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Primary nutritional groups

Primary nutritional groups are groups of organisms, divided in relation to the nutrition mode according to the sources of energy and carbon, needed for living, growth and reproduction. The sources of energy can be light or chemical compounds; the sources of carbon can be of organic or inorganic origin.[1]

The terms aerobic respiration, anaerobic respiration and fermentation (substrate-level phosphorylation) do not refer to primary nutritional groups, but simply reflect the different use of possible electron acceptors in particular organisms, such as O2 in aerobic respiration, or nitrate (NO
3
), sulfate (SO2−
4
) or fumarate in anaerobic respiration, or various metabolic intermediates in fermentation.

Primary sources of energy edit

Phototrophs absorb light in photoreceptors and transform it into chemical energy.
Chemotrophs release chemical energy.

The freed energy is stored as potential energy in ATP, carbohydrates, or proteins. Eventually, the energy is used for life processes such as moving, growth and reproduction.

Plants and some bacteria can alternate between phototrophy and chemotrophy, depending on the availability of light.

Primary sources of reducing equivalents edit

Organotrophs use organic compounds as electron/hydrogen donors.
Lithotrophs use inorganic compounds as electron/hydrogen donors.

The electrons or hydrogen atoms from reducing equivalents (electron donors) are needed by both phototrophs and chemotrophs in reduction-oxidation reactions that transfer energy in the anabolic processes of ATP synthesis (in heterotrophs) or biosynthesis (in autotrophs). The electron or hydrogen donors are taken up from the environment.

Organotrophic organisms are often also heterotrophic, using organic compounds as sources of both electrons and carbon. Similarly, lithotrophic organisms are often also autotrophic, using inorganic sources of electrons and CO2 as their inorganic carbon source.

Some lithotrophic bacteria can utilize diverse sources of electrons, depending on the availability of possible donors.

The organic or inorganic substances (e.g., oxygen) used as electron acceptors needed in the catabolic processes of aerobic or anaerobic respiration and fermentation are not taken into account here.

For example, plants are lithotrophs because they use water as their electron donor for the electron transport chain across the thylakoid membrane. Animals are organotrophs because they use organic compounds as electron donors to synthesize ATP (plants also do this, but this is not taken into account). Both use oxygen in respiration as electron acceptor, but this character is not used to define them as lithotrophs.

Primary sources of carbon edit

Heterotrophs metabolize organic compounds to obtain carbon for growth and development.
Autotrophs use carbon dioxide (CO2) as their source of carbon.

Energy and carbon edit

 
Yellow fungus
Classification of organisms based on their metabolism
Energy source Light photo-   -troph
Molecules chemo-
Electron donor Organic compounds   organo-  
Inorganic compounds litho-
Carbon source Organic compounds   hetero-
Carbon dioxide auto-

A chemoorganoheterotrophic organism is one that requires organic substrates to get its carbon for growth and development, and that obtains its energy from the decomposition of an organic compound. This group of organisms may be further subdivided according to what kind of organic substrate and compound they use. Decomposers are examples of chemoorganoheterotrophs which obtain carbon and electrons or hydrogen from dead organic matter. Herbivores and carnivores are examples of organisms that obtain carbon and electrons or hydrogen from living organic matter.

Chemoorganotrophs are organisms which use the chemical energy in organic compounds as their energy source and obtain electrons or hydrogen from the organic compounds, including sugars (i.e. glucose), fats and proteins.[2] Chemoheterotrophs also obtain the carbon atoms that they need for cellular function from these organic compounds.

All animals are chemoheterotrophs (meaning they oxidize chemical compounds as a source of energy and carbon), as are fungi, protozoa, and some bacteria. The important differentiation amongst this group is that chemoorganotrophs oxidize only organic compounds while chemolithotrophs instead use oxidation of inorganic compounds as a source of energy.[3]

Primary metabolism table edit

The following table gives some examples for each nutritional group:[4][5][6][7]

Energy
source
Electron/
H-atom
donor
Carbon source Name Examples
Sun Light
Photo-
Organic
-organo-
Organic
-heterotroph
Photoorganoheterotroph Some bacteria: Rhodobacter, Heliobacterium, some green non-sulfur bacteria[8]
Carbon dioxide
-autotroph
Photoorganoautotroph Some archaea (Haloarchaea) perform anoxygenic photosynthesis and fix atmospheric carbon.
Inorganic
-litho-*
Organic
-heterotroph
Photolithoheterotroph Purple non-sulfur bacteria
Carbon dioxide
-autotroph
Photolithoautotroph Some bacteria (cyanobacteria), some eukaryotes (eukaryotic algae, land plants). Photosynthesis.
Breaking
Chemical
Compounds
Chemo-
Organic
-organo-
Organic
-heterotroph
Chemoorganoheterotroph Predatory, parasitic, and saprophytic prokaryotes. Some eukaryotes (heterotrophic protists, fungi, animals)
Carbon dioxide
-autotroph
Chemoorganoautotroph Some archaea (anaerobic methanotrophic archaea).[9] Chemosynthesis, synthetically autotrophic Escherichia coli bacteria[10] and Pichia pastoris yeast.[11]
Inorganic
-litho-*
Organic
-heterotroph
Chemolithoheterotroph Some bacteria (Oceanithermus profundus)[12]
Carbon dioxide
-autotroph
Chemolithoautotroph Some bacteria (Nitrobacter), some archaea (Methanobacteria). Chemosynthesis.

*Some authors use -hydro- when the source is water.

The common final part -troph is from Ancient Greek τροφή trophḗ "nutrition".

Mixotrophs edit

Some, usually unicellular, organisms can switch between different metabolic modes, for example between photoautotrophy, photoheterotrophy, and chemoheterotrophy in Chroococcales.[13] Rhodopseudomonas palustris – another example – can grow with or without oxygen, use either light, inorganic or organic compounds for energy.[14] Such mixotrophic organisms may dominate their habitat, due to their capability to use more resources than either photoautotrophic or organoheterotrophic organisms.[15]

Examples edit

All sorts of combinations may exist in nature, but some are more common than others. For example, most plants are photolithoautotrophic, since they use light as an energy source, water as electron donor, and CO2 as a carbon source. All animals and fungi are chemoorganoheterotrophic, since they use organic substances both as chemical energy sources and as electron/hydrogen donors and carbon sources. Some eukaryotic microorganisms, however, are not limited to just one nutritional mode. For example, some algae live photoautotrophically in the light, but shift to chemoorganoheterotrophy in the dark. Even higher plants retained their ability to respire heterotrophically on starch at night which had been synthesised phototrophically during the day.

Prokaryotes show a great diversity of nutritional categories.[16] For example, cyanobacteria and many purple sulfur bacteria can be photolithoautotrophic, using light for energy, H2O or sulfide as electron/hydrogen donors, and CO2 as carbon source, whereas green non-sulfur bacteria can be photoorganoheterotrophic, using organic molecules as both electron/hydrogen donors and carbon sources.[8][16] Many bacteria are chemoorganoheterotrophic, using organic molecules as energy, electron/hydrogen and carbon sources.[8] Some bacteria are limited to only one nutritional group, whereas others are facultative and switch from one mode to the other, depending on the nutrient sources available.[16] Sulfur-oxidizing, iron, and anammox bacteria as well as methanogens are chemolithoautotrophs, using inorganic energy, electron, and carbon sources. Chemolithoheterotrophs are rare because heterotrophy implies the availability of organic substrates, which can also serve as easy electron sources, making lithotrophy unnecessary. Photoorganoautotrophs are uncommon since their organic source of electrons/hydrogens would provide an easy carbon source, resulting in heterotrophy.

Synthetic biology efforts enabled the transformation of the trophic mode of two model microorganisms from heterotrophy to chemoorganoautotrophy:

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ Eiler A (December 2006). "Evidence for the ubiquity of mixotrophic bacteria in the upper ocean: implications and consequences". Applied and Environmental Microbiology. 72 (12): 7431–7. Bibcode:2006ApEnM..72.7431E. doi:10.1128/AEM.01559-06. PMC 1694265. PMID 17028233. Table 1: Definitions of metabolic strategies to obtain carbon and energy
  2. ^ Todar K (2009). "Todar's Online Textbook of Bacteriology". Nutrition and Growth of Bacteria. Retrieved 2014-04-19.
  3. ^ Kelly DP, Mason J, Wood A (1987). "Energy Metabolism in Chemolithotrophs". In van Verseveld HW, Duine JA (eds.). Microbial Growth on C1 Compounds. Dordrecht: Springer. pp. 186–187. doi:10.1007/978-94-009-3539-6_23. ISBN 978-94-010-8082-8.
  4. ^ Lwoff A, Van Niel CB, Ryan TF, Tatum EL (1946). "Nomenclature of nutritional types of microorganisms" (PDF). Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology (5th ed.). 11: 302–303.
  5. ^ Andrews JH (1991). Comparative Ecology of Microorganisms and Macroorganisms. Berlin: Springer Verlag. p. 68. ISBN 978-0-387-97439-2.
  6. ^ Yafremava LS, Wielgos M, Thomas S, Nasir A, Wang M, Mittenthal JE, Caetano-Anollés G (2013). "A general framework of persistence strategies for biological systems helps explain domains of life". Frontiers in Genetics. 4: 16. doi:10.3389/fgene.2013.00016. PMC 3580334. PMID 23443991.
  7. ^ Margulis L, McKhann HI, Olendzenski L, eds. (1993). Illustrated Glossary of Protoctista: Vocabulary of the Algae, Apicomplexa, Ciliates, Foraminifera, Microspora, Water Molds, Slime Molds, and the Other Protoctists. Jones & Bartlett Learning. pp. xxv. ISBN 978-0-86720-081-2.
  8. ^ a b c Morris, J. et al. (2019). "Biology: How Life Works", 3rd edition, W. H. Freeman. ISBN 978-1319017637
  9. ^ Kellermann MY, Wegener G, Elvert M, Yoshinaga MY, Lin YS, Holler T, et al. (November 2012). "Autotrophy as a predominant mode of carbon fixation in anaerobic methane-oxidizing microbial communities". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 109 (47): 19321–6. Bibcode:2012PNAS..10919321K. doi:10.1073/pnas.1208795109. PMC 3511159. PMID 23129626.
  10. ^ a b Gleizer S, Ben-Nissan R, Bar-On YM, Antonovsky N, Noor E, Zohar Y, et al. (November 2019). "2". Cell. 179 (6): 1255–1263.e12. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2019.11.009. PMC 6904909. PMID 31778652.
  11. ^ a b Gassler T, Sauer M, Gasser B, Egermeier M, Troyer C, Causon T, et al. (December 2019). "2". Nature Biotechnology. 38 (2): 210–216. doi:10.1038/s41587-019-0363-0. PMC 7008030. PMID 31844294.
  12. ^ Miroshnichenko ML, L'Haridon S, Jeanthon C, Antipov AN, Kostrikina NA, Tindall BJ, et al. (May 2003). "Oceanithermus profundus gen. nov., sp. nov., a thermophilic, microaerophilic, facultatively chemolithoheterotrophic bacterium from a deep-sea hydrothermal vent". International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology. 53 (Pt 3): 747–52. doi:10.1099/ijs.0.02367-0. PMID 12807196.
  13. ^ Rippka R (March 1972). "Photoheterotrophy and chemoheterotrophy among unicellular blue-green algae". Archives of Microbiology. 87 (1): 93–98. doi:10.1007/BF00424781. S2CID 155161.
  14. ^ Li, Meijie; Ning, Peng; Sun, Yi; Luo, Jie; Yang, Jianming (2022). "Characteristics and Application of Rhodopseudomonas palustris as a Microbial Cell Factory". Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology. 10: 897003. doi:10.3389/fbioe.2022.897003. ISSN 2296-4185. PMC 9133744. PMID 35646843.
  15. ^ Eiler A (December 2006). "Evidence for the ubiquity of mixotrophic bacteria in the upper ocean: implications and consequences". Applied and Environmental Microbiology. 72 (12): 7431–7. Bibcode:2006ApEnM..72.7431E. doi:10.1128/AEM.01559-06. PMC 1694265. PMID 17028233.
  16. ^ a b c Tang, K.-H., Tang, Y. J., Blankenship, R. E. (2011). "Carbon metabolic pathways in phototrophic bacteria and their broader evolutionary implications" Frontiers in Microbiology 2: Art. 165. http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/micb.2011.00165

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This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Primary nutritional groups news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Primary nutritional groups are groups of organisms divided in relation to the nutrition mode according to the sources of energy and carbon needed for living growth and reproduction The sources of energy can be light or chemical compounds the sources of carbon can be of organic or inorganic origin 1 The terms aerobic respiration anaerobic respiration and fermentation substrate level phosphorylation do not refer to primary nutritional groups but simply reflect the different use of possible electron acceptors in particular organisms such as O2 in aerobic respiration or nitrate NO 3 sulfate SO2 4 or fumarate in anaerobic respiration or various metabolic intermediates in fermentation Contents 1 Primary sources of energy 2 Primary sources of reducing equivalents 3 Primary sources of carbon 4 Energy and carbon 5 Primary metabolism table 6 Mixotrophs 7 Examples 8 See also 9 Notes and referencesPrimary sources of energy editPhototrophs absorb light in photoreceptors and transform it into chemical energy Chemotrophs release chemical energy The freed energy is stored as potential energy in ATP carbohydrates or proteins Eventually the energy is used for life processes such as moving growth and reproduction Plants and some bacteria can alternate between phototrophy and chemotrophy depending on the availability of light Primary sources of reducing equivalents editOrganotrophs use organic compounds as electron hydrogen donors Lithotrophs use inorganic compounds as electron hydrogen donors The electrons or hydrogen atoms from reducing equivalents electron donors are needed by both phototrophs and chemotrophs in reduction oxidation reactions that transfer energy in the anabolic processes of ATP synthesis in heterotrophs or biosynthesis in autotrophs The electron or hydrogen donors are taken up from the environment Organotrophic organisms are often also heterotrophic using organic compounds as sources of both electrons and carbon Similarly lithotrophic organisms are often also autotrophic using inorganic sources of electrons and CO2 as their inorganic carbon source Some lithotrophic bacteria can utilize diverse sources of electrons depending on the availability of possible donors The organic or inorganic substances e g oxygen used as electron acceptors needed in the catabolic processes of aerobic or anaerobic respiration and fermentation are not taken into account here For example plants are lithotrophs because they use water as their electron donor for the electron transport chain across the thylakoid membrane Animals are organotrophs because they use organic compounds as electron donors to synthesize ATP plants also do this but this is not taken into account Both use oxygen in respiration as electron acceptor but this character is not used to define them as lithotrophs Primary sources of carbon editHeterotrophs metabolize organic compounds to obtain carbon for growth and development Autotrophs use carbon dioxide CO2 as their source of carbon Energy and carbon edit nbsp Yellow fungusClassification of organisms based on their metabolism Energy source Light photo trophMolecules chemo Electron donor Organic compounds organo Inorganic compounds litho Carbon source Organic compounds hetero Carbon dioxide auto A chemoorganoheterotrophic organism is one that requires organic substrates to get its carbon for growth and development and that obtains its energy from the decomposition of an organic compound This group of organisms may be further subdivided according to what kind of organic substrate and compound they use Decomposers are examples of chemoorganoheterotrophs which obtain carbon and electrons or hydrogen from dead organic matter Herbivores and carnivores are examples of organisms that obtain carbon and electrons or hydrogen from living organic matter Chemoorganotrophs are organisms which use the chemical energy in organic compounds as their energy source and obtain electrons or hydrogen from the organic compounds including sugars i e glucose fats and proteins 2 Chemoheterotrophs also obtain the carbon atoms that they need for cellular function from these organic compounds All animals are chemoheterotrophs meaning they oxidize chemical compounds as a source of energy and carbon as are fungi protozoa and some bacteria The important differentiation amongst this group is that chemoorganotrophs oxidize only organic compounds while chemolithotrophs instead use oxidation of inorganic compounds as a source of energy 3 Primary metabolism table editThe following table gives some examples for each nutritional group 4 5 6 7 Energysource Electron H atomdonor Carbon source Name ExamplesSun LightPhoto Organic organo Organic heterotroph Photo organo heterotroph Some bacteria Rhodobacter Heliobacterium some green non sulfur bacteria 8 Carbon dioxide autotroph Photo organo autotroph Some archaea Haloarchaea perform anoxygenic photosynthesis and fix atmospheric carbon Inorganic litho Organic heterotroph Photo litho heterotroph Purple non sulfur bacteriaCarbon dioxide autotroph Photo litho autotroph Some bacteria cyanobacteria some eukaryotes eukaryotic algae land plants Photosynthesis Breaking Chemical CompoundsChemo Organic organo Organic heterotroph Chemo organo heterotroph Predatory parasitic and saprophytic prokaryotes Some eukaryotes heterotrophic protists fungi animals Carbon dioxide autotroph Chemo organo autotroph Some archaea anaerobic methanotrophic archaea 9 Chemosynthesis synthetically autotrophic Escherichia coli bacteria 10 and Pichia pastoris yeast 11 Inorganic litho Organic heterotroph Chemo litho heterotroph Some bacteria Oceanithermus profundus 12 Carbon dioxide autotroph Chemo litho autotroph Some bacteria Nitrobacter some archaea Methanobacteria Chemosynthesis Some authors use hydro when the source is water nbsp Look up troph in Wiktionary the free dictionary The common final part troph is from Ancient Greek trofh trophḗ nutrition Mixotrophs editSome usually unicellular organisms can switch between different metabolic modes for example between photoautotrophy photoheterotrophy and chemoheterotrophy in Chroococcales 13 Rhodopseudomonas palustris another example can grow with or without oxygen use either light inorganic or organic compounds for energy 14 Such mixotrophic organisms may dominate their habitat due to their capability to use more resources than either photoautotrophic or organoheterotrophic organisms 15 Examples editAll sorts of combinations may exist in nature but some are more common than others For example most plants are photolithoautotrophic since they use light as an energy source water as electron donor and CO2 as a carbon source All animals and fungi are chemoorganoheterotrophic since they use organic substances both as chemical energy sources and as electron hydrogen donors and carbon sources Some eukaryotic microorganisms however are not limited to just one nutritional mode For example some algae live photoautotrophically in the light but shift to chemoorganoheterotrophy in the dark Even higher plants retained their ability to respire heterotrophically on starch at night which had been synthesised phototrophically during the day Prokaryotes show a great diversity of nutritional categories 16 For example cyanobacteria and many purple sulfur bacteria can be photolithoautotrophic using light for energy H2O or sulfide as electron hydrogen donors and CO2 as carbon source whereas green non sulfur bacteria can be photoorganoheterotrophic using organic molecules as both electron hydrogen donors and carbon sources 8 16 Many bacteria are chemoorganoheterotrophic using organic molecules as energy electron hydrogen and carbon sources 8 Some bacteria are limited to only one nutritional group whereas others are facultative and switch from one mode to the other depending on the nutrient sources available 16 Sulfur oxidizing iron and anammox bacteria as well as methanogens are chemolithoautotrophs using inorganic energy electron and carbon sources Chemolithoheterotrophs are rare because heterotrophy implies the availability of organic substrates which can also serve as easy electron sources making lithotrophy unnecessary Photoorganoautotrophs are uncommon since their organic source of electrons hydrogens would provide an easy carbon source resulting in heterotrophy Synthetic biology efforts enabled the transformation of the trophic mode of two model microorganisms from heterotrophy to chemoorganoautotrophy Escherichia coli was genetically engineered and then evolved in the laboratory to use CO2 as the sole carbon source while using the one carbon molecule formate as the source of electrons 10 The methylotrophic Pichia pastoris yeast was genetically engineered to use CO2 as the carbon source instead of methanol while the latter remained the source of electrons for the cells 11 See also editAutotrophic Chemosynthesis Chemotrophic Heterotrophic Lithotrophic Metabolism Mixotrophic Organotrophic PhototrophicNotes and references edit Eiler A December 2006 Evidence for the ubiquity of mixotrophic bacteria in the upper ocean implications and consequences Applied and Environmental Microbiology 72 12 7431 7 Bibcode 2006ApEnM 72 7431E doi 10 1128 AEM 01559 06 PMC 1694265 PMID 17028233 Table 1 Definitions of metabolic strategies to obtain carbon and energy Todar K 2009 Todar s Online Textbook of Bacteriology Nutrition and Growth of Bacteria Retrieved 2014 04 19 Kelly DP Mason J Wood A 1987 Energy Metabolism in Chemolithotrophs In van Verseveld HW Duine JA eds Microbial Growth on C1 Compounds Dordrecht Springer pp 186 187 doi 10 1007 978 94 009 3539 6 23 ISBN 978 94 010 8082 8 Lwoff A Van Niel CB Ryan TF Tatum EL 1946 Nomenclature of nutritional types of microorganisms PDF Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology 5th ed 11 302 303 Andrews JH 1991 Comparative Ecology of Microorganisms and Macroorganisms Berlin Springer Verlag p 68 ISBN 978 0 387 97439 2 Yafremava LS Wielgos M Thomas S Nasir A Wang M Mittenthal JE Caetano Anolles G 2013 A general framework of persistence strategies for biological systems helps explain domains of life Frontiers in Genetics 4 16 doi 10 3389 fgene 2013 00016 PMC 3580334 PMID 23443991 Margulis L McKhann HI Olendzenski L eds 1993 Illustrated Glossary of Protoctista Vocabulary of the Algae Apicomplexa Ciliates Foraminifera Microspora Water Molds Slime Molds and the Other Protoctists Jones amp Bartlett Learning pp xxv ISBN 978 0 86720 081 2 a b c Morris J et al 2019 Biology How Life Works 3rd edition W H Freeman ISBN 978 1319017637 Kellermann MY Wegener G Elvert M Yoshinaga MY Lin YS Holler T et al November 2012 Autotrophy as a predominant mode of carbon fixation in anaerobic methane oxidizing microbial communities Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 109 47 19321 6 Bibcode 2012PNAS 10919321K doi 10 1073 pnas 1208795109 PMC 3511159 PMID 23129626 a b Gleizer S Ben Nissan R Bar On YM Antonovsky N Noor E Zohar Y et al November 2019 2 Cell 179 6 1255 1263 e12 doi 10 1016 j cell 2019 11 009 PMC 6904909 PMID 31778652 a b Gassler T Sauer M Gasser B Egermeier M Troyer C Causon T et al December 2019 2 Nature Biotechnology 38 2 210 216 doi 10 1038 s41587 019 0363 0 PMC 7008030 PMID 31844294 Miroshnichenko ML L Haridon S Jeanthon C Antipov AN Kostrikina NA Tindall BJ et al May 2003 Oceanithermus profundus gen nov sp nov a thermophilic microaerophilic facultatively chemolithoheterotrophic bacterium from a deep sea hydrothermal vent International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 53 Pt 3 747 52 doi 10 1099 ijs 0 02367 0 PMID 12807196 Rippka R March 1972 Photoheterotrophy and chemoheterotrophy among unicellular blue green algae Archives of Microbiology 87 1 93 98 doi 10 1007 BF00424781 S2CID 155161 Li Meijie Ning Peng Sun Yi Luo Jie Yang Jianming 2022 Characteristics and Application of Rhodopseudomonas palustris as a Microbial Cell Factory Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology 10 897003 doi 10 3389 fbioe 2022 897003 ISSN 2296 4185 PMC 9133744 PMID 35646843 Eiler A December 2006 Evidence for the ubiquity of mixotrophic bacteria in the upper ocean implications and consequences Applied and Environmental Microbiology 72 12 7431 7 Bibcode 2006ApEnM 72 7431E doi 10 1128 AEM 01559 06 PMC 1694265 PMID 17028233 a b c Tang K H Tang Y J Blankenship R E 2011 Carbon metabolic pathways in phototrophic bacteria and their broader evolutionary implications Frontiers in Microbiology 2 Art 165 http dx doi org 10 3389 micb 2011 00165 Portal nbsp Biology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Primary nutritional groups amp oldid 1197921415, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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