tianyuan man from China.[9] K2b1 (P397/P399) known previously as Haplogroup MS, and Haplogroup P (P-P295), also known as K2b2 are the only primary clades of K2b.

According to geneticist Spencer Wells, haplogroup K, from which haplogroup P descend, originated in the Middle East or Central Asia. It is likely that haplogroup P diverged somewhere in South Asia into P1, which expanded into Siberia and Northern Eurasia, and into P2, which expanded into Oceania and Southeast Asia.[2]

Population geneticist Tatiana Karafet and other researchers (2014) point out that both K2b1 and P* are virtually restricted geographically to South East Asia and Oceania.[3] Whereas, in a striking contrast, P1 (P-M45) and its primary subclades Q and R now make up "the most frequent haplogroup in Europe, the Americas, and Central Asia and South Asia". According to Karafet et al., the estimated dates for the branching of K, K2, K2b and P point to a "rapid diversification" within K2 "that likely occurred in Southeast Asia", with subsequent "westward expansions" of P*, P1, Q and R.[3] However, these authors also stipulated that haplogroup K might have arisen in Eurasia and later went extinct there, and that either origin hypothesis is "equally parsimonious".[10]

Structure edit

A direct descendant of Haplogroup K, K2 is a sibling of basal/paragroup K* and Haplogroup LT (also known as K1).

As of 2017, the phylogeny of haplogroup K2 is as follows:

K-M526 (K2) M526 – formerly known as K(xLT) and MNOPS

  • K-M2308 (K2a) M2308 – found only in ancient remains; see above)[7]
    • K-M2313 (K2a1) M2313[7]
      • NO-F549 (NO*) or K-M2335 F549/S22380/M2335/V4208; M2335/Z4952/M2339/E482; CTS11667[8][7]
        • NO1-M214 (NO1*) or NO-F176 M214/Page39; F176/M2314; CTS5858/M2325/F346; CTS11572[8][7][11]
          • N-M231 (N*) M231; CTS2947/M2175; Z4891; CTS10118[8]
          • O-M175 (O*) M175/P186/P191/P196; F369/M1755; F380/M1757/S27659[8]
      • K-Y28299 (primary subclade of K2a; no phylogenetic name as of 2017) Y28299/Y28355; Y28357; Y28412 – found in one living individual in India[8]
      • K-Y28301 (primary subclade of K2a; no phylogenetic name as of 2017) Y28301/Y28328; Y28358; Y28410 – found in two living individuals in India[8]
  • K-P331 (K2b) M1221/P331/PF5911, CTS2019/M1205, PF5990/L405, PF5969 – subclades of K2b include the major haplogroups M; S, P, Q, and R
  • K-P261 (K2c) P261
  • K-P261 (K2d) P402
  • K-P261 (K2e) M147

Distribution edit

At the level of highly derived subclades, K2 is almost universal in some modern Eurasian, Australasian and Native American populations. Haplogroup NO (M214), as a descendant of K2a (M2308), includes most males among Southeast Asian, East Asian, and Finno-Ugric-speaking populations.[7] Similarly, the direct descendants of K2b include the major haplogroups M; S, P, Q, and R. These are now numerically in dominant in: Oceania, Central Asia, Siberia, among Native American populations, Europe, and South Asia.

A rapid diversification within and from K2 (M526), most likely in Southeast Asia, is suggested by estimates of the point in time that K2 branched off from K* (M9). Likewise the branching from K2 of K2b (P331) and Haplogroup P (K2b2 P295) from K2b, as well as Haplogroups Q and R from P (K2b2), and their subsequent expansions westward in Europe,[3] and eastward into the Americas.

K2c, K2d, and K2e are extremely rare subhaplogroups that are found in specific parts of South and Southeast Asia.[3] K2c (P261) has been reported only among males in Bali and K2d (P402) only in Java. K2e (M147), which has been found in two modern cases from South India,[3] was provisionally named "pre-NO" (among other names), as it was believed initially to be ancestral to K2a (NO). However, it was later found to be a primary branch of Haplogroup K2 (K-M526) and a sibling of K2a; the new clade was renamed K2e.

Studies published in 2014 and 2015 found that up to 27% of Aboriginal Australian males carry K-M526*, which could not be classified into a known subclade at the time, and another 27% probably have K2b1a1 (P60, P304, P308; also known as "S-P308") and perhaps 2.0% have Haplogroup M1 – also known as M-M4 (or "M-M186") and K2b1d1.[12][3]

Naming edit

The name K2 was introduced in 2014, following dissatisfaction with the previous names.

K(xLT), the name introduced by the Y Chromosome Consortium in 2012 to replace MNOPS, was controversial. Under the previous methodology, a term such as "K(xLT)" designated all clades and subclades that belonged to K, but did not belong to Haplogroup LT; the haplogroups subordinate to MNOPS would likely have been renamed "U", "V", "W" and "X", and MNOPS would therefore have become "MNOPSUVWX". This posed a problem, because there was no way to disambiguate between "K(xLT)" in the broad and narrow meanings of the term.

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Fu, Qiaomei; Li, Heng; Moorjani, Priya; Jay, Flora; Slepchenko, Sergey M.; Bondarev, Aleksei A.; Johnson, Philip L. F.; Aximu-Petri, Ayinuer; Prüfer, Kay; de Filippo, Cesare; Meyer, Matthias; Zwyns, Nicolas; Salazar-García, Domingo C.; Kuzmin, Yaroslav V.; Keates, Susan G.; Kosintsev, Pavel A.; Razhev, Dmitry I.; Richards, Michael P.; Peristov, Nikolai V.; Lachmann, Michael; Douka, Katerina; Higham, Thomas F. G.; Slatkin, Montgomery; Hublin, Jean-Jacques; Reich, David; Kelso, Janet; Viola, T. Bence; Pääbo, Svante (October 2014). "Genome sequence of a 45,000-year-old modern human from western Siberia". Nature. 514 (7523): 445–449. Bibcode:2014Natur.514..445F. doi:10.1038/nature13810. PMC 4753769. PMID 25341783.
  2. ^ a b Wells, Spencer (20 November 2007). Deep Ancestry: The Landmark DNA Quest to Decipher Our Distant Past. National Geographic Books. p. 79. ISBN 978-1-4262-0211-7. "Given the widespread distribution of K, it probably arose somewhere in the Middle East or Central Asia, perhaps in the region of Iran or Pakistan."
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Karafet, Tatiana M; Mendez, Fernando L; Sudoyo, Herawati; Lansing, J Stephen; Hammer, Michael F (March 2015). "Improved phylogenetic resolution and rapid diversification of Y-chromosome haplogroup K-M526 in Southeast Asia". European Journal of Human Genetics. 23 (3): 369–373. doi:10.1038/ejhg.2014.106. PMC 4326703. PMID 24896152.
  4. ^ Hallast, Pille; Agdzhoyan, Anastasia; Balanovsky, Oleg; Xue, Yali; Tyler-Smith, Chris (2021). "A Southeast Asian origin for present-day non-African human y chromosomes". Human Genetics. 140 (2): 299–307. doi:10.1007/s00439-020-02204-9. PMC 7864842. PMID 32666166.
  5. ^ Chiaroni, Jacques; Underhill, Peter A.; Cavalli-Sforza, Luca L. (2009). "Y chromosome diversity, human expansion, drift, and cultural evolution". PNAS. 106 (48): 20174–9. Bibcode:2009PNAS..10620174C. doi:10.1073/pnas.0910803106. PMC 2787129. PMID 19920170.
  6. ^ Bergström, Anders; Nagle, Nano; Chen, Yuan; McCarthy, Shane; Pollard, Martin O.; Ayub, Qasim; Wilcox, Stephen; Wilcox, Leah; van Oorschot, Roland A.H.; McAllister, Peter; Williams, Lesley; Xue, Yali; Mitchell, R. John; Tyler-Smith, Chris (21 March 2016). "Deep Roots for Aboriginal Australian Y Chromosomes". Current Biology. 26 (6): 809–813. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2016.01.028. PMC 4819516. PMID 26923783.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Poznik, G David; Xue, Yali; Mendez, Fernando L; Willems, Thomas F; Massaia, Andrea; Wilson Sayres, Melissa A; Ayub, Qasim; McCarthy, Shane A; Narechania, Apurva; Kashin, Seva; Chen, Yuan; Banerjee, Ruby; Rodriguez-Flores, Juan L; Cerezo, Maria; Shao, Haojing; Gymrek, Melissa; Malhotra, Ankit; Louzada, Sandra; Desalle, Rob; Ritchie, Graham R S; Cerveira, Eliza; Fitzgerald, Tomas W; Garrison, Erik; Marcketta, Anthony; Mittelman, David; Romanovitch, Mallory; Zhang, Chengsheng; Zheng-Bradley, Xiangqun; Abecasis, Gonçalo R; McCarroll, Steven A; Flicek, Paul; Underhill, Peter A; Coin, Lachlan; Zerbino, Daniel R; Yang, Fengtang; Lee, Charles; Clarke, Laura; Auton, Adam; Erlich, Yaniv; Handsaker, Robert E; Bustamante, Carlos D; Tyler-Smith, Chris (June 2016). "Punctuated bursts in human male demography inferred from 1,244 worldwide Y-chromosome sequences". Nature Genetics. 48 (6): 593–599. doi:10.1038/ng.3559. PMC 4884158. PMID 27111036.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g YFull YTree v5.08, 2017, "K-M2335" (9 December 2017); PhyloTree, 2017, "Details of the Y-SNP markers included in the minimal Y tree" (9 December 2017); GeneticHomeland.com, 2016, DNA Marker Index Chromosome Y V4208 (9 December 2017).
  9. ^ . reich.hms.harvard.edu. Archived from the original on 2 November 2019. Retrieved 11 September 2019.
  10. ^ Karafet et al. 2015"This pattern leads us to hypothesize a southeastern Asian origin for P-P295 and a later expansion of the ancestor of subhaplogroups R and Q into mainland Asia. An alternative explanation would involve an extinction event of ancestral P-P295* chromosomes everywhere in Asia. These scenarios are equally parsimonious. They involve either a migration event (P* chromosomes from Indonesia to mainland Asia) or an extinction event of P-P295* paragroup in Eurasia."
  11. ^ "ISOGG 2018 Y-DNA Haplogroup Tree Trunk". www.isogg.org.
  12. ^ Nagle, Nano; Ballantyne, Kaye N.; van Oven, Mannis; Tyler-Smith, Chris; Xue, Yali; Taylor, Duncan; Wilcox, Stephen; Wilcox, Leah; Turkalov, Rust; van Oorschot, Roland A.H.; McAllister, Peter; Williams, Lesley; Kayser, Manfred; Mitchell, Robert J.; Genographic, Consortium. (March 2016). "Antiquity and diversity of aboriginal Australian Y-chromosomes: Aboriginal Australian Y-Chromosomes". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 159 (3): 367–381. doi:10.1002/ajpa.22886. PMID 26515539.

haplogroup, this, article, about, chromosome, haplogroup, mitochondrial, haplogroup, haplogroup, mtdna, haplogroup, known, until, 2008, haplogroup, haplogroup, sometimes, known, p256, haplogroup, p256, also, known, m526, formerly, known, mnops, human, haplogro. This article is about the Y chromosome haplogroup K2 For mitochondrial DNA haplogroup K2 see Haplogroup K mtDNA For the Y DNA haplogroup known until 2008 as K2 see Haplogroup T Y DNA For the haplogroup sometimes known as K P256 see Haplogroup M P256 Haplogroup K2 also known as K M526 and formerly known as K xLT and MNOPS 5 is a human Y DNA haplogroup Haplogroup K2Possible time of origin47 000 50 000 years BP 1 Possible place of originCentral Asia 2 or Southeast Asia 3 4 AncestorKDescendantsK2a M2308 K2b MPS K2c K2d K2e Defining mutationsrs2033003 M526 Relative to its age the internal structure of K2 is extremely complex and subclades of it are carried by males native to regions including Australasia Oceania Southeast Asia South Asia East Asia Central Asia the Americas Europe and the Horn of Africa Many of its branches are very common the most numerically important being R in Europe and South Asia and O in East and Southeast Asia as well as recent immigrants to other continents Haplogroups N and Q while they are less common overall are also very widespread in northern Eurasia and the Americas respectively M and S are almost entirely restricted to Oceania and eastern Indonesia where they occur at high frequency Rare subclades outside of these major lineages are known mainly from Island Southeast Asia including the Andaman Islands and the Philippines Basal paragroup K2 has been identified among native Australians about 27 of them carry basal K M526 6 K2a has been found only in Upper Paleolithic remains from western Siberia and the Balkans known respectively as Ust Ishim man and Oase 1 7 The only primary branch of K2a known as K M2313 has been documented in two living individuals who have ethnic ties to South Asia and South East Asia respectively a Telugu from India and an ethnic Malay from Singapore In addition K Y28299 which appears to be a primary branch of K M2313 has been found in three living individuals from India 8 Another subclade NO M214 which for a time was thought to be synonymous with K2a M2308 has not been identified in living individuals or remains Basal paragroup K2b has not been identified among living males but was found in Upper Paleolithic Tianyuan man from China 9 K2b1 P397 P399 known previously as Haplogroup MS and Haplogroup P P P295 also known as K2b2 are the only primary clades of K2b According to geneticist Spencer Wells haplogroup K from which haplogroup P descend originated in the Middle East or Central Asia It is likely that haplogroup P diverged somewhere in South Asia into P1 which expanded into Siberia and Northern Eurasia and into P2 which expanded into Oceania and Southeast Asia 2 Population geneticist Tatiana Karafet and other researchers 2014 point out that both K2b1 and P are virtually restricted geographically to South East Asia and Oceania 3 Whereas in a striking contrast P1 P M45 and its primary subclades Q and R now make up the most frequent haplogroup in Europe the Americas and Central Asia and South Asia According to Karafet et al the estimated dates for the branching of K K2 K2b and P point to a rapid diversification within K2 that likely occurred in Southeast Asia with subsequent westward expansions of P P1 Q and R 3 However these authors also stipulated that haplogroup K might have arisen in Eurasia and later went extinct there and that either origin hypothesis is equally parsimonious 10 Contents 1 Structure 2 Distribution 3 Naming 4 FootnotesStructure editMain article Structure of Y DNA Haplogroup K A direct descendant of Haplogroup K K2 is a sibling of basal paragroup K and Haplogroup LT also known as K1 As of 2017 the phylogeny of haplogroup K2 is as follows K M526 K2 M526 formerly known as K xLT and MNOPS K M2308 K2a M2308 found only in ancient remains see above 7 K M2313 K2a1 M2313 7 NO F549 NO or K M2335 F549 S22380 M2335 V4208 M2335 Z4952 M2339 E482 CTS11667 8 7 NO1 M214 NO1 or NO F176 M214 Page39 F176 M2314 CTS5858 M2325 F346 CTS11572 8 7 11 N M231 N M231 CTS2947 M2175 Z4891 CTS10118 8 O M175 O M175 P186 P191 P196 F369 M1755 F380 M1757 S27659 8 K Y28299 primary subclade of K2a no phylogenetic name as of 2017 Y28299 Y28355 Y28357 Y28412 found in one living individual in India 8 K Y28301 primary subclade of K2a no phylogenetic name as of 2017 Y28301 Y28328 Y28358 Y28410 found in two living individuals in India 8 K P331 K2b M1221 P331 PF5911 CTS2019 M1205 PF5990 L405 PF5969 subclades of K2b include the major haplogroups M S P Q and R K P261 K2c P261 K P261 K2d P402 K P261 K2e M147Distribution editAt the level of highly derived subclades K2 is almost universal in some modern Eurasian Australasian and Native American populations Haplogroup NO M214 as a descendant of K2a M2308 includes most males among Southeast Asian East Asian and Finno Ugric speaking populations 7 Similarly the direct descendants of K2b include the major haplogroups M S P Q and R These are now numerically in dominant in Oceania Central Asia Siberia among Native American populations Europe and South Asia A rapid diversification within and from K2 M526 most likely in Southeast Asia is suggested by estimates of the point in time that K2 branched off from K M9 Likewise the branching from K2 of K2b P331 and Haplogroup P K2b2 P295 from K2b as well as Haplogroups Q and R from P K2b2 and their subsequent expansions westward in Europe 3 and eastward into the Americas K2c K2d and K2e are extremely rare subhaplogroups that are found in specific parts of South and Southeast Asia 3 K2c P261 has been reported only among males in Bali and K2d P402 only in Java K2e M147 which has been found in two modern cases from South India 3 was provisionally named pre NO among other names as it was believed initially to be ancestral to K2a NO However it was later found to be a primary branch of Haplogroup K2 K M526 and a sibling of K2a the new clade was renamed K2e Studies published in 2014 and 2015 found that up to 27 of Aboriginal Australian males carry K M526 which could not be classified into a known subclade at the time and another 27 probably have K2b1a1 P60 P304 P308 also known as S P308 and perhaps 2 0 have Haplogroup M1 also known as M M4 or M M186 and K2b1d1 12 3 Naming editThe name K2 was introduced in 2014 following dissatisfaction with the previous names K xLT the name introduced by the Y Chromosome Consortium in 2012 to replace MNOPS was controversial Under the previous methodology a term such as K xLT designated all clades and subclades that belonged to K but did not belong to Haplogroup LT the haplogroups subordinate to MNOPS would likely have been renamed U V W and X and MNOPS would therefore have become MNOPSUVWX This posed a problem because there was no way to disambiguate between K xLT in the broad and narrow meanings of the term Footnotes edit Fu Qiaomei Li Heng Moorjani Priya Jay Flora Slepchenko Sergey M Bondarev Aleksei A Johnson Philip L F Aximu Petri Ayinuer Prufer Kay de Filippo Cesare Meyer Matthias Zwyns Nicolas Salazar Garcia Domingo C Kuzmin Yaroslav V Keates Susan G Kosintsev Pavel A Razhev Dmitry I Richards Michael P Peristov Nikolai V Lachmann Michael Douka Katerina Higham Thomas F G Slatkin Montgomery Hublin Jean Jacques Reich David Kelso Janet Viola T Bence Paabo Svante October 2014 Genome sequence of a 45 000 year old modern human from western Siberia Nature 514 7523 445 449 Bibcode 2014Natur 514 445F doi 10 1038 nature13810 PMC 4753769 PMID 25341783 a b Wells Spencer 20 November 2007 Deep Ancestry The Landmark DNA Quest to Decipher Our Distant Past National Geographic Books p 79 ISBN 978 1 4262 0211 7 Given the widespread distribution of K it probably arose somewhere in the Middle East or Central Asia perhaps in the region of Iran or Pakistan a b c d e f g Karafet Tatiana M Mendez Fernando L Sudoyo Herawati Lansing J Stephen Hammer Michael F March 2015 Improved phylogenetic resolution and rapid diversification of Y chromosome haplogroup K M526 in Southeast Asia European Journal of Human Genetics 23 3 369 373 doi 10 1038 ejhg 2014 106 PMC 4326703 PMID 24896152 Hallast Pille Agdzhoyan Anastasia Balanovsky Oleg Xue Yali Tyler Smith Chris 2021 A Southeast Asian origin for present day non African human y chromosomes Human Genetics 140 2 299 307 doi 10 1007 s00439 020 02204 9 PMC 7864842 PMID 32666166 Chiaroni Jacques Underhill Peter A Cavalli Sforza Luca L 2009 Y chromosome diversity human expansion drift and cultural evolution PNAS 106 48 20174 9 Bibcode 2009PNAS 10620174C doi 10 1073 pnas 0910803106 PMC 2787129 PMID 19920170 Bergstrom Anders Nagle Nano Chen Yuan McCarthy Shane Pollard Martin O Ayub Qasim Wilcox Stephen Wilcox Leah van Oorschot Roland A H McAllister Peter Williams Lesley Xue Yali Mitchell R John Tyler Smith Chris 21 March 2016 Deep Roots for Aboriginal Australian Y Chromosomes Current Biology 26 6 809 813 doi 10 1016 j cub 2016 01 028 PMC 4819516 PMID 26923783 a b c d e f Poznik G David Xue Yali Mendez Fernando L Willems Thomas F Massaia Andrea Wilson Sayres Melissa A Ayub Qasim McCarthy Shane A Narechania Apurva Kashin Seva Chen Yuan Banerjee Ruby Rodriguez Flores Juan L Cerezo Maria Shao Haojing Gymrek Melissa Malhotra Ankit Louzada Sandra Desalle Rob Ritchie Graham R S Cerveira Eliza Fitzgerald Tomas W Garrison Erik Marcketta Anthony Mittelman David Romanovitch Mallory Zhang Chengsheng Zheng Bradley Xiangqun Abecasis Goncalo R McCarroll Steven A Flicek Paul Underhill Peter A Coin Lachlan Zerbino Daniel R Yang Fengtang Lee Charles Clarke Laura Auton Adam Erlich Yaniv Handsaker Robert E Bustamante Carlos D Tyler Smith Chris June 2016 Punctuated bursts in human male demography inferred from 1 244 worldwide Y chromosome sequences Nature Genetics 48 6 593 599 doi 10 1038 ng 3559 PMC 4884158 PMID 27111036 a b c d e f g YFull YTree v5 08 2017 K M2335 9 December 2017 PhyloTree 2017 Details of the Y SNP markers included in the minimal Y tree 9 December 2017 GeneticHomeland com 2016 DNA Marker Index Chromosome Y V4208 9 December 2017 Downloadable genotypes of present day and ancient DNA data compiled from published papers David Reich Lab reich hms harvard edu Archived from the original on 2 November 2019 Retrieved 11 September 2019 Karafet et al 2015 This pattern leads us to hypothesize a southeastern Asian origin for P P295 and a later expansion of the ancestor of subhaplogroups R and Q into mainland Asia An alternative explanation would involve an extinction event of ancestral P P295 chromosomes everywhere in Asia These scenarios are equally parsimonious They involve either a migration event P chromosomes from Indonesia to mainland Asia or an extinction event of P P295 paragroup in Eurasia ISOGG 2018 Y DNA Haplogroup Tree Trunk www isogg org Nagle Nano Ballantyne Kaye N van Oven Mannis Tyler Smith Chris Xue Yali Taylor Duncan Wilcox Stephen Wilcox Leah Turkalov Rust van Oorschot Roland A H McAllister Peter Williams Lesley Kayser Manfred Mitchell Robert J Genographic Consortium March 2016 Antiquity and diversity of aboriginal Australian Y chromosomes Aboriginal Australian Y Chromosomes American Journal of Physical Anthropology 159 3 367 381 doi 10 1002 ajpa 22886 PMID 26515539 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Haplogroup K2 amp oldid 1179978562, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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