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1.
Non-heme iron(III) complexes of 14-membered tetraaza macrocycles have previously been found to catalytically decompose hydrogen peroxide to water and molecular oxygen, like the native enzyme catalase. Here the mechanism of this reaction is theoretically investigated by DFT calculations at the (U)B3LYP/6-31G* level, with focus on the reactivity of the possible spin states of the FeIII complexes. The computations suggest that H2O2 decomposition follows a homolytic route with intermediate formation of an iron(IV) oxo radical cation species (L.+FeIV==O) that resembles Compound I of natural iron porphyrin systems. Along the whole catalytic cycle, no significant energetic differences were found for the reaction proceeding on the doublet (S=1/2) or on the quartet (S=3/2) hypersurface, with the single exception of the rate-determining O--O bond cleavage of the first associated hydrogen peroxide molecule, for which reaction via the doublet state is preferred. The sextet (S=5/2) state of the FeIII complexes appears to be unreactive in catalase-like reactions.  相似文献   

2.
The interaction between fullerene C60 and catalase enzyme was studied with a fullerene C60‐coated piezoelectric (PZ) quartz crystal sensor. The partially irreversible response of the C60‐coated PZ crystal sensor for catalase was observed by the desorption study, which implied that C60 could chemically react with catalase. Thus, immobilized fullerene C60‐catalase enzyme was synthesized and applied in determining hydrogen peroxide in aqueous solutions. An oxygen electrode detector with the immobilized C60‐catalase was also employed to detect oxygen, a product of the hydrolysis of hydrogen peroxide which was catalyzed by the C60‐catalase. The oxygen electrode/C60‐catalase detection system exhibited linear responses to the concentration of hydrogen peroxide and amount of immobilized C60‐catalase enzyme that was used. The effects of pH and temperature on the activity of the immobilized C60‐catalase enzyme were also investigated. Optimum pH at 7.0 and optimum temperature at 25 °C for activity of the insoluble immobilized C60‐catalase enzyme were found. The immobilized C60‐catalase enzyme could be reused with good repeatability of the activity. The lifetime of the immobilized C60‐catalase enzyme was long enough with an activity of 93% after 95 days. The immobilized C60‐catalase enzyme was also applied in determining glucose which was oxidized with glucose oxidase resulting in producing hydrogen peroxide, followed by detecting hydrogen peroxide with the oxygen electrode/C60‐catalase detection system.  相似文献   

3.
A novel enzymatic amperometric method is described for the determination of oxalic acid in urine. An amperometric biosensor was made by immobilizing oxalate oxidase on the surface of a chromium(III) hexacyanoferrate-modified graphite electrode by using a bovine serum albumin and glutaraldehyde cross-linking procedure. The enzyme biocatalyzes oxalate decomposition in the presence of oxygen into carbon dioxide and hydrogen peroxide. The oxalate concentration, which is proportional to the amount of hydrogen peroxide, was determined amperometrically by measuring the current resulting in the reduction of hydrogen peroxide at a very low working potential (0.05 V versus the Hg ?Hg2Cl2? 3M KCl electrode), which minimized the influence of the possible interferences present in human urine. All experiments were performed with succinic buffer, pH 3.8, containing 0.1M KCl and 5.4mM ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid. In an aqueous solution of pure oxalic acid, the biosensor showed good linearity in a concentration range of 2.5-100 microM without the use of a dialysis membrane. For untreated urine samples, a high correlation (R2 = 0.9949) was obtained between oxalate concentrations added to urine samples and oxalate recoveries calculated for determinations with the described oxalate biosensor.  相似文献   

4.
The complex [iron(III) (octaphenylsulfonato)porphyrazine] (5-), Fe (III)(Pz), was synthesized. The p K a values of the axially coordinated water molecules were determined spectrophotometrically and found to be p K a 1 = 7.50 +/- 0.02 and p K a 2 = 11.16 +/- 0.06. The water exchange reaction studied by (17)O NMR as a function of the pH was fast at pH = 1, k ex = (9.8 +/- 0.6) x 10 (6) s (-1) at 25 degrees C, and too fast to be measured at pH = 10, whereas at pH = 13, no water exchange reaction occurred. The equilibrium between mono- and diaqua Fe (III)(Pz) complexes was studied at acidic pH as a function of the temperature and pressure. Complex-formation equilibria with different nucleophiles (Br (-) and pyrazole) were studied in order to distinguish between a five- (in the case of Br (-)) or six-coordinate (in the case of pyrazole) iron(III) center. The kinetics of the reaction of Fe (III)(Pz) with NO was studied as a model ligand substitution reaction at various pH values. The mechanism observed is analogous to the one observed for iron(III) porphyrins and follows an I d mechanism. The product is (Pz)Fe (II)NO (+), and subsequent reductive nitrosylation usually takes place when other nucleophiles like OH (-) or buffer ions are present in solution. Fe (III)(Pz) also activates hydrogen peroxide. Kinetic data for the direct reaction of hydrogen peroxide with the complex clearly indicate the occurrence of more than one reaction step. Kinetic data for the catalytic decomposition of the dye Orange II by H 2O 2 in the presence of Fe (III)(Pz) imply that a catalytic oxidation cycle is initiated. The peroxide molecule first coordinates to the iron(III) center to produce the active catalytic species, which immediately oxidizes the substrate. The influence of the catalyst, oxidant, and substrate concentrations on the reaction rate was studied in detail as a function of the pH. The rate increases with increasing catalyst and peroxide concentrations but decreases with increasing substrate concentration. At low pH, the oxidation of the substrate is not complete because of catalyst decomposition. The observed kinetic traces at pH = 10 and 12 for the catalytic cycle could be simulated on the basis of the obtained kinetic data and the proposed reaction cycle. The experimental results are in good agreement with the simulated ones.  相似文献   

5.
Akgöl S  Dinçkaya E 《Talanta》1999,48(2):363-367
A biosensor for the specific determination of hydrogen peroxide was developed using catalase (EC 1.11.1.6) in combination with a dissolved oxygen probe. Catalase was immobilized with gelatin by means of glutaraldehyde and fixed on a pretreated teflon membrane served as enzyme electrode. The electrode response was maximum when 50 mM phosphate buffer was used at pH 7.0 and at 35 degrees C. The biosensor response depends linearly on hydrogen peroxide concentration between 1.0x10(-5) and 3.0x10(-3) M with a response time of 30 s. The sensor is stable for >3 months so in this period >400 assays can be performed.  相似文献   

6.
A new colorimetric detection technique for glucose, based on electron transfer from glucose oxidase (GODred) to iron(III) acetylacetonate(acac)/phenanthroline(phen) mixed complexes, is developed. When GOD is added to an aqueous mixture that contains tris(acetylacetonato)iron(III) complex (FeIII-(acac)3), 1,10-phenanthroline (phen), and glucose, the color immediately changes from pale yellow to red. The red color originates from formation of tris(1,10-phenanthroline)iron(II) complex ([FeII(phen)3]2+). Differential pulse voltammetry indicates that cationic, mixed-ligand complexes of [Fe(acac)3-n-(phen)n]n+ are formed upon mixing the labile FeIII(acac)3 complex and phenanthroline. The cationic mixed-ligand complexes electrostatically bind to GOD (pI 4.2), and are easily reduced by electron transfer from GODred. This electron transfer is not affected by the presence of oxygen. The reduced complex [FeII(acac)3-n(phen)n](n-1)+ then undergoes rapid ligand exchange to FeII (phen)3. Formation of the colored FeII complex is repressed when the salt concentration in the mixture is increased, or when anionic bathophenanthroline disulfonate (BPS) is employed in place of phenanthroline. The use of labile metal complexes as electron acceptors would be widely applicable to the design of new biochromic detection systems.  相似文献   

7.
The hydrogen peroxide decomposition kinetics were investigated for both “free” iron catalyst [Fe(II) and Fe(III)] and complexed iron catalyst [Fe(II) and Fe(III)] complexed with DTPA, EDTA, EGTA, and NTA as ligands (L). A kinetic model for free iron catalyst was derived assuming the formation of a reversible complex (Fe–HO2), followed by an irreversible decomposition and using the pseudo‐steady‐state hypothesis (PSSH). This resulted in a first‐order rate at low H2O2 concentrations and a zero order rate at high H2O2 concentrations. The rate constants were determined using the method of initial rates of hydrogen peroxide decomposition. Complexed iron catalysts extend the region of significant activity to pH 2–10 vs. 2–4 for Fenton's reagent (free iron catalyst). A rate expression for Fe(III) complexes was derived using a mechanism similar to that of free iron, except that a L–Fe–HO2 complex was reversibly formed, and subsequently decayed irreversibly into products. The pH plays a major role in the decomposition rate and was incorporated into the rate law by considering the metal complex specie, that is, EDTA–Fe–H, EDTA–Fe–(H2O), EDTA–Fe–(OH), or EDTA–Fe–(OH)2, as a separate complex with its unique kinetic coefficients. A model was then developed to describe the decomposition of H2O2 from pH 2–10 (initial rates = 1 × 10−4 to 1 × 10−7 M/s). In the neutral pH range (pH 6–9), the complexed iron catalyzed reactions still exhibited significant rates of reaction. At low pH, the Fe(II) was mostly uncomplexed and in the free form. The rate constants for the Fe(III)–L complexes are strongly dependent on the stability constant, KML, for the Fe(III)–L complex. The rates of reaction were in descending order NTA > EGTA > EDTA > DTPA, which are consistent with the respective log KMLs for the Fe(III) complexes. Because the method of initial rates was used, the mechanism does not include the subsequent reactions, which may occur. For the complexed iron systems, the peroxide also attacks the chelating agent and by‐product‐complexing reactions occur. Accordingly, the model is valid only in the initial stages of reaction for the complexed system. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 32: 24–35, 2000  相似文献   

8.
过氧化氢酶是需氧生物体内抗氧化酶系的重要组分。过氧化氢酶催化过氧化氢分解是一个两底物酶促反应,依照Chance提出的机理,反应速率方程具有一级反应方程的形式。此反应在高浓度底物存在的情况下,表现出明显的不可逆底物抑制。本研究用热动力学方法研究了这一反应,提出了一种不可逆底物抑制机理,并应用该机理求出了相关动力学参数。在310.15K,pH=7.0时k0=9.6×10^5L·mol^-1^·s^-1,k1/k2=2.9×10^6。实验结果证明此机理正确有效。  相似文献   

9.
Zheng M  Li P  Yang C  Zhu H  Chen Y  Tang Y  Zhou Y  Lu T 《The Analyst》2012,137(5):1182-1189
A fast, simple square wave potential method is developed for the fabrication of a three-dimensional (3D) nanoporous gold (NPG) film. The nanostructures are characterized and confirmed by scanning electronic microscopy (SEM) and cyclic voltammetry (CV). The nanostructures modified with self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) are employed as an electrode substrate to immobilize inorganic iron(III) ion. After immobilization, iron(III) ion undergoes an effective direct electron transfer reaction with a pair of well-defined redox peak at -256 ± 10 mV (pH 7.0). The iron(III) ion modified electrode displays the excellent electrocatalytic performance for reduction of hydrogen peroxide, and thus can be used as an electrochemical sensor for detecting hydrogen peroxide with a low detection limit (1.0 × 10(-9) M), a wide linear range (9.0 × 10(-7)~5.0 × 10(-4) M), as well as good stability, selectivity and reproducibility.  相似文献   

10.
Catalytically synthesized carbon nanotubes (CNTs) such as those prepared via chemical vapor deposition (CVD) contain metallic impurities including Fe, Ni, Co, and Mo. Transition metal contaminants such as Fe can participate in redox cycling reactions that catalyze the generation of reactive oxygen species and other products. Through the nature of the CVD growth process, metallic nanoparticles become encased within the CNT graphene lattice and may still be chemically accessible and participate in redox chemistry, especially when these materials are utilized as electrodes in electrochemical applications. We demonstrate that metallic impurities can be selectively dissolved and/or passivated during electrochemical potential cycling. Anomalous Fe dissolution and passivation behavior is observed in neutral (pH=6.40+/-0.03) aqueous solutions when using multiwalled CNTs prepared from CVD. Fe particles contained within these CNTs display intriguing, potential-dependent Fe redox activity that varies with supporting electrolyte composition. In neutral solutions containing dibasic sodium phosphate, sodium acetate, and sodium citrate, FeII dissolution and surface confined FeII/III redox activity are significant despite Fe being encapsulated within CNT graphene layers. However, no apparent Fe dissolution is observed in 1 M potassium nitrate solutions, suggesting that the electrolyte composition plays an important role in observing FeII dissolution, passivation, and surface confined FeII/III redox activity. Between potentials of 0 and -1.1 V versus Hg/Hg2SO4, the primary redox-active Fe species are surface FeII/III oxides/oxyhydroxides. This FeII/III surface oxide redox chemistry can be completely suppressed by passivating Fe through repeated cycling of the CNTs in supporting electrolyte. By increasing the potential to more negative values (>-1.3 V), FeII dissolution may be induced in electrolyte solutions containing acetate and phosphate and inhibited by addition of sodium benzoate, which adsorbs on exposed Fe particles, effectively passivating them. Finally, we observe that the FeII/III redox chemistry or subsequent passivation does not affect the onset of oxygen reduction at nitrogen-doped CNTs, suggesting that the surface-bound FeII species is not the primary catalytically active site for oxygen reduction in these materials.  相似文献   

11.
The photolysis of hydrogen peroxide in dilute aqueous solution (1 × 10−4 M) at various temperatures (15–85°C) and pH (ph 2.5–7) was studied by flash photolysis. The rate of oxygen production under continuous photolysis conditions was measured at room temperature. The rate constants and activation parameters are reported. Evidence for the formation of complexes between hydrogen peroxide and intermediate radicals is presented. The liquid phase data are discussed and compared with those available for the gas phase.  相似文献   

12.
The decomposition reaction of hydrogen peroxide by Fe(III)- and Co(III)-2,9,16,23-tetracarboxyphthalocyanine supported on poly(2-vinylpyridine-CO-styrene) and the quaternized one, was studied at pH 7.0 in aqueous media. The kinetics of this reaction was also investigated at pH 7.0 by measuring the initial velocity V0 of the increasing concentration of O2 with a Warburg respirometer. The reaction proceeded according to the catalaselike mechanism. Fe(III)-2,9,16,23-tetracarboxyphthalocyanine supported on poly(2-vinylpyridine-CO-styrene) was a remarkably effective catalyst for a H2O2 decomposition reaction. The coordination sphere around the Fe(III)-phthalocyanine ring was characterized by electronic and ESR spectroscopy. Fe(III)-phthalocyanine supported on the copolymer dispersed in water was the five-coordinated, high-spin type. A typical competitive inhibition in respect of H2O2 by CN- was observed. ESR spectrum of this system showed the low spin iron(III) in the octahedral ligand field. The polymer coils hindered undesirable dimerization of metal-phthalocyanine molecules by the shielding effect.  相似文献   

13.
A kinetic flow-injection (FI) method is described for the determination of hydrogen peroxide. This method is based on an iron(III)-catalyzed oxidative coupling of 4-aminoantipyrine with N,N-dimethylaniline by hydrogen peroxide. By measuring the change in the absorbance of the dye formed at 560 nm, 1 x 10(-6) - 6 x 10(-4) M hydrogen peroxide could be determined with a sampling rate of 15 h(-1). The relative standard deviation (n = 30) was 0.8% for 5 x 10(-5) M hydrogen peroxide. There was little interference of the co-existing ions and compounds. After introducing some immobilized enzyme reactors to the FI system, the proposed method allowed the determination of glucose and uric acid ranging from 1 x 10(-6) to 6 x 10(-4) M with relative standard deviations of below 2%. The applicability of the method was demonstrated by determining these substances in serum samples.  相似文献   

14.
The temperature dependence of the resistivity of tablets of hexacyanoferrate(II)–thiosemicarbazide complexes of chromium(III), manganese(II), iron(III), cobalt(III), nickel(II), copper(II), and zinc(II) was measured in the range 20-90 °C. A relationship between the conductivity of a substance and the rate constant for the catalytic decomposition of hydrogen peroxide is established.  相似文献   

15.
To gain knowledge about biological iron mobilization, tripodal monotopic and ditopic hydroxamate ligands (1 and 2) are prepared, and their iron-chelating properties are investigated. Ligands 1 and 2 contain three Ala-Ala-beta-(HO)Ala units and three [Ala-Ala-beta-(HO)Ala](2) units connected with tris(alanylaminoethyl)amine, respectively, and form six-coordinate octahedral complexes with iron(III) in aqueous solution. Ligand 1 and 1 equiv of iron give Fe-1, and ligand 2 and 1 or 2 equiv of iron produce Fe(1)-2, or Fe(2)-2. These complexes exhibit absorptions at lambda(max) 425 nm of epsilon 2800-3000/Fe, characteristic of tris(hydroxamato)iron(III) complexes, and preferentially assume the Delta-cis configuration. Loading of Fe(III) on 1, 2, and M(III)-loaded ligands (M-1 and M(1)-2, M = Al, Ga, In) with ammonium ferric oxalate at pH 5.4 is performed, and the second-order rate constants of loading with respect to Fe(III) and the ligand or M(III)-loaded ligands are determined. The rates of loading of Fe(III) on M-1 increase in the order Al-1 < Ga-1 < In-1, and those on M(1)-2 in the order Al(1)-2 < Ga(1)-2 < Fe(1)-2 < In(1)-2, indicating that the dissociation tendency of M(III) ions from the hydroxamate ligand is an important factor. The iron complexes formed with 2 are subjected to an iron removal reaction with excess EDTA in aqueous pH 5.4 solution at 25.0 degrees C, and the collected data are analyzed by curve-fitting using appropriate first-order kinetic equations, providing the rate constants for the upper site and the lower site of 2. Similar analysis for FeM-2 affords removal rate constants for Fe(up)-2, M(up)-2, and Fe(low)-2, and the iron residence probability at each site. The protonation constants of the hydroxamate groups for 1 and 2 (pK(1,) pK(2), pK(3), and pK(1,) pK(2)., pK(6)) are determined, and the proton-independent stability constants for Fe-1, the upper site of Fe(2)-2, and the lower site of Fe(1)-2 are 10(28), 10(29), and 10(28.5), respectively.  相似文献   

16.
The formation of considerable amounts of hydrogen peroxide upon the slow addition of various oxidizing agents to oxalic acid in dilute sulphuric acid in the presence of oxygen and Mn(II) is greatly retarded in the presence of Fe(III) or Cu(II). With hydrogen peroxide as oxidizing agent and a trace of Fe(II) there is considerable decomposition of peroxide, under a nitrogen atmosphere, after a few hours at 25 degrees in light (from a tungsten lamp), and less decomposition in the dark. This decomposition is decreased by Mn(II) and also when the original mixture contains Fe(III). With oxygen as the oxidizing agent Fe(II) is about 100 times as effective an inhibitor of peroxide formation as Fe(III). With all oxidizing agents used, Cu(II) is some 6-10 times more effective as a retarder than Fe(III). The inhibition is accounted for by the reaction Fe(III) [or Cu(II)] + CO(-)(2) --> Fe(II) [or Cu(I)] + CO(2).  相似文献   

17.
A study has been conducted of the mechanism and kinetics of cyclooctene epoxidation by hydrogen peroxide catalyzed by iron(III) tetrakispentafluorophenyl [F(20)TPPFe(III)] porphyrin. The formation of cyclooctene oxide, the only product, was determined by gas chromatography, and the consumption of hydrogen peroxide was determined by (1)H NMR. UV-visible spectroscopy was used to identify the state of the porphyrin as a function of solvent composition and reaction conditions and to follow the kinetics of porphyrin degradation. F(20)TPPFe(III) was found to be inactive in the chloride-ligated form, but became active when the chloride ligand was replaced by a methoxide ligand. The methoxide-ligated form of F(20)TPPFe(III) reacts with hydrogen peroxide to form an iron(III) hydroperoxide species, which then undergoes both heterolytic and homolytic cleavage to form iron(IV) pi-radical cations and iron(IV) oxo species, respectively. The iron(IV) pi-radical cations are responsible for the epoxidation of cyclooctene, whereas the iron(IV) oxo species are responsible for hydrogen peroxide decomposition. The kinetics of cyclooctene epoxidation and hydrogen peroxide decomposition developed from the proposed mechanism describe the experimentally observed kinetics accurately. The rate parameters derived from a fit of the model to the experimental data are consistent with previous estimates of the magnitude of these parameters.  相似文献   

18.
A complete characterization of the aqueous solution Fe(III) and Fe(II) coordination chemistry of a saccharide-based ferrichrome analogue, 1-O-methyl-2,3,6-tris-O-[4-(N-hydroxy-N-ethylcarbamoyl)-n-butyryl]-alpha-D-glucopyranoside (H3LN236), is reported including relevant thermodynamic parameters and growth promotion activity with respect to both Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacterial strains. The saccharide platform is an attractive backbone for the design and synthesis of ferrichrome analogues because of its improved water solubility and hydrogen-bonding capabilities, which can potentially provide favorable receptor recognition and biological activity. The ligand deprotonation constants (pKa values), iron complex (FeIII(LN236) and FeII(LN236)1-) protonation constants (KFeHxL-236-N), overall Fe(III) and Fe(II) chelation constants (beta110), and aqueous solution speciation were determined by spectrophotometric and potentiometric titrations, EDTA competition equilibria, and cyclic voltammetry. Log betaIII110 = 31.16 and pFe = 26.1 for FeIII(LN236) suggests a high affinity for Fe(III), which is comparable to or greater than ferrichrome and other ferrichrome analogues. The E1/2 for the FeIII(LN236)/FeII(LN236)1- couple was determined to be -454 mV (vs NHE) from quasi-reversible cyclic voltammograms at pH 9. Below pH 6.5, the E1/2 shifts to more positive values and the pH-dependent E1/2 profile was used to determine the FeII(LN236)1- protonation constants and overall stability constant log betaII110 = 11.1. A comparative analysis of similar data for an Fe(III) complex of a structural isomer of this exocyclic saccharide chelator (H3LR234), including strain energy calculations, allows us to analyze the relative effects of the pendant arm position and hydroxamate moiety orientation (normal vs retro) on overall complex stability. A correlation between siderophore activity and iron coordination chemistry of these saccharide-hydroxamate chelators is made.  相似文献   

19.
An oligomerization of l-phenylalanine in aqueous solution was studied in the presence of iron (III) hydroxide sols. To an aqueous solution of the iron hydroxide sols prepared from iron (III) chloride,l-phenylalanine with 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide hydrochloride was added. After stirring for 48 h at 0 °C, 3 M HCl solution was added to the reaction mixture to decompose the colloidal iron hydroxide. Oligo (l-phenylalanine) was isolated by centrifugation and washed with acidic water. The maximum yield of 15% was obtained at around pH 6.3. This value was 2.5 times higher than that obtained without the iron hydroxide sols at the same pH. Adsorption study of l-phenylalanine indicated that assemblies of l-phenylalanine onto the iron hydroxide sols were predominant factor to improve the yield of the oligomerization product. The presence of nitrate anions changes the pattern of the yield of oligo (l-phenylalanine) against pH values. The maximum yield of 20% was obtained at around pH 3. This value was four times higher than that obtained without the iron hydroxide sols at the same pH. Effect of NaCl for the oligomerization of l-phenylalanine in an aqueous solution was also studied.  相似文献   

20.
Stable electroactive iron tetra(o-aminophenyl)porphyrin (FeTAPP) films are prepared by electropolymerization from aqueous solution by cycling the electrode potential between −0.4 and 1.0 V vs Ag/AgCl at 0.1 V s−1. The cyclic voltammetric response indicates that polymerization takes place after the oxidation of amino groups, and the films could be produced on glassy carbon (GC) and gold electrodes. The film growth of poly(FeTAPP) was monitored by using cyclic voltammetry and electrochemical quartz crystal microbalance. The cyclic voltammetric features of Fe(III)/Fe(II) redox couple in the film resembles that of surface confined redox species. The electrochemical response of the modified electrode was found to be dependent on the pH of the contacting solution with a negative shift of 57 mV/pH. The electrocatalytic behavior of poly(FeTAPP) film-modified electrode was investigated towards reduction of hydrogen peroxide, molecular oxygen, and chloroacetic acids (mono-, di-, and tri-). The reduction of hydrogen peroxide, molecular oxygen, and dichloroacetic acid occurred at less negative potential on poly(FeTAPP) film compared to bare GC electrode. Particularly, the overpotential of hydrogen peroxide was reduced substantially. The O2 reduction proceeds through direct four-electron reduction mechanism.  相似文献   

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