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1 orm appetitive memory, even in flies lacking octopamine.
2 ear to mediate the wake-promoting effects of octopamine.
3 hort-term appetitive memory is reinforced by octopamine.
4  the beta-hydroxylation of tyramine to yield octopamine.
5 t dopamine is a stronger arousal signal than octopamine.
6 e neurons respond to in vitro application of octopamine.
7 ype levels by pharmacological treatment with octopamine.
8 esicular storage of dopamine, serotonin, and octopamine.
9 insensitive to the wake-promoting effects of octopamine.
10 other that detects another neurotransmitter, octopamine.
11 ne beta-hydroxylase to convert tyramine into octopamine.
12 0.5-1.5 microm), a subset of which contained octopamine.
13 ramine, beta-phenethylamine, tryptamine, and octopamine.
14 luminescence induced by the neurotransmitter octopamine.
15 ents, and from more nerves per segment, than octopamine.
16 ositive OC interneurons and its followers is octopamine.
17 o increase body temperature by administering octopamine.
18 mone that incorporates the neurotransmitter, octopamine.
19 ne, GABA, glutamate, serotonin, dopamine and octopamine.
20 e neurotransmitters dopamine, serotonin, and octopamine.
21 e effects are mimicked by the neuromodulator octopamine.
22 d from succinylation of the neurotransmitter octopamine.
23 ities as the less commonly reported feruloyl octopamine (1.2-5.2), 5-O-feruloyl quinic acid (0.1-7.5)
24                      N-(11)C-guanyl-(-)-meta-octopamine ((11)C-GMO) has a much slower NET transport r
25  than reported in previous studies regarding octopamine (4.5 %) and glutamate release (31 %).
26                          Bath application of octopamine, 5-HT, and dopamine at concentrations of 10(-
27 ocal axon modulation with the biogenic amine octopamine, abolished signal integration at the primary
28                We conclude that tyramine and octopamine act as neurotransmitters/modulators in distin
29 rate biogenic amines structurally related to octopamine acted as superagonists at the DmOctR but part
30 s define the cellular and molecular basis of octopamine action and suggest that the PI is a sleep:wak
31                        Similarly, peripheral octopamine action on motoneurons has been reported to be
32                         Here, we report that octopamine activity through the beta-adrenergic-like rec
33                                              Octopamine acts rapidly upon the onset of flight to modu
34                                              Octopamine also affects metabolism in invertebrate speci
35 f Neuron, Watanabe et al. (2017) uncover how octopamine, an invertebrate norepinephrine analog, modul
36                                              Octopamine and 5-hydroxytryptamine are not active (< 100
37 a mutation in dTdc2 lack neural tyramine and octopamine and are female sterile due to egg retention.
38 ition, they reconcile previous findings with octopamine and dopamine and suggest that reinforcement s
39 This study identifies the cognate actions of octopamine and dopamine signaling as a key neural mechan
40 ulatory circuits, especially those involving octopamine and dopamine.
41 changes in synaptic structure in response to octopamine and for starvation-induced increase in locomo
42                                              Octopamine and glutamate treatments increased the likeli
43  are wake-promoting and respond to dopamine, octopamine and light.
44 on of particular concentrations of the drugs octopamine and nicotine, but due to high environmental v
45 , Drosophila melanogaster, and Danio rerio - octopamine and norepinephrine play an essential role in
46 ing conditions also influenced antennal lobe octopamine and serotonin, neuromodulators involved in st
47 nd held at a potential sufficient to oxidize octopamine and the terminal stimulated by blue light.
48 dc expression contribute to a model in which octopamine and tyramine have distinct and separable neur
49                      The two biogenic amines octopamine and tyramine have recently been shown to modu
50             Given various potential roles of octopamine and tyramine in the larval brain, such as loc
51              By using mutants having altered octopamine and tyramine levels and by genetic interferen
52                                   Therefore, octopamine and tyramine provide global but distinctly di
53 ng crowding and isolation, the activities of octopamine and tyramine signalings were respectively cor
54 Tbetah(nM18) mutants, with altered levels of octopamine and tyramine, have a locomotion deficit.
55 s well as an increase in cAMP in response to octopamine, and genetic manipulation of their electrical
56 ransport activity; norepinephrine, tyramine, octopamine, and histamine also have high affinity for th
57  invertebrate counterpart of norepinephrine, octopamine, and its biological precursor and functional
58 mechanism involving the VEGF2-like receptor, octopamine, and its receptor.
59  we have defined the roles of tyramine (TA), octopamine, and neuropeptides in the inhibition of avers
60 lso have lower levels of hemolymph dopamine, octopamine, and serotonin.
61 selective alpha-adrenergic receptor agonist, octopamine, and the specific alpha(1) agonist, phenyleph
62                                              Octopamine- and tyramine immunostaining in the central c
63 ing machinery, provides direct evidence that octopamine- and tyramine-based neuromodulation can be me
64 ned the patterns seen with the tyramine- and octopamine antisera.
65                                 In contrast, octopamine appears to inhibit 5-HT stimulation by activa
66 sed cAMP and intracellular Ca2+ levels after octopamine application.
67 tants unable to synthesize the catecholamine octopamine are also impaired in their ability to develop
68 mine, beta-phenylethylamine, tryptamine, and octopamine are biogenic amines present in trace levels i
69 e neurotransmitters serotonin, dopamine, and octopamine are converted to a large extent into the corr
70 nattractive flowers, however, is mediated by octopamine-associated modulation of antennal-lobe neuron
71     Facilitation is mimicked by bath applied octopamine at 5 microM.
72 nism, activation of Octss2R autoreceptors by octopamine at octopaminergic neurons initiated a cAMP-de
73                         In-depth analysis of octopamine auditory function shows that it affects the m
74 re, we report the presence of an alternative octopamine autoreceptor, Octss1R, with antagonistic func
75 e-feedback mechanism that required Octbeta2R octopamine autoreceptors.
76 ein 90, and SBV-infected bees expressed more octopamine beta-2 receptor (Obeta-2R).
77 n intact neuronal circuit, with dopamine and octopamine bidirectionally influencing the generation of
78                                              Octopamine binds to receptors located on various cell ty
79                             Mutations in the octopamine biosynthesis pathway produced a phenotype of
80                                              Octopamine biosynthesis requires tyrosine decarboxylase
81 e absence of TBH protein and blockage of the octopamine biosynthesis.
82 , the enzyme that catalyzes the last step in octopamine biosynthesis.
83 ult locomotion and startle behavior required octopamine, but a complementary role was observed for se
84 y produced tyramine is probably converted to octopamine by the host tyramine beta-hydroxylase enzyme.
85          Additionally, the tyrosine analogue octopamine can replace topoisomerase I derived peptides
86 that mimic those observed during flight, and octopamine cells that project to the optic lobes increas
87             We have examined the role of the octopamine-containing buccal OC interneuron in the ficti
88 rties of synaptic connections from the three octopamine-containing OC interneurons to identified bucc
89  defect in egg laying is associated with the octopamine deficit, because females that have retained e
90  couple of brain neurons modulate a specific octopamine-dependent behavior to adapt female physiology
91 an and that these cells do not control other octopamine-dependent behaviors such as female receptivit
92 rivation was accompanied by an activity- and octopamine-dependent extension of octopaminergic arbors
93                                    Moreover, octopamine-dependent memory formation requires signallin
94 energic-like OCTbeta2R receptor reveals that octopamine-dependent reinforcement also requires an inte
95        Investigating the biogenesis of these octopamine-derived ascarosides, we found that succinylat
96                           The biogenic amine octopamine did not elicit pheromone production in isolat
97 igate the effect of several neuromodulators (octopamine, dopamine, acetylcholine, serotonin and proct
98 ransmitter release by biogenic amines, e.g., octopamine, dopamine, or serotonin.
99                          They also block the octopamine-evoked inhibition of B3, N2 and N3 neurons.
100                                              Octopamine-evoked neuropeptide release also requires end
101               Pharmacological application of octopamine evokes responses in quiescent flies that mimi
102                                              Octopamine exposure mimics flight effects in one, wherea
103      In the locust, these neurons synthesize octopamine from tyramine stress-dependently.
104 rd-based and punishment-based learning while octopamine function is important only for reward.
105                           OCTR-1, a putative octopamine G protein-coupled catecholamine receptor (GPC
106                                Additionally, octopamine had direct effects on the STG, including the
107  insects, such as honeybees and fruit flies, octopamine has been shown to be a major stimulator of ad
108                                     Instead, octopamine has historically been considered to be the si
109 hed in seven steps in 10% overall yield from octopamine hydrochloride (17), N-(Boc)glycine (16), and
110 mine, in contrast, was strikingly similar to octopamine immunolabeling.
111 idence that the neurotransmitter between the octopamine-immunopositive OC interneurons and its follow
112 meres except in abdominal ganglion 5) and 48 octopamine-immunoreactive cell bodies (in brain and thor
113                 The pattern of appearance of octopamine-immunoreactive cells is cell type-specific.
114 ods to examine the sequence of appearance of octopamine-immunoreactive neurons during development, an
115 ells appear at about the same time the first octopamine-immunoreactive neurons show staining.
116 ntennal lobes are supplied by at least three octopamine-immunoreactive neurons.
117  discussed with respect to recent studies on octopamine-immunoreactive organization in honey bees and
118                                              Octopamine-immunoreactive processes from one or more cel
119                                 In both taxa octopamine-immunoreactive processes invade only the gamm
120 markably similar to the previously described octopamine immunoreactivity in Drosophila.
121 onfocal immunocytochemistry revealed intense octopamine immunoreactivity in the anterior lateral asso
122                                 In contrast, octopamine immunostaining was present in two bilateral p
123 TBH), the enzyme that converts tyramine into octopamine in aminergic neurons, is increased by food de
124 athy, we uncovered an unprecedented role for octopamine in driving the conversion from toxic to neuro
125 that underlies the wake-promoting effects of octopamine in Drosophila.
126               The role of the biogenic amine octopamine in modulating cholinergic synaptic transmissi
127 tion center, thus confirming the presence of octopamine in neuropil regions containing fSR/BA1 synaps
128 s knowledge gap, we investigated the role of octopamine in olfactory conditioning.
129 e roles of the biogenic amines serotonin and octopamine in regulating locomotion behaviors associated
130  discussed with respect to possible roles of octopamine in sensory integration and association.
131 s and cockroaches and the suggested roles of octopamine in sensory processing, learning, and memory.
132 ut little is known about the distribution of octopamine in the brain.
133 its thus contributing to the many actions of octopamine in the central nervous system.
134 were able to induce hypothermia by depleting octopamine in the flight muscles.
135   It is suggested that these neurons release octopamine in the ventral nerve cord ganglia and, most l
136 g for TBH, the enzyme converting tyramine to octopamine, in contrast, was strikingly similar to octop
137 lyzes the synthesis of the neurotransmitter, octopamine, in insects.
138                                              Octopamine, in turn, targets the OCTR-1 octopamine recep
139                                              Octopamine increases the cycle frequency of the pyloric
140   When applied only to the stn-son junction, octopamine induced action potentials in the axons of the
141  (10(-6) M) had no significant effect on the octopamine-induced decrease in ACh responses.
142 uced by postsynaptic receptor block mirrored octopamine-induced Unc13 recruitment and required presyn
143 out the identity of the neurons that receive octopamine input and how they mediate octopamine-regulat
144                                              Octopamine is a major monoamine in invertebrates and aff
145                                              Octopamine is a neuroactive monoamine that functions as
146                                              Octopamine is a neuromodulator that mediates diverse phy
147   Although we showed that the neuromodulator octopamine is implicated, the identity of the involved n
148 he first evidence that endogenous release of octopamine is involved in state-dependent modulation of
149                                              Octopamine is likely to be an important neuroactive mole
150 ate protein source in mated females and that octopamine is specifically required to mediate homeostat
151 ramine are the preferred substrates, whereas octopamine is transported less efficiently, and serotoni
152 re we show that a Drosophila biogenic amine, octopamine, is a potent wake-promoting signal.
153 ve behavioral imaging, we show that 5-HT and octopamine jointly influence locomotor activity and quie
154  systemic injection with the receptor ligand octopamine leads to increased cAMP levels in this specif
155 eptor whose activation by its natural ligand octopamine leads to rapid and transient increases in cAM
156                      T beta h-null flies are octopamine-less but survive to adulthood.
157 ensitivity to CO(2) in flight via changes in octopamine levels, along with Ir64a, quickly switches th
158 in as well as many midline perikarya provide octopamine-like immunoreactive processes to circumscribe
159 e brain as well as midline perikarya provide octopamine-like immunoreactive processes to the optic lo
160 clonal antibody to study the distribution of octopamine-like immunoreactivity in the brain of the haw
161  of octopamine, the receptor responsible for octopamine-mediated modulation could not be characterize
162 od deprivation increases locomotor speed via octopamine-mediated structural plasticity of neuromuscul
163                   These results suggest that octopamine mediates consolidation of a component of olfa
164                                 Dopamine and octopamine modulated intracellular cAMP in spatially dis
165 y be an important circuit mechanism by which octopamine modulates behavior.
166 uding L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine, N-acetyl octopamine, N-acetyldopamine, naTA, N-acetylserotonin, O
167                         We further show that octopamine neurons are required for sustained behavioral
168 toinhibition is seen in spontaneously active octopamine neurons but is absent from spontaneously acti
169                   Furthermore, we found that octopamine neurons contact Crz neurons in the subesophag
170                                    The first octopamine neurons express their transmitter phenotype a
171                  We investigated the role of octopamine neurons in the flight-dependent modulation ob
172 ng flight, and blocking synaptic output from octopamine neurons inverts the valence assigned to CO(2)
173                                 In addition, octopamine neurons regulated the expansion of excitatory
174 ll five octopamine receptors express in Tdc2/octopamine neurons to varying degrees.
175  genetic tools to manipulate the activity of octopamine neurons, we find that they are both necessary
176 ity seems plausible: the three pairs of claw octopamine neurosecretory cells show immunostaining as a
177                Use of immunostaining for the octopamine neurotransmitter synthesis enzyme Tdc2, along
178              There is ample evidence linking octopamine (OA) and tyramine (TA) to several neurophysio
179 t that the biogenic amines tyramine (TA) and octopamine (OA) in Drosophila melanogaster females play
180   Here, we show a role of the neuromodulator octopamine (OA) in the female postmating response.
181 In Caenorhabditis elegans, tyramine (TA) and octopamine (OA) inhibit aversive responses to 100%, but
182  with a reduction in dMBD-R2 specifically in octopamine (OA) neurons exhibit courtship toward diverge
183 pathway requiring an alpha2A-adrenergic-like octopamine (OA) receptor, OCTR-1, and a 5-HT1A-like sero
184                           Ovulation requires octopamine (OA) signaling from the central nervous syste
185                                              Octopamine (OA), a biogenic amine similar to norepinephr
186 rtex of follicle cells upon stimulation with octopamine (OA), a monoamine critical for Drosophila ovu
187 r biogenic amines, such as dopamine (DA) and octopamine (OA), have yet to be completed.
188 the response of tubules to the related amine octopamine (OA), indicating that OA can activate TAR2.
189 clude dopamine, epinephrine, norepinephrine, octopamine (OA), L-3, 4-dihydroxyphenylalanine, tyramine
190                                              Octopamine (OA), the insect homolog of NE, is known to p
191                                              Octopamine (OA), the invertebrate counterpart of norepin
192 nalytes, such as N-acetyltyramine (naTA) and octopamine (OA).
193  the Oamb gene, which encodes a receptor for octopamine (OA, the invertebrate homologue of norepineph
194 arning, whereas the octopamine-Octbeta1R and octopamine-OAMB pathways jointly facilitate appetitive,
195              Thus, the invertebrate-specific octopamine-OARalpha and tyramine-TAR signalings respecti
196 noamines dopamine (DA), serotonin (5HT), and octopamine (Oct) can each sculpt a unique motor pattern
197 sion assays indicate that the neuromodulator octopamine (OCT) is necessary for Drosophila males to co
198                Furthermore, we show that the octopamine-Octbeta1R and dopamine-dDA1 signals together
199 versive and appetitive learning, whereas the octopamine-Octbeta1R and octopamine-OAMB pathways jointl
200                Here, we demonstrate that the octopamine-Octbeta1R-cAMP pathway processes both aversiv
201 ially by insulin, suggesting that effects of octopamine on metabolism are independent of its effects
202 , we investigated its role in the effects of octopamine on sleep.
203                                   Effects of octopamine on sleep:wake are mediated by the cAMP-depend
204 if insulin signaling mediates the effects of octopamine on sleep:wake behavior, we assayed flies in w
205 These results demonstrate the dual action of octopamine on synaptic growth and behavioral plasticity,
206 ) has a hyperpolarizing agonist effect (like octopamine) on these neurons and also blocks their chemi
207 aggression has shown that the biogenic amine octopamine plays a role in the modulation of aggressive
208                                              Octopamine plays central roles in various learning types
209          To test more specifically what role octopamine plays in the antennal lobe, we used two treat
210 rward pairing of neuronal depolarization and octopamine produced a subadditive effect on cAMP.
211                                              Octopamine, produced by the RIC neurons, acts via SER-3
212                  Local perfusion of 10(-4) M octopamine produces the same inhibitory membrane respons
213            Moreover, electrical silencing of octopamine-producing cells decreased wakefulness, wherea
214 e findings may be relevant to the control of octopamine production in insect cells.
215 stablished that, in Drosophila, dopamine and octopamine promote increased arousal.
216 CO(2) repulsion in well-fed animals, whereas octopamine promotes CO(2) attraction in starved animals.
217                                              Octopamine promotes wakefulness in the fly by acting thr
218 te-gated chloride channel (avermectins), the octopamine receptor (amitraz metabolite), and the calciu
219 hat dopaminergic neurons expressing the OAMB octopamine receptor [6] specifically convey the short-te
220               RNA interference verified that octopamine receptor alpha (OARalpha) signaling in gregar
221 mushroom bodies (OAMB), was identified as an octopamine receptor because human and Drosophila cell li
222                                 Furthermore, octopamine receptor disruption, and FAC-mediated oxidati
223 to mianserin/dsRNA treatment did not reverse octopamine receptor disruption-mediated inhibitory respo
224 l lobe, we used two treatments to disrupt an octopamine receptor from Apis mellifera brain (AmOAR) fu
225 equency of a mutation in the beta-adrenergic octopamine receptor gene (RmbetaAOR).
226                            One new receptor, octopamine receptor in mushroom bodies (OAMB), was ident
227 promote ovulatory competency by upregulating octopamine receptor in mushroom body (OAMB), matrix meta
228                               To identify an octopamine receptor mediating this function in Drosophil
229                                 Moreover, an octopamine receptor mRNA is selectively enriched in l-LN
230 aging) induced by starvation was elevated in octopamine receptor mutants, despite their high propensi
231                                          The octopamine receptor OAMB has two isoforms (OAMB-K3 and O
232      Octopamine, in turn, targets the OCTR-1 octopamine receptor on ASH nociceptive neurons to modula
233 d expression of a Galphas-coupled Drosophila octopamine receptor selectively in mouse hippocampal exc
234 on the heterologous expression of an Aplysia octopamine receptor, a G-protein-coupled receptor whose
235                               The alpha-like octopamine receptors (OctR) are believed to be the evolu
236 ective motion-detecting neurons that express octopamine receptors elicits visual valence reversal in
237 ditional Tdc2-LexA driver, revealed all five octopamine receptors express in Tdc2/octopamine neurons
238  previously identified one of the Drosophila octopamine receptors named OAMB that produces increases
239 euronal expression was observed for all five octopamine receptors, yet distinct differences among the
240 n-Gal4 lines for each of the five Drosophila octopamine receptors.
241 ns, the biogenic amines serotonin (5-HT) and octopamine regulate a number of food-related behaviors.
242 eceive octopamine input and how they mediate octopamine-regulated behaviors.
243                           The biogenic amine octopamine regulates critical physiological processes du
244            Furthermore, after consolidation, octopamine release becomes essential for recall, which s
245                                              Octopamine release by one such pathway in the honeybee a
246 a parsimonious model in which odor-activated octopamine release excites the motion detection pathway
247 anipulation in Type II varicosities to study octopamine release in Drosophila.
248                                 Tyramine and octopamine released from neurons expressing tyrosine dec
249         We observe 22700+/-4200 molecules of octopamine released per vesicle.
250 lation (-89.0 mV, S.E.M.=14.1, n=10) and the octopamine response of the B3 neurons (-84.7 mV, S.E.M.=
251 ct mechanisms: light-mediated suppression of octopamine responses was regulated by the circadian cloc
252  Although other Drosophila mutants that lack octopamine retain eggs completely within the ovaries, dT
253                       A serum raised against octopamine reveals in cockroaches and honey bees structu
254            A serum raised against conjugated octopamine reveals structurally comparable systems of pe
255 These results demonstrate that serotonin and octopamine reversibly modulate the activity of the ASHs,
256                                              Octopamine's effects on cycle frequency require an under
257 AMB receptor is a key molecule mediating the octopamine's signal for appetitive olfactory learning an
258 MB in the mushroom body neurons mediates the octopamine's signal for appetitive olfactory learning.
259 sion to attraction such that animals lacking octopamine show a delayed shift to attraction.
260                                  Part of the octopamine signal requires the alpha-adrenergic-like OAM
261 icate that sweet taste engages a distributed octopamine signal that reinforces memory through discret
262 es are decreased in mutants with compromised octopamine signaling and elevated in flies with increase
263 otein kinase A (PKA) is a putative target of octopamine signaling and is also implicated in Drosophil
264                    In this study, we present octopamine signaling as a neurochemical prerequisite for
265               Moreover, flies with increased octopamine signaling do not suppress sleep in response t
266 he oocytes of Caenorhabditis mutants lacking octopamine signaling fail to remain quiescent, but conti
267                              We then blocked octopamine signaling in random areas of the fly brain an
268                                     Finally, octopamine signaling in the service of thermogenesis mig
269 to assume food-appropriate behavior, whereas octopamine signaling is required for animals to assume f
270  indispensable contributions of dopamine and octopamine signaling to aversive and appetitive learning
271 Genetic and pharmacologic approaches suggest octopamine signaling transmits changes in aggression upo
272 he starvation response of flies with altered octopamine signaling.
273 r dopamine overturns the previous model that octopamine signalled reward and dopamine punishment.
274 uires bacterially produced tyramine and host octopamine signalling.
275                                  Among them, octopamine stands out as an auditory modulator during sw
276                     Serotonin, dopamine, and octopamine stimulate locomotion and grooming, showing di
277 gs initiate egg laying when transferred onto octopamine-supplemented food.
278 ng several mechanisms, notably through GABA, octopamine synapses, and the inhibition of acetylcholine
279 BH likely being the rate-limiting enzyme for octopamine synthesis in a small subpopulation of TDC-con
280 ed in the absence of extracellular Ca(2+) by octopamine, the arthropod homolog to norepinephrine.
281                                              Octopamine, the invertebrate analog of norepinephrine, i
282                  We investigated the role of octopamine, the invertebrate counterpart of adrenaline a
283                                              Octopamine, the invertebrate homolog of mammalian adrena
284  and tolazoline both mimicked the actions of octopamine, the receptor responsible for octopamine-medi
285                   Application of tyramine or octopamine to live preparations silenced dopaminergic ne
286                                              Octopamine triggers an increase in intracellular calcium
287 neurons immunoreactive with antisera against octopamine, tyramine, and the enzymes required for their
288 es to stimulate Ca(2+) increases through the octopamine/tyramine receptor (Oct-TyrR) and the transien
289        The expression of a cloned Drosophila octopamine/tyramine receptor (OctyR99AB) is described in
290 maps to 99B3-5, close to the position of the octopamine/tyramine receptor gene at 99A10-B1, suggestin
291 ractive behaviors, we have cloned a putative octopamine/tyramine receptor.
292 ates ecdysteroid biosynthesis in response to octopamine, uncovering a regulatory neuroendocrine syste
293 ify the roles of tyramine and its metabolite octopamine, we have cloned two TDC genes from Drosophila
294 octbeta1r brain exhibit blunted responses to octopamine when cAMP levels are monitored through the cA
295 abolomic profiling data identified a QTL for octopamine, which co-localised with the QTL for liver hi
296 ted in vivo in mice chronically treated with octopamine, which exhibited reduction in liver histopath
297 human primates with [11C]1e, N-[11C]guanyl-m-octopamine, which has a slow NET transport rate, showed
298 tion of Type II boutons evokes exocytosis of octopamine, which is detected through oxidization at the
299             Surprisingly, the application of octopamine, which is released during flight, reverses th
300  before and after mating: the biogenic amine octopamine, which regulates ovulation rate in Drosophila

 
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