| Literature DB >> 30072987 |
Fagui Zou1,2, Xu Wang1,2, Xinxin Han1,2, Gerson Rothschild3, Song Guo Zheng4,5, Uttiya Basu3, Jianbo Sun1,2.
Abstract
Tetraspanins are transmembrane proteins that modulate multiple diverse biological processes, including signal transduction, cell-cell communication, immunoregulation, tumorigenesis, cell adhesion, migration, and growth and differentiation. Here, we provide a systematic review of the involvement of tetraspanins and their partners in the regulation and function of B cells, including mechanisms associated with antigen presentation, antibody production, cytokine secretion, co-stimulator expression, and immunosuppression. Finally, we direct our focus to the signaling mechanisms, evolutionary conservation aspects, expression, and potential therapeutic strategies that could be based on tetraspanins and their interacting partners.Entities:
Keywords: B cell; immune regulation; partner; tetraspanin; therapy strategy
Year: 2018 PMID: 30072987 PMCID: PMC6058033 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.01606
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Scheme of B cell development and subsets in humans and mice. According to their individualized origin, surface marker, anatomic localization and functional property, B lymphocytes can be divided into several subsets, including B-1a cell, 1b cell, Breg cell, and B2 cell, the latter considered the conventional B cell. In the early stage, B cells differentiate from hematopoietic precursors into pro-B, pre-B within the bone marrow, then migrate to the spleen and progress through the transitional T1 and T2 stages. These immature cells then differentiate into FO or MZ naïve B cells depending on their special B cell receptor. MZ B cells rapidly develop into plasma cells secreting IgM during the early stage of pathogen infection and function as the first defense line against blood-borne pathogens. FO B cells enter germinal centers and undergo class switch recombination (CSR), somatic hypermuation (SHM), and affinity maturation and terminally differentiate into memory B cells or plasma cells. The important transcription factors and surface markers in human or murine involved in conventional B cell development are shown. The origin of regulatory B cells and B1 cells is still not identified. Here, the solid arrows represent known developmental routes while the dashed arrows represent possible development directions. Abbreviation: CLP, common lymphoid progenitor.
Figure 2Functions of B cells. B lymphocytes perform diverse and complex roles in vivo mainly through promotion or suppression of immune responses. The well-known function of B cells is antibody production by plasma cells after SHM selection and CSR. B cells can also activate other immune cells by providing co-stimulation signals, serving as antigen-presenting cells or secreting multiple proinflammation cytokines, such as IL2, IL4, IL6, TNF-α, and INF-γ. On the other hand, B cells can suppress immune responses by regulating certain types of immune cells through multiple ways. Abbreviations: SHM, somatic hypermutation; CSR, class switch recombination; Ab, antibody.
Figure 3Structure of tetraspanin and pathways regulated by tetraspanins. (A) Schematic diagram of tetraspanins. Tetraspanins present four transmembrane domains (TMs) intracellular N- and C-termini and two extracellular domains (EC1 and EC2). CCG motif is formed with cysteine–cysteine–glycine (marked by red) and two disulfide bonds (marked by black line). (B) Pathways regulated by tetraspanins. (B1) B cell receptor (BCR) activation mediated by CD19–CD81–CD21 complex. Ig-α/β receive signals and are phosphorylated by Src kinase (Lyn, Fyn, or Btk), then recruit Syk kinase for initiating downstream signal pathway PLCγ2, Ras/Raf. Tetraspanin CD81, associated with CD52 and CD82, binds C19/CD21/Leu-13 signal-transducing complex and actives PLCγ2 through PI3K, which lowers the threshold for BCR signaling. (B2) Integrin-mediated cell adhesion. PI4-k, associated with various tetraspanins (CD9, CD63, CD81, CD151, and CD231), interacts with and promotes integrins to modulate cell spread and migration. (B3) T cell-B cell contact (TCR) pathway mediated by tetraspanins CD81, CD82, and CD37. CD4 and CD8 associate with Lck kinase to activate TCR signaling but their interaction with CD81, CD82, and CD37 interferes with phosphorylation of Lck kinase and may inhibit TCR signaling. (B4) Endocytic pathway for antigen presentation. Recognized antigens are internalized, processed, and loaded onto MHC class II molecules during the late endosome stage. Major histocompatibility complex class II mediates transport to the cell surface and the release of exosomes. Tetraspanin microdomains in antigen-presenting cell membranes are enriched for specific peptide–MHC class II complexes, peptide editor human leukocyte antigen-DM, and CD86 among other proteins. This selecting domain probably facilitates antigen presentation and T-cell activation, increasing MHC avidity.
The regulation and function of tetraspanins and their interacting partners.
| Protein | Regulate | Regulated by | Binds | Role in cell |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TSPAN1 | N/A | TP73, mir-8 | NFKBIB | Endocytosis by proliferation |
| TSPAN2 | CTNNB1, Jnk, BAX | TCF7L2, calmodulin, ERN1, RTN4, TGFB3, dexamethasone, | SNX13, MTCH1, REEP6, PTGFRN, ARF6, GLP1R, LPCAT3, ZDHHC6, LGALS3, TSPAN3, DAGLB, LCLAT1, HSDL1, FAM241A, SNX14 | Myelination, degeneration, development, differentiation, formation, upregulation, activation in, apoptosis |
| TSPAN3 | N/A | FAS, neutrophils, PAX3, camptothecin, | ITGB1, LPAR1, RNF13, GABARAP, RDH14, MAP1LC3B2, SNX17, UGCG, FAM189B, GOLGA7, ZDHHC9, TNFRSF10B, RNF149, STX6, CDC6 | Migration, proliferation |
| TSPAN4 | Protein–protein complex | PLAG1, HK cells, MGEA5, hydrogen peroxide, CLOCK, estrogen | ITGA3, ITGB1, ITGA6, LOC100996763/NOTCH2NL, CREB3, Ul94, CD81, CD9, CLDN11, peptide, miR-1-3p (and other miRNAs w/seed GGAAUGU) | N/A |
| TSPAN5 | N/A | CST5, WT1, MGEA5, TNFSF11, STAT4, beta-estradiol | ATP2B3, LCLAT1, RDH14, FAM210B, KLHL2, THAP11, TMEM87A, PIEZO1, NAT14, BSCL2, AGPAT3, TVP23C, ALG11, SOAT1, SNX25 | Adhesion, proliferation, osteoclastogenesis |
| TSPAN6 | N/A | Seocalcitol, SOX4, RBM5, HRAS, TP53, SNX27, retromer | EVA1C, TMEM185A, CLEC5A, TNFRSF17, ASIC4, CDS1, TMEM30B, VNN2, SERPINA12, LYPD4, GPR141, LRRTM1, MAVS, TMEM173, IFIH1 | N/A |
| TSPAN7 | N/A | MYC, EZH2, HOXD3, IL15, LMO1, TAL1, NEUROG1, HDAC4, influenza A virus [A/Bangkok/RX73(H3N2)], CD3, PAX3, omeprazole, LIF, NKX2-1, large T antigen | HAVCR2, PI4KA, CREB3, BBS1, NEF, ADCY5, CACNA1A, KPTN, RBL1, LGALS3 | Shape change, cell spreading |
| TSPAN8 | GCG | FGF10, TCF, STAT5A, CBX5, CTNNB1, 2-bromoethylamine, SMARCA4, AR, doxorubicin, indomethacin, captopril, hexachlorobenzene, cyclophosphamide, lomustine, puromycin aminonucleoside | ITGB1, ITGA3, EPCAM, integrin, ITGA6, CLDN7, ACTA1, ATP1A1, integrin alpha 6 beta 1, integrin alpha6 beta1, CD44, PDX1, miR-125b-5p (and other miRNAs w/seed CCCUGAG) | Cell movement |
| TSPAN9 | N/A | EAhy926 cells, tamoxifen, ESR1, dexamethasone, cyclosporin A, NEF, CD3 | ELAVL1 | N/A |
| TSPAN10 | N/A | PRDM1 | HSD17B13, ADAM10, ADGRG5, PNLDC1 | N/A |
| TSPAN11 | N/A | N/A | POMC, CYB5R3, IGLL1/IGLL5, TM9SF4, ITGA7, ITGA6, REEP5, NRP2, ESYT1, ARL6IP5, ITGB1 | N/A |
| TSPAN12 | ADAM10, APP | GATA2, MGEA5, CLDN7, UPF2 | FTT0715, TFCP2, LRP5, NDP, FZD4, TSPAN12, ADAM10 | Proteolysis in, maturation in |
| TSPAN13 | Cyclic AMP | CBX5, STAT5A, SMARCA4, PMSG, ESR2, HDAC4, TNFSF11, TGFB3, Cg, UPF2 | GAG, GLP1R, APP, ELAVL1 | Osteoclastogenesis, accumulation in |
| TSPAN14 | GP6 | Tretinoin, TGM2 | ADAM10, PIK3R2, DPY30, PIK3CA, PIK3R3, ATP13A2, ELAVL1, HNF4A, REST | Molecular cleavage in |
| TSPAN15 | CDH2 | TCF7L2, F2RL1 | P2RY12, AGTR1, RETREG3, LPAR6, ADAM10, SLC7A1, SYPL2, SLC22A16, IPPK, FZD10, C3AR1, HTR3A, GYPB, ADGRE5, CLCC1 | Molecular cleavage in |
| TSPAN16 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| TSPAN17 | N/A | KLF3, SATB1, calmodulin | PRAF2, FAM210B, ATP2A3, DHRS7, CCDC115, FAM189B, AGPAT3, TYW1, GHDC, PNPLA6, SLC44A1, RNF149, RETREG3, EPHX1, GP1BB | N/A |
| TSPAN18 | N/A | 2-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid | FITM2, RNF130, iucD | N/A |
| TSPAN19 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| UPK1B | N/A | UPK3A, UPK2, CNR1, TP63, PD 153035, rosiglitazone, troglitazone | UPK3A, SNX31, BCL2L13, BNIP2, CCDC155 | Differentiation |
| UPK1A | N/A | TP63, ATG16L1, OSM, SLC13A1, Caco2 cells, troglitazone, PD 153035 | ECEL1, DIRC2, TMEM223, TMEM62, LMF2, TUSC3, SOAT1, FZD3, DPY19L1, TMEM39A, FZD1, LRRC8A, NAT14, PIGO, CIB1 | Differentiation |
| PRPH2 | RHO, ROM1, 26s proteasome | CRX, RHO | PRPH2, ROM1 | Quantity, formation, function, synaptic transmission, overload in, length, generation, cell death, morphology |
| ROM1 | N/A | AHI1, PLAG1, PRPH2, NRL, NRG2, influenza A virus [A/Bangkok/RX73(H3N2)], NRG1, dihydrotestosterone, EGF | PRPH2, SPTLC2, PHGDH, ITSN1, EPN1 | Electrophysiology, degeneration, abnormal morphology, length, synaptic transmission, apoptosis, size |
| CD151 | ITGA3, ITGB1, ERK1/2, PRKCA, PTK2, P38 MAPK, PI4KA, Akt, CD63, PRKCB, collagen type I, CD81, CD151, laminin (complex), FN1 | MYC, ZDHHC2, PAX3, RET, integrin alpha 6 beta 4, mir-193, MITF, SMARCD3, T, BCL6, MKL2, MKL1, MGEA5, MYL2, valproic acid | ITGB1, ITGA3, ITGA6, ITGB4, CD9, ITGB3, ITGA5, GRAMD1C, integrin alpha 3 beta 1, TMED10, PI4KA, CD81, CD63, PRKCB, TMPRSS11B | Migration, adhesion, proliferation, abnormal morphology, thickness, lack, effacement, morphology, activation in, cell spreading |
| CD53 | BCL2L1, BAX, DHX32, KRT20, GLS, TPPP3, TFDP1, MRPL32, FAM43A, CD53, PRKCA, PRKCB, caspase, Akt | Tretinoin, 17-alpha-ethinylestradiol, DYSF, CD3, RARA, IL15, RUNX1T1, RUNX1, MGEA5, SOX4, CREBBP, EP300, paclitaxel, PRDM1, vitamin E | PRKCA, PRKCB, ITGB1, CD81, GGT1, CD82, ITGA4, CD37, CD2, CD9, miR-224-5p (miRNAs w/seed AAGUCAC) | Apoptosis, invasiveness |
| CD37 | IgG1, Immunoglobulin, IgG, CD4, LCK, CD8, IgM, IGHG1, adenosine, Lfa-1, RAC1, ICAM1, IL2 | IL13, IGF1R, fluvoxamine, lipopolysaccharide, B lymphocytes, plasma cells, RAF1, PD98059 | ACPA, PURL, YBTQ, PG8786 084, CD19, CD53, SYK, KARS, PTPN6, LYN, PIK3CD, PIK3CG, CD81, MHC class II (complex), CR2 | Proliferation, adhesion, activation, chemotaxis, transendothelial migration, recruitment, cell death, cell division, internalization by, activation in |
| CD82 | CD82, EGFR, BCAR1, MET, PRKCA, RAC1, CRK, focal adhesion kinase, GRB2, ITGA3, CANX, ITGA5, ITGB1, PRKCB, SHC1 | IL1B, CD82, NFKBIA, ERBB2, APP, APBB1, IL6, TP63, NFkB (complex), ZFPM1, GSK3B, AURKB, P38 MAPK, mir-15, NEUROG1 | CD81, CD19, CD9, ITGA3, ITGB1, ITGA6, EGFR, PRKCA, MET, NFKB1, CD1D, PRKCB, ITGA5, CREB3, integrin beta 1 | Migration, invasion, transcription in, adhesion, accumulation in, motility, anoikis, invasion by, differentiation, signaling in |
| CD81 | CD19, IFNG, MMP14, TNF, CD81, IgM, IgA, ERK1/2, PRKCA, IgG1, IgG, Igg3, dopamine, SP1, GTF3A | CD81, phorbol myristate acetate, hepatitis C virus JFH-1, LY9, WIPF1, curcumin, HIST1H1T, Hist1h1a, hydrogen peroxide, butyric acid, ZBTB16, HRAS, laminin 5, interferon alpha, ADORA2A | E2, CR2, ITGB1, CD19, ITGA3, CD9, CD82, IGSF8, PTGFRN, CLDN1, ITGA5, HNRNPD, RAC2, E1, CD151 | Proliferation, abnormal morphology, adhesion, migration, motility, differentiation, number, phosphorylation in, entrance, binding |
| CD9 | CD9, IL2, ITGA3, ITGA5, PRKCA, ITGB1, SRC (family), MMP9, CBL, ERK1/2, CD69, YAP1, DPP4, CASP3, ERVW-1 | Decitabine, trichostatin A, forskolin, CD9, ZDHHC2, BCAP31, PRDX1, FOLR1, methylprednisolone, lactacystin, CCR5, MYC, MYCT1, E2F1, CXCR4 | ITGB1, ITGA3, IGSF8, ITGA5, CD81, PTGFRN, CD151, ITGA6, ITGB3, CD82, ITGA2, ITGB4, Psg18 (includes others), PRKCA, CD36 | Fusion, adhesion, proliferation, aggregation, migration, binding, apoptosis, motility, accumulation in, fertilization |
| CD63 | KDR, PLC gamma, SRC, PTK2, ERK1/2, Akt, VTN, laminin (family), FN1, collagen, ITGB1, TNF | F2, cytochalasin B, IL3, IFNG, collagen(s), C5, IL5, CSF2, guanosine triphosphate, LEP, roscovitine, CDK5R1, AP3B1, NEUROG3, ZFPM1 | ITGB1, LGALS8, RETREG3, LGALS3, LGALS9, TIMP1, ITGB3, ITGA3, PI4KA, CD151, MHC class II (complex), AP3M1, TSPAN2, TSPAN3, RNF13 | Adhesion, differentiation, endocytosis by, internalization in, tubulation by, sprouting in, phosphorylation in, tyrosine phosphorylation in, migration, growth |
| TSPAN31 | TSPAN31 | Benzo(a)pyrene, TSPAN31, IRF4, CREBBP, EP300, heavy metal, TFAP4, EAhy926 cells | ELAVL1 | Proliferation |
| TSPAN32 | IL2 | HOXA3, GATA2 | N/A | Proliferation, organization, activation, aggregation |
| TSPAN33 | PTGS2, NOTCH1, IFNB1, NOS1, NFkB (complex), ADAM10, Notch | NOTCH1, NOTCH2, | PLEKHA7, MSN, PDZD11, ADAM10, EZR | number, abnormal morphology, quantity, maturation in, signaling in, expression in, erythropoiesis |
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Expression of tetraspanins on B cells.
| Name | Gene synonyms | Subcellular location | Expression on human B cell (TPM) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD38 | Isotype switched memory B cell | Memory B cell | |||
| TSPAN1 | NET-1, TSPAN-1 | Nucleoplasm, vesicles | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| TSPAN2 | FLJ12082, TSN2, TSPAN-2 | Nucleoplasm | 0 | 0.8 | 0 |
| TSPAN3 | TM4-A, TM4SF8, TSPAN-3 | Nucleoplasm, Golgi apparatus | 26 | 15 | 28 |
| TSPAN4 | NAG-2, TETRASPAN, TM4SF7, TSPAN-4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| TSPAN5 | NET-4, TM4SF9, Tspan-5 | 2 | 1 | 1 | |
| TSPAN6 | T245, TM4SF6, TSPAN-6 | Cytosol | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| TSPAN7 | A15, CD231, DXS1692E, MRX58, MXS1, TALLA-1, TM4SF2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| TSPAN8 | CO-029, TM4SF3 | Nucleoplasm | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| TSPAN9 | NET-5 | Nucleoplasm, Golgi apparatus, cytosol | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| TSPAN10 | OCSP | 0.6 | 0 | 0 | |
| TSPAN11 | Vesicles | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| TSPAN12 | NET-2, TM4SF12 | Vesicles, microtubules | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| TSPAN13 | NET-6, TM4SF13 | Nucleus | 72 | 13 | 17 |
| TSPAN14 | DC-TM4F2, MGC11352, TM4SF14 | Vesicles | 4 | 2 | 3 |
| TSPAN15 | NET-7, TM4SF15 | Nucleoplasm, cytosol | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| TSPAN16 | TM-8, TM4-B, TM4SF16 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| TSPAN17 | FBX23, FBXO23, TM4SF17 | Nucleoplasm | 2 | 2 | 2 |
| TSPAN18 | TSPAN | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| TSPAN19 | |||||
| UPK1B | TSPAN20, UPK1 | 0.6 | 0 | 0 | |
| UPK1A | TSPAN21 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| PRPH2 | CACD2, rd2, RDS, RP7, TSPAN22 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| ROM1 | ROM, TSPAN23 | Plasma membrane, cytosol | 0.5 | 0 | 0.6 |
| CD151 | PETA-3, RAPH, SFA-1, TSPAN24 | 1 | 2 | 2 | |
| CD53 | MOX44, TSPAN25 | 240 | 185 | 221 | |
| CD37 | TSPAN26 | 183 | 73 | 117 | |
| CD82 | IA4, KAI1, R2, ST6, TSPAN27 | Vesicles | 16 | 28 | 48 |
| CD81 | TAPA-1, TAPA1, TSPAN28 | Plasma membrane | 15 | 9 | 12 |
| CD9 | BA2, MIC3, MRP-1, P24, TSPAN29 | Plasma membrane | 8 | 1 | 0.5 |
| CD63 | ME491, MLA1, TSPAN30 | Vesicles | 6 | 7 | 13 |
| TSPAN31 | SAS | 5 | 3 | 6 | |
| TSPAN32 | PHEMX, TSSC6 | 6 | 1 | 2 | |
| TSPAN33 ( | MGC50844, Penumbra | Microtubules | 31 | 11 | 26 |
The information of “Gene synonyms” and “subcellular location” is obtained from “The Human Protein Atlas” (.
aThe original description in the consortium is “Class switch memory B cell.”
Figure 4Expression of tetraspanins in murine B cell subsets. The heat map was obtained from http://www.immgen.org/by inputting the list of tetraspanins in “My GeneSet” and choosing B cells as the populations of interest. The gene expression level is determined by Affymetrix microarrays (GEO: GSE15907).
Figure 5Expression of tetraspanin partners in human and murine B cell subsets. (A) The expression of cell surface partners of human and murine tetraspanins on specific B cells. The partners without TPM values are not listed in the table. Human data are determined by the RNA-seq data generated by the Blueprint Consortium, and murine data are from RNA-Seq CAGE (Cap Analysis of Gene Expression) analysis of mouse cells in RIKEN FANTOM5 project. (B) Expression of tetraspanin partners listed in (A) in murine B cell subsets. The heat map was obtained from http://www.immgen.org/ by inputting the list of cell surface partners of tetraspanin partners in “My GeneSet” and choosing B cells as the populations of interest. Based on the database, ADGRE5, ADGRG5, and CD1D in (A) are shown as Cd97, Gpr114, and Cd1d1 in (B), respectively.
Figure 6Schematic diagram for main functions of tetraspanins and their partners in B cells. Dotted lines enclose coreceptors formed by tetraspanins and partners. Lines between tetraspanins and partners or coreceptors indicate the interactions which have functions in B cells (line with arrow) in seven biologic processes, such as cell activation, antigen presentation, and antibody production. One tetraspanin or partner can have one or more functions on B cells. Same colored lines with arrows point to similar function or regulation.
Function of tetraspanin on B cells.
| Tetraspanin | Keywords | Details of function on B cells |
|---|---|---|
| CD9 | Markers, immune suppression, virus infection, activation, differentiation | Marker for murine marginal zone B cells, B-1, and plasma cells ( |
| CD81 | Forms CD81–CD19–CD21 complex, proliferation | Controls lymphocyte homeostasis by facilitating the interaction with follicular dendritic cells through the VLA4/VCAM-1 axis ( |
| CD53 | Activation, adhesion, development, apoptosis, antibody production | Interferes with lymphocyte activation and cell adhesion; a direct genetic target for EBF1 which is a critical transcription factor for early B lymphocyte development, and can be induced by ectopic expression of EBF-1 ( |
| CD63 | Exosome production, virus infection, migration | Suppressor of exosome production and could regulate the exosome-mediated major histocompatibility complex class II-dependent T-cell stimulation ( |
| CD37 | Apoptosis, survival, antibody production | Regulates the membrane distribution of α(4)β(1) integrin crucial for activating the Akt survival pathways, increases apoptosis of plasma cells in germinal centers ( |
| CD82 | Protection from cytotoxicity | Interferes with the capacity of the MHC-I complex to protect targets from NK-mediated cytotoxicity ( |
aOnly list the tetraspanins discussed in Section “Functions of tetraspanins on B cells.”
Functions of tetraspanin partners on B cells.
| Partner | Tetraspanin interacted | Function of partners on B cells |
|---|---|---|
| Adam10 | TSPAN33 | Required for development of T1 B cells to marginal zone B cells ( |
| CD19 | CD37, CD82, CD81 | Interacts with CD21, CD81, and B cell receptor (BCR) complex to augment signals by the pre-BCR/BCR for transducing signals; modulates B-cell fate decisions at multiple stages of development ( |
| CD1d | CD82 | Regulates interaction between activated T cells and B cells which is crucial to B cell proliferation and antibody production ( |
| CD2 | CD53 | Expressed preferentially on fetal thymic B cells, anti-CD2 antibody increases IL-4-dependent Ig production by thymic B cells ( |
| CD36 | CD9 | Expressed by most resting MZ B cells, has no role in the development of B cells but regulates both primary and secondary phosphoryl choline antibody responses during |
| CD44 | TSPAN8 | Complex of CD44 and CD74 binds macrophage migration inhibitory factor to induce B cell survival ( |
| CR2/CD21 | CD37, CD81 | An Epstein–Barr virus receptor on B cells and transduces signals ( |
| MET | CD82 | Recruited to CD74/CD44 complex and activated by HGF then leads to a survival cascade of B cells ( |
| TNFRSF17/BCMA | TSPAN6 | Reduced BCMA expression on peripheral B cells associates with severe syndrome of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients ( |
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