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1 nd an auditory brainstem synapse in a female gerbil.
2 s on auditory brainstem neurons of Mongolian gerbil.
3 using neuroanatomical tracing methods in the gerbil.
4 microm) to stimulate auditory neurons of the gerbil.
5 rate in the medial geniculate nucleus of the gerbil.
6 uring vestibular adaptation in the Mongolian gerbil.
7 found in any sensory cortex except AI of the gerbil.
8 pplied chronically to one cochlea of a young gerbil.
9 l injury after 5 min of cerebral ischemia in gerbil.
10 r uvula/nodulus and flocculus lobules in the gerbil.
11 d by cerebral ischemia/reperfusion injury in gerbils.
12 s also found in H. pylori-infected Mongolian gerbils.
13 mation than the isogenic wild-type strain in gerbils.
14 y, cochleae were freshly isolated from young gerbils.
15 ith NO synthase (NOS) in recently mated male gerbils.
16 ot altered in auditory nerve fibers of aging gerbils.
17 resentation of ITDs in adult male and female gerbils.
18 in the cultured organ of Corti from neonatal gerbils.
19 vitro and reduced the incidence of cancer in gerbils.
20  been well documented in rats, hamsters, and gerbils.
21 ns from synaptosomes isolated from Mongolian gerbils.
22 ers in 32% and hyperplastic polyps in 68% of gerbils.
23 em slices from postnatal day 14 (P14) to P38 gerbils.
24 diated gastric cancer incidence in Mongolian gerbils.
25  membrane phosphatide synthesis in brains of gerbils.
26 n a model of ischemic tolerance in Mongolian Gerbils.
27 ling cascades in the hippocampal CA1 of male gerbils.
28 (MeApd) express Fos with ejaculation in male gerbils.
29 media infection via transbullar injection of gerbils.
30 II mRNA in vulnerable hippocampal regions of gerbils.
31 lceration and atrophy occurred only in B128+ gerbils.
32 al neurons of the MSO of anesthetized female gerbils.
33 n the ventral cochlear nucleus of developing gerbils.
34 cipal neurons in brain slices from Mongolian gerbils.
35  rapidly induces gastric cancer in Mongolian gerbils.
36  divided between young, middle-aged, and old gerbils.
37 r, spontaneous rates were decreased in aging gerbils.
38 epithelial (hyper)proliferation in Mongolian gerbils.
39 heir impact on sensory processing in vivo in gerbils.
40 gle-unit auditory nerve fibers of quiet-aged gerbils.
41 cts sound perception in developing and adult gerbils.
42 the auditory brainstem of juvenile Mongolian gerbils.
43 lus (IC) and primary auditory cortex (A1) of gerbils.
44  and the calyx of Held in juvenile Mongolian gerbils.
45 ce density (CSD) analysis in AI of Mongolian gerbils.
46 the responses of pregnant versus nonpregnant gerbils.
47                                 In Mongolian gerbils, a prototype colonizing strain from the high-ris
48                                        Naive gerbils acquired the task significantly faster in either
49                                     In adult gerbils, "active" BM responses at this site are most sen
50 eurogenesis in the behavioral performance of gerbils after cerebral global ischemia.
51                      However, for CHL-reared gerbils, all three forms of masking release were reduced
52 enge and successful colonization of mice and gerbils allows tracking of H. pylori phenotype variabili
53           We report here that MSO neurons in gerbil also have resonant properties and, based on our w
54             The V(BM) simulation results for gerbil and chinchilla are consistent with in vivo cochle
55 tinylated dextran amine into the CNIC of the gerbil and demonstrated that it can be divided into two
56 n site-directed mutagenesis revealed that in gerbil and human AT(1) receptors, the amino acid most im
57                                      In both gerbil and human AT(1) receptors, the effect of G107S an
58 ned with mutations G107S and I108V, for both gerbil and human AT(1) receptors.
59 species with dissimilar timing requirements (gerbil and mouse): In gerbils (like humans), neuronal pr
60 ulated and recorded neurons, and between the gerbil and mustached bat.
61 ordings of binaural neurons in the Mongolian gerbil and pharmacological manipulations to directly com
62 SNPs (ENm010.7p15:2 data from HapMap) versus GERBIL and PHASE requiring more than a week and admittin
63 P is several orders of magnitude faster than GERBIL and PHASE while matching them in quality measured
64 the determination of antagonist affinity for gerbil and, most importantly, for human angiotensin II A
65 stric carcinoma in infected INS-GAS mice and gerbils and attenuated isoLG adducts, DNA damage, and so
66              Other species such as hamsters, gerbils and Egyptian spiny mice also burrow in this appa
67 ical data of proximal MSO axons in Mongolian gerbils and found that the axon diameter is <1 mum and t
68 uantitatively similar to those seen in aging gerbils and humans, e.g., a flat threshold loss at low f
69  apoptosis accounted for 42%-69% of cells in gerbils and insulin-gastrin mice with dysplasia and carc
70 odulation (FM) detection thresholds in adult gerbils and investigated whether diminished auditory exp
71                                           In gerbils and mice, DNA damage was CagA-dependent and pres
72                                  Analysis of gerbils and rats yielded results similar to those obtain
73                                           In gerbils and rats, inhibition to the LSO reportedly shift
74                 Thus, the specializations in gerbils and their absence in mice suggest an optimizatio
75 sorineural hearing loss (SNHL) in developing gerbils and then reared the animals for several days.
76   Until recently, only two models, Mongolian gerbils and Tyrp1(B-lt) mice, were known to undergo age-
77 bular hair cells in mature rodents (mice and gerbils) and bats.
78 en and owl), and mammals (mouse, guinea pig, gerbil, and bat), and the connexin composition of GJs in
79 ng vertebrates including alligator, chicken, gerbil, and human.
80 d features between human strial presbycusis, gerbils, and BALB/cJ and C57BL/6-Tyr(c-2J) mice further
81 lori-infected gastritis tissues from humans, gerbils, and both wild-type and hypergastrinemic insulin
82  during postnatal development in rats, mice, gerbils, and ferrets.
83 peech in the primary auditory cortex (A1) of gerbils, and found that responses were qualitatively dif
84 derate or severe hearing loss was induced in gerbils, and iSTP was characterized by measuring inhibit
85  is critical for H. pylori to colonize mice, gerbils, and other animal models.
86 thers have previously reported that in mice, gerbils, and rhesus macaques, expression of babA is lost
87                                              Gerbil angiotensin II AT(1) receptors have more than 90%
88 llbirths were seen in gerbils indicates that gerbils are not more sensitive to L. monocytogenes invas
89 insulin-gastrin (INS-GAS) mice and Mongolian gerbils as models of H pylori-induced carcinogenesis and
90 re activated at ejaculation in male rats and gerbils as seen with Fos immunocytochemistry.
91 ron responses in well trained, freely moving gerbils as they performed a tone detection task.
92 tivity from a subset of adolescent and adult gerbils as they underwent perceptual training.
93 responses to tones were measured in neonatal gerbils at a site near the round window of the cochlea.
94  (SNHL) was induced surgically in developing gerbils at postnatal day 10, and excitatory synaptic pla
95  the dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) in Mongolian gerbils at selected times during a 12:12 h light:dark cy
96      To evaluate these alternatives in awake gerbil auditory cortex, we measured neural detection of
97 different from postmortem responses in adult gerbils: BF was more than an octave lower, the steep slo
98 emetrically from the core auditory cortex of gerbils, both while they engaged in an amplitude-modulat
99 esults indicate that a local LPS infusion in gerbil brain may be a useful model in which to investiga
100 P-choline, the immediate precursor of PC, in gerbil brain.
101 in a framework formed by an MRI atlas of the gerbil brain.
102 e phosphatide and synaptic protein levels in gerbil brains.
103 atic and dendritic patch-clamp recordings in gerbil brainstem slices together with compartmental mode
104 amp recordings from MSO principal neurons in gerbil brainstem slices, we examined interactions betwee
105  sodium currents in MSO principal neurons in gerbil brainstem slices.
106 amp recordings from MSO principal neurons in gerbil brainstem slices.
107  in a number of species, including Mongolian gerbils, but functional correlates of this optic pathway
108                    (Pyrimidine metabolism in gerbils, but not rats, resembles that in humans.) Animal
109 rganotypic cultures from postnatal day (P) 6 gerbils, but this regenerative capacity is lost by P12.
110      Global cerebral ischemia was induced in gerbils by a 5-min occlusion of bilateral common carotid
111 ient global cerebral ischemia was induced in gerbils by occlusion of both common carotid arteries for
112          We report the identification of the gerbil C5aR cDNA using a degenerate primer PCR cloning s
113                             Alignment of the gerbil C5aR sequence with those from other species showe
114 periments to determine the acuity with which gerbils can use ITDs to localize sounds.
115 ory deprivation in male and female Mongolian gerbils caused correlated deficits in behavioral and cor
116 ional cochlear fluid model was developed for gerbil, chinchilla, cat, and human, featuring an active
117 ole in the formation of lymphatic lesions in gerbils chronically infected with B. pahangi.
118 ent fibers at a constant location within the gerbil cochlea by using the fluorescent carbocyanine dye
119 ed voltage-evoked hair-bundle motions in the gerbil cochlea to determine if such movements were also
120  measured in the basal turn of the sensitive gerbil cochlea using a scanning laser interferometer.
121 ed from 4 to 20 kHz in the basal turn of the gerbil cochlea, where the best frequency is approximatel
122 oked motility in the 13-25 kHz region of the gerbil cochlea.
123 udinal locations in the first turn in living gerbil cochleae using a laser interferometer.
124 . pylori-infected gerbils than in uninfected gerbils, consistent with IDA.
125 he lowest hemoglobin levels were in infected gerbils consuming a high-salt/low-iron diet.
126 ic ulcers significantly more frequently than gerbils consuming a normal-salt diet, and the lowest hem
127                                     Infected gerbils consuming diets with a high salt content develop
128  (a manipulation previously found to disrupt gerbil cortical properties), or from P23-P35.
129 f the hippocampus, suggesting that Mongolian gerbils currently available in the US have anomalous con
130                                 All infected gerbils developed gastritis; however, inflammation was s
131                                              Gerbils did not develop carcinoma when infected with a D
132 imulation can affect c-Fos expression in the gerbil DRN, quantitative analysis of c-Fos-immunoreactiv
133 CM in the auditory cortex of adult Mongolian gerbils during specific phases of cortex-dependent audit
134     We show that in MSO principal neurons of gerbils during the first week of hearing, a hyperpolariz
135           These strains were inoculated into gerbils either alone or in combination with the wild-typ
136                                    Mongolian gerbils (either H. pylori infected or uninfected) receiv
137 ed H. pylori strains isolated from Mongolian gerbils fed either a high-salt diet or a regular diet fo
138 MO1 activity was significantly higher in the gerbils fed without Bc or VitA than those fed with a Vit
139 orange-fleshed sweet potato, using Mongolian gerbils, focussing on BCMO1 activity.
140 ed binocular horizontal eye movements in the gerbil following unilateral labyrinthectomy during the a
141 em penetration and pharmacological activity (gerbil foot tap test) in the case of the highest affinit
142                        We examined Mongolian gerbils for up to 52 weeks after H. pylori (ATCC 43504)
143               A brief ischemic injury to the gerbil forebrain that caused selective damage in the CA1
144 ommunicating arteries were present in 90% of gerbils from each vendor, ranging from 19 microm to 125
145                       We subjected Mongolian gerbils from Harlan Sprague-Dawley and Charles River Lab
146  from both human and experimentally infected gerbil gastric tissue specimens.
147 ert in the Middle East, the greater Egyptian gerbil Gerbillus pyramidum and the Saharan horned viper
148 inst ischaemia-induced hippocampal damage in gerbil global cerebral ischaemia when dosed at 10, 12.5
149 n three models of cerebral ischaemia (global gerbil, global rat and focal rat).
150                  In comparison to uninfected gerbils, H. pylori-infected gerbils had a higher gastric
151 on to uninfected gerbils, H. pylori-infected gerbils had a higher gastric pH, a higher incidence of g
152                                         Nine gerbils had one to five injections, 10 had six to 10, an
153 ls (independent of diet), H. pylori-infected gerbils had significantly lower hemoglobin values than t
154 red with whole-cell recordings from immature gerbil hair cells using near-physiological conditions.
155 s, we formulate a well-posed problem for the gerbil hemicochlea preparation by introducing an in-plan
156 d IHC transducer currents and BM motion in a gerbil hemicochlea to examine relationships between thes
157 ases the number of dendritic spines in adult gerbil hippocampus, particularly when animals are co-sup
158 19 was inoculated into the Brugia-permissive gerbil host to induce gamma interferon (IFN-gamma) produ
159 ule C5aR antagonist-responsive species (i.e. gerbil, human, and non-human primate).
160                Descending connections to the gerbil IC form a segregated system in which multiple des
161                                Low-frequency gerbil IHCs (~0.3 kHz) have significantly more depolariz
162                      I(Ca) was recorded from gerbil IHCs maintained near physiological recording cond
163 estigated Ca(2)(+) channel activity in adult gerbil IHCs.
164   Of the six models evaluated, nude rats and gerbils immunosuppressed with dexamethasone excreted the
165 the sizes of renal lymph nodes isolated from gerbils in each treatment group.
166  hilar interneurons labeled with biocytin in gerbils in vivo.
167 than those at which stillbirths were seen in gerbils indicates that gerbils are not more sensitive to
168 hrombocytosis were also detected in infected gerbils, indicating the presence of a systemic inflammat
169 ipopolysaccharide (LPS) into the striatum of gerbils induced lectin-positive macrophage parenchymal i
170 ic dysplasia and cancer developed in >50% of gerbils infected with either the wild-type or vacA(-) st
171 creased in gastric epithelium harvested from gerbils infected with the H. pylori carcinogenic strain
172 ng properties of single neurons in the awake gerbil inferior colliculus (IC) and compared them with p
173 terize the population code for speech in the gerbil inferior colliculus (IC), the hub of the auditory
174        The PdPN-DMH projection is minimal in gerbils, involving few, if any, ejaculation-related cell
175 d T2* changes in the heart and liver using a gerbil iron-overload model.
176 al carotid artery occlusion in the Mongolian gerbil is a widely used model of forebrain ischemia due
177 f the bulbocavernosus (SNB) of the Mongolian gerbil is achieved by two periods of postnatal increase,
178                                              Gerbil is one rodent species reportedly responsive to sm
179 l bushy cell (SBC) activity in the Mongolian gerbil is rendered sparser and more reliable by subtract
180 rea, caudal BST, and medial amygdala of male gerbils is also described.
181 st that the neural representation of ITDs in gerbils is transformed from IC to A1 and have important
182 s commonly studied in auditory research, the gerbil, is used to demonstrate that altering the viscoel
183 iffered in human isolates (mutations) versus gerbil isolates (addition/deletion of motifs).
184                                       In the gerbil, Leb binding was lost by replacement of the babA
185                                       In the gerbil, less important amino acids are located in positi
186                 Following global ischemia in gerbils, levels of caspase-3 enzyme activity peaked at 1
187 r timing requirements (gerbil and mouse): In gerbils (like humans), neuronal processing of sound sour
188 ata on the main rodent host reservoir (great gerbil), main vector (flea), human cases, and external (
189  rats and suggest that social interaction in gerbils may also be used to screen for anxiolytic action
190 nals in a noisy background, we recorded from gerbil medial superior olivary (MSO) neurons in vitro.
191 ons of recent physiological results from the gerbil medial superior olive (MSO) that reveal that bloc
192 tissue migration of Brugia pahangi L3 in the gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus) and measure host cellular
193               Here we report that neurons in gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus) substantia nigra pars ret
194 ortical auditory structures of the Mongolian gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus), a frequently used animal
195                             In the Mongolian gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus), a valuable model species
196 coustic responses of MNTB neurons from adult gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus) of either sex.
197 d mole rats compared to mice (Mus musculus), gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus), and Damaraland mole rat
198 an amine, in different parts of the IC in 74 gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus).
199  asialylated siaB mutant was attenuated in a gerbil middle ear infection model system, as well as in
200                            We found that the gerbil mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is not maintained in re
201 l of hypoxia-hypoglycaemia in vitro and in a gerbil model of global and in two rat models of focal ce
202 actor (G-CSF) and underlying mechanisms in a gerbil model of global cerebral ischemia.
203 uction of its neuroprotective effects in the gerbil model of global ischemia.
204 nduced by a Deltafur strain in the Mongolian gerbil model of infection and compared the results to re
205 lzine provided robust neuroprotection in the gerbil model of transient forebrain ischemia, with drug
206                            Here, a Mongolian gerbil model was used to investigate a potential role of
207 on of H. pylori in both murine and Mongolian gerbil models of infection.
208           In addition, using recordings from gerbil, mouse, and bullfrog auditory organs, we find tha
209                             Here, we show in gerbil MSO principal cells in vitro that feedforward inh
210 e gastritis, proliferation, and apoptosis in gerbil mucosa than did duodenal ulcer strain G1.1, and g
211                                              Gerbils (n=50) depleted in VitA were divided into five g
212                                 The study of gerbil natural mutants allowed us to advance our underst
213 ckers ('photoswitches') in binaural auditory gerbil neurons to show that hyperpolarization and cyclic
214 pared with the levels in B. pahangi-infected gerbils not treated with tetracycline.
215 antifications of the afferent innervation in gerbils of both sexes with computational modeling of a s
216 nd calcium entry in MSO neurons of Mongolian gerbils of either sex raised in a normal and in an activ
217 r recordings were obtained from 41 Mongolian gerbils of either sex, divided between young, middle-age
218 au(1) = 8.5 s) similar to that of the native gerbil OHC.
219 btained the charge density of prestin in the gerbil OHCs by measuring their nonlinear capacitance (NL
220 velopmental conductive hearing loss (CHL) in gerbils on MMR characteristics, as a test for putative C
221  pylori strains harvested from iron-depleted gerbils or grown under iron-limiting conditions exhibite
222 e invasion and adverse pregnancy outcomes in gerbils orally exposed to L. monocytogenes, to compare t
223 cally evoked OHC somatic motility within the gerbil organ of Corti using an excised cochlear preparat
224 s in the gastric mucosa of H pylori-infected gerbils over the course of the infection.
225                                    In vitro, gerbil-passaged B128 derivatives significantly increased
226 ophages in the neurodegenerative response in gerbils, peripheral macrophages were depleted by an intr
227  The mechanics of hearing in rodents such as gerbil pose a challenge to our understanding of the coch
228 ermediate response to membrane thickness and gerbil prestin was the least sensitive.
229  in human pendrin with residues 156-169 from gerbil prestin.
230 al inhibitory synaptic transmission as adult gerbils progressed through the process of associative le
231     We found that utricular afferents in the gerbil projected to all divisions of the vestibular nucl
232 ently transfected with the gene encoding the gerbil protein prestin.
233                                              Gerbils reared with transient hearing loss displayed bot
234  conductive hearing loss (CHL) in developing gerbils, reared the animals for 8-13 d, and subsequently
235                              Male and female gerbils received bilateral earplugs to induce a mild, re
236                  In the present study, adult gerbils received UMP (1 mmol/kg), a constituent of human
237 e of the SNB in prepubertally castrated male gerbils receiving delayed hormone replacement as adults.
238                             In the Mongolian gerbil, retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) with alpha-like mo
239 evious results about the organization of the gerbil's subcortical auditory pathway using other anatom
240 the laminar and cellular organization of the gerbil's subcortical auditory structures, in particular
241  potential due to strial dysfunction in aged gerbils.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT As our society ages, age-
242 th the injected mitochondria, we used either gerbil single-cell embryos or rat oocytes to package inj
243                                          The gerbil social interaction test has previously detected a
244  substantial decrease in inflammation in the gerbil stomach compared to that with the wild type.
245 isease in the human stomach and in mouse and gerbil stomach models.
246  chemotaxis, led to less inflammation in the gerbil stomach than did the wild type.
247 ve in acid and also to colonize the mouse or gerbil stomach.
248 he cheY mutant completely failed to colonize gerbil stomachs, the tlpB mutant colonized at levels sim
249                                              Gerbils subjected to both irradiation and ischemia demon
250 r and cardiac iron calibration curves in the gerbil suggests that extrapolation of human liver calibr
251 re significantly lower in H. pylori-infected gerbils than in uninfected gerbils, consistent with IDA.
252 sound detection task is slower in adolescent gerbils than in younger or older animals.
253 sent exclusively in fast conducting axons of gerbils that also exhibited unusual structural adaptatio
254 tanding of the cochlea, however, because for gerbil the two layers separate to form a pronounced arch
255   However, if acid secretion is inhibited in gerbils, the deletion mutants do colonize but are eradic
256                                     In older gerbils, the rapid speed of membrane voltage changes and
257  for efficient colonization of the Mongolian gerbil: the mutant strain exhibits a 100-fold increase i
258 n cognitive behaviors of giving normal adult gerbils three compounds, normally in the circulation, wh
259 ellular recordings in anesthetized Mongolian gerbils to assess the effect of acoustically evoked inhi
260                         The ability of naive gerbils to learn a sound discrimination task following 5
261                                   We trained gerbils to perform an auditory discrimination task and o
262 the activity of auditory cortical neurons as gerbils trained on a sound detection task.
263 ries as a function of age as male and female gerbils trained on an auditory task.
264  that H. pylori output strains isolated from gerbils treated with DFMO exhibit reduced ability to tra
265 r findings were noted in B. pahangi-infected gerbils treated with ivermectin, suggesting that the los
266                                          The gerbils treated with tetracycline showed reduced levels
267                                  Twenty-four gerbils underwent either a sham operation (n=6) or 15 mi
268                                       Twelve gerbils underwent iron dextran loading (200 mg . kg(-1)
269  1) to define the central projections of the gerbil utricular afferents by injecting horseradish pero
270 jor afferent and efferent connections of the gerbil VNLL.
271                                The Mongolian gerbil was recently proposed as the most appropriate sma
272  days of exposure adjacent to a demonstrator gerbil was tested in the presence or absence of visual c
273 nd detailed signal analysis in the Mongolian Gerbil, we demonstrate that inhibition is widely co-tune
274                       In AI of the Mongolian gerbil, we found that focal electrical stimulation evoke
275 rom postnatal day 7 to 24 (P7-P24) Mongolian gerbils, we confirm that activation of GABAB receptors r
276                    In comparison to mice and gerbils, we observed alterations in afferent and efferen
277                 Using recordings from mature gerbils, we report here a surprisingly strong block of e
278                                    Mongolian gerbils were challenged with H pylori and their gastric
279                                        Adult gerbils were exposed for 2 weeks to moderate noise with
280                     In this study, Mongolian gerbils were infected with H. pylori and necropsied cont
281                                    Mongolian gerbils were infected with wild-type strain 7.13 or cagA
282                  Six-week-old male Mongolian gerbils were inoculated orally with H pylori TN2GF4 or i
283                                              Gerbils were intradermally inoculated in the hind limb w
284               The detection thresholds of NH gerbils were lower in modulated noise, when compared wit
285 rulence in gastric carcinogenesis, Mongolian gerbils were maintained on iron-depleted diets and infec
286                                              Gerbils were orally exposed to 0 (control), 10(3), 10(5)
287  after birth (DAB), BM responses in neonatal gerbils were passive but otherwise very different from p
288                                              Gerbils were then infected with B. pahangi, and the effe
289                                     Juvenile gerbils were trained to detect amplitude modulation (AM)
290                                              Gerbils were treated with yokukasan by oral gavage for 3
291 ocampal damage following global ischaemia in gerbils when administered before or immediately post-occ
292 uditory cortical field (AI) in the Mongolian gerbil with subcortical structures of the auditory syste
293 tation of speech in the auditory midbrain of gerbils with "hidden hearing loss" through noise exposur
294 s of a high-salt diet, we infected Mongolian gerbils with a wild-type (WT) cagA(+) H. pylori strain o
295                       Infection of Mongolian gerbils with an H. pylori pgdA(-) mutant strain led to s
296                                 Treatment of gerbils with either alpha-difluoromethylornithine, an in
297               Serial infections of Mongolian gerbils with H. pylori strain 7.13 identified an oscilla
298 mma mRNA levels were significantly higher in gerbils with ulcers than in those with hyperplastic poly
299 tely 60 mV, a value often seen in quiet-aged gerbils, with no concomitant loss of hair cells.
300 NB of prepubertally castrated male Mongolian gerbils within 2 days of the start of delayed TP treatme

 
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