研究者業績

渡邉 毅一

ワタナベ キイチ  (Kiichi Watanabe)

基本情報

所属
藤田医科大学 国際再生医療センター 准教授

研究者番号
90392183
J-GLOBAL ID
202101015665572510
researchmap会員ID
R000030317

論文

 20
  • Kiichi Watanabe, Hui Chiu, Barret D Pfeiffer, Allan M Wong, Eric D Hoopfer, Gerald M Rubin, David J Anderson
    Neuron 95(5) 1112-1128 2017年8月30日  
    Diffuse neuromodulatory systems such as norepinephrine (NE) control brain-wide states such as arousal, but whether they control complex social behaviors more specifically is not clear. Octopamine (OA), the insect homolog of NE, is known to promote both arousal and aggression. We have performed a systematic, unbiased screen to identify OA receptor-expressing neurons (OARNs) that control aggression in Drosophila. Our results uncover a tiny population of male-specific aSP2 neurons that mediate a specific influence of OA on aggression, independent of any effect on arousal. Unexpectedly, these neurons receive convergent input from OA neurons and P1 neurons, a population of FruM+ neurons that promotes male courtship behavior. Behavioral epistasis experiments suggest that aSP2 neurons may constitute an integration node at which OAergic neuromodulation can bias the output of P1 neurons to favor aggression over inter-male courtship. These results have potential implications for thinking about the role of related neuromodulatory systems in mammals.
  • Kenta Asahina, Kiichi Watanabe, Brian J Duistermars, Eric Hoopfer, Carlos Roberto González, Eyrún Arna Eyjólfsdóttir, Pietro Perona, David J Anderson
    Cell 156(1-2) 221-35 2014年1月16日  
    Males of most species are more aggressive than females, but the neural mechanisms underlying this dimorphism are not clear. Here, we identify a neuron and a gene that control the higher level of aggression characteristic of Drosophila melanogaster males. Males, but not females, contain a small cluster of FruM(+) neurons that express the neuropeptide tachykinin (Tk). Activation and silencing of these neurons increased and decreased, respectively, intermale aggression without affecting male-female courtship behavior. Mutations in both Tk and a candidate receptor, Takr86C, suppressed the effect of neuronal activation, whereas overexpression of Tk potentiated it. Tk neuron activation overcame reduced aggressiveness caused by eliminating a variety of sensory or contextual cues, suggesting that it promotes aggressive arousal or motivation. Tachykinin/Substance P has been implicated in aggression in mammals, including humans. Thus, the higher aggressiveness of Drosophila males reflects the sexually dimorphic expression of a neuropeptide that controls agonistic behaviors across phylogeny.
  • Daisuke Kamiya, Satoe Banno, Noriaki Sasai, Masatoshi Ohgushi, Hidehiko Inomata, Kiichi Watanabe, Masako Kawada, Rieko Yakura, Hiroshi Kiyonari, Kazuki Nakao, Lars Martin Jakt, Shin-ichi Nishikawa, Yoshiki Sasai
    Nature 470(7335) 503-9 2011年2月24日  
    The neural fate is generally considered to be the intrinsic direction of embryonic stem (ES) cell differentiation. However, little is known about the intracellular mechanism that leads undifferentiated cells to adopt the neural fate in the absence of extrinsic inductive signals. Here we show that the zinc-finger nuclear protein Zfp521 is essential and sufficient for driving the intrinsic neural differentiation of mouse ES cells. In the absence of the neural differentiation inhibitor BMP4, strong Zfp521 expression is intrinsically induced in differentiating ES cells. Forced expression of Zfp521 enables the neural conversion of ES cells even in the presence of BMP4. Conversely, in differentiation culture, Zfp521-depleted ES cells do not undergo neural conversion but tend to halt at the epiblast state. Zfp521 directly activates early neural genes by working with the co-activator p300. Thus, the transition of ES cell differentiation from the epiblast state into neuroectodermal progenitors specifically depends on the cell-intrinsic expression and activator function of Zfp521.
  • Teruko Danjo, Mototsugu Eiraku, Keiko Muguruma, Kiichi Watanabe, Masako Kawada, Yuchio Yanagawa, John L R Rubenstein, Yoshiki Sasai
    The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 31(5) 1919-33 2011年2月2日  
    During early telencephalic development, the major portion of the ventral telencephalic (subpallial) region becomes subdivided into three regions, the lateral (LGE), medial (MGE), and caudal (CGE) ganglionic eminences. In this study, we systematically recapitulated subpallial patterning in mouse embryonic stem cell (ESC) cultures and investigated temporal and combinatory actions of patterning signals. In serum-free floating culture, the dorsal-ventral specification of ESC-derived telencephalic neuroectoderm is dose-dependently directed by Sonic hedgehog (Shh) signaling. Early Shh treatment, even before the expression onset of Foxg1 (also Bf1; earliest marker of the telencephalic lineage), is critical for efficiently generating LGE progenitors, and continuous Shh signaling until day 9 is necessary to commit these cells to the LGE lineage. When induced under these conditions and purified by fluorescence-activated cell sorter, telencephalic cells efficiently differentiated into Nolz1(+)/Ctip2(+) LGE neuronal precursors and subsequently, both in culture and after in vivo grafting, into DARPP32(+) medium-sized spiny neurons. Purified telencephalic progenitors treated with high doses of the Hedgehog (Hh) agonist SAG (Smoothened agonist) differentiated into MGE- and CGE-like tissues. Interestingly, in addition to strong Hh signaling, the efficient specification of MGE cells requires Fgf8 signaling but is inhibited by treatment with Fgf15/19. In contrast, CGE differentiation is promoted by Fgf15/19 but suppressed by Fgf8, suggesting that specific Fgf signals play different, critical roles in the positional specification of ESC-derived ventral subpallial tissues. We discuss a model of the antagonistic Fgf8 and Fgf15/19 signaling in rostral-caudal subpallial patterning and compare it with the roles of these molecules in cortical patterning.
  • Fumitaka Osakada, Zi-Bing Jin, Yasuhiko Hirami, Hanako Ikeda, Teruko Danjyo, Kiichi Watanabe, Yoshiki Sasai, Masayo Takahashi
    Journal of cell science 122(Pt 17) 3169-79 2009年9月1日  
    The use of stem-cell therapy to treat retinal degeneration holds great promise. However, definitive methods of retinal differentiation that do not depend on recombinant proteins produced in animal or Escherichia coli cells have not been devised. Here, we report a defined culture method using low-molecular-mass compounds that induce differentiation of human embryonic stem (ES) cells and induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells into retinal progenitors, retinal pigment epithelium cells and photoreceptors. The casein kinase I inhibitor CKI-7, the ALK4 inhibitor SB-431542 and the Rho-associated kinase inhibitor Y-27632 in serum-free and feeder-free floating aggregate culture induce retinal progenitors positive for RX, MITF, PAX6 and CHX10. The treatment induces hexagonal pigmented cells that express RPE65 and CRALBP, form ZO1-positive tight junctions and exhibit phagocytic functions. Subsequent treatment with retinoic acid and taurine induces photoreceptors that express recoverin, rhodopsin and genes involved in phototransduction. Both three-factor (OCT3/4, SOX2 and KLF4) and four-factor (OCT3/4, SOX2, KLF4 and MYC) human iPS cells could be successfully differentiated into retinal cells by small-molecule induction. This method provides a solution to the problem of cross-species antigenic contamination in cell-replacement therapy, and is also useful for in vitro modeling of development, disease and drug screening.
  • Mototsugu Eiraku, Kiichi Watanabe, Mami Matsuo-Takasaki, Masako Kawada, Shigenobu Yonemura, Michiru Matsumura, Takafumi Wataya, Ayaka Nishiyama, Keiko Muguruma, Yoshiki Sasai
    Cell stem cell 3(5) 519-32 2008年11月6日  
    Here, we demonstrate self-organized formation of apico-basally polarized cortical tissues from ESCs using an efficient three-dimensional aggregation culture (SFEBq culture). The generated cortical neurons are functional, transplantable, and capable of forming proper long-range connections in vivo and in vitro. The regional identity of the generated pallial tissues can be selectively controlled (into olfactory bulb, rostral and caudal cortices, hem, and choroid plexus) by secreted patterning factors such as Fgf, Wnt, and BMP. In addition, the in vivo-mimicking birth order of distinct cortical neurons permits the selective generation of particular layer-specific neurons by timed induction of cell-cycle exit. Importantly, cortical tissues generated from mouse and human ESCs form a self-organized structure that includes four distinct zones (ventricular, early and late cortical-plate, and Cajal-Retzius cell zones) along the apico-basal direction. Thus, spatial and temporal aspects of early corticogenesis are recapitulated and can be manipulated in this ESC culture.
  • Takafumi Wataya, Satoshi Ando, Keiko Muguruma, Hanako Ikeda, Kiichi Watanabe, Mototsugu Eiraku, Masako Kawada, Jun Takahashi, Nobuo Hashimoto, Yoshiki Sasai
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 105(33) 11796-801 2008年8月19日  
    Embryonic stem (ES) cells differentiate into neuroectodermal progenitors when cultured as floating aggregates in serum-free conditions. Here, we show that strict removal of exogenous patterning factors during early differentiation steps induces efficient generation of rostral hypothalamic-like progenitors (Rax(+)/Six3(+)/Vax1(+)) in mouse ES cell-derived neuroectodermal cells. The use of growth factor-free chemically defined medium is critical and even the presence of exogenous insulin, which is commonly used in cell culture, strongly inhibits the differentiation via the Akt-dependent pathway. The ES cell-derived Rax(+) progenitors generate Otp(+)/Brn2(+) neuronal precursors (characteristic of rostral-dorsal hypothalamic neurons) and subsequently magnocellular vasopressinergic neurons that efficiently release the hormone upon stimulation. Differentiation markers of rostral-ventral hypothalamic precursors and neurons are induced from ES cell-derived Rax(+) progenitors by treatment with Shh. Thus, in the absence of exogenous growth factors in medium, the ES cell-derived neuroectodermal cells spontaneously differentiate into rostral (particularly rostral-dorsal) hypothalamic-like progenitors, which generate characteristic hypothalamic neuroendocrine neurons in a stepwise fashion, as observed in vivo. These findings indicate that, instead of the addition of inductive signals, minimization of exogenous patterning signaling plays a key role in rostral hypothalamic specification of neural progenitors derived from pluripotent cells.
  • Fumitaka Osakada, Hanako Ikeda, Michiko Mandai, Takafumi Wataya, Kiichi Watanabe, Nagahisa Yoshimura, Akiori Akaike, Yoshiki Sasai, Masayo Takahashi
    Nature Biotechnology 26(3) 352 2008年3月  査読有り
  • Fumitaka Osakada, Hanako Ikeda, Michiko Mandai, Takafumi Wataya, Kiichi Watanabe, Nagahisa Yoshimura, Akinori Akaike, Yoshiki Sasai, Masayo Takahashi
    Nature biotechnology 26(2) 215-24 2008年2月  
    We previously reported the differentiation of mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells into retinal progenitors. However, these progenitors rarely differentiate into photoreceptors unless they are cultured with embryonic retinal tissues. Here we show the in vitro generation of putative rod and cone photoreceptors from mouse, monkey and human ES cells by stepwise treatments under defined culture conditions, in the absence of retinal tissues. With mouse ES cells, Crx+ photoreceptor precursors were induced from Rx+ retinal progenitors by treatment with a Notch signal inhibitor. Further application of fibroblast growth factors, Shh, taurine and retinoic acid yielded a greater number of rhodopsin+ rod photoreceptors, in addition to default cone production. With monkey and human ES cells, feeder- and serum-free suspension culture combined with Wnt and Nodal inhibitors induced differentiation of Rx+ or Mitf+ retinal progenitors, which produced retinal pigment epithelial cells. Subsequent treatment with retinoic acid and taurine induced photoreceptor differentiation. These findings may facilitate the development of human ES cell-based transplantation therapies for retinal diseases.
  • Kiichi Watanabe, Morio Ueno, Daisuke Kamiya, Ayaka Nishiyama, Michiru Matsumura, Takafumi Wataya, Jun B Takahashi, Satomi Nishikawa, Shin-ichi Nishikawa, Keiko Muguruma, Yoshiki Sasai
    Nature biotechnology 25(6) 681-6 2007年6月  
    Poor survival of human embryonic stem (hES) cells after cell dissociation is an obstacle to research, hindering manipulations such as subcloning. Here we show that application of a selective Rho-associated kinase (ROCK) inhibitor, Y-27632, to hES cells markedly diminishes dissociation-induced apoptosis, increases cloning efficiency (from approximately 1% to approximately 27%) and facilitates subcloning after gene transfer. Furthermore, dissociated hES cells treated with Y-27632 are protected from apoptosis even in serum-free suspension (SFEB) culture and form floating aggregates. We demonstrate that the protective ability of Y-27632 enables SFEB-cultured hES cells to survive and differentiate into Bf1(+) cortical and basal telencephalic progenitors, as do SFEB-cultured mouse ES cells.
  • Morio Ueno, Michiru Matsumura, Kiichi Watanabe, Takahiro Nakamura, Fumitaka Osakada, Masayo Takahashi, Hiroshi Kawasaki, Shigeru Kinoshita, Yoshiki Sasai
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 103(25) 9554-9 2006年6月20日  
    Here we report a human-derived material with potent inductive activity that selectively converts ES cells into neural tissues. Both mouse and human ES cells efficiently differentiate into neural precursors when cultured on the matrix components of the human amniotic membrane in serum-free medium [amniotic membrane matrix-based ES cell differentiation (AMED)]. AMED-induced neural tissues have regional characteristics (brainstem) similar to those induced by coculture with mouse PA6 stromal cells [a common method called stromal cell-derived inducing activity (SDIA) culture]. Like the SDIA culture, the AMED system is applicable to the in vitro generation of various CNS tissues, including dopaminergic neurons, motor neurons, and retinal pigment epithelium. In contrast to the SDIA method, which uses animal cells, the AMED culture uses a noncellular inductive material derived from an easily available human tissue; therefore, AMED should provide a more suitable and versatile system for generating a variety of neural tissues for clinical applications.
  • Hitoshi Fukuda, Jun Takahashi, Kiichi Watanabe, Hideki Hayashi, Asuka Morizane, Masaomi Koyanagi, Yoshiki Sasai, Nobuo Hashimoto
    Stem cells (Dayton, Ohio) 24(3) 763-71 2006年3月  
    The differentiation of dopaminergic (DA) neurons from mouse embryonic stem cells (ESCs) can be efficiently induced, making these neurons a potential source for transplantation as a treatment for Parkinson's disease, a condition characterized by the gradual loss of midbrain DA neurons. One of the major persistent obstacles to the successful implementation of therapeutic ESC transplantation is the propensity of ESC-derived grafts to form tumors in vivo. To address this problem, we used fluorescence-activated cell sorting to purify mouse ESC-derived neural precursors expressing the neural precursor marker Sox1. ESC-derived, Sox1+ cells began to express neuronal cell markers and differentiated into DA neurons upon transplantation into mouse brains but did not generate tumors in this site. In contrast, Sox1- cells that expressed ESC markers frequently formed tumors in vivo. These results indicate that Sox1-based cell sorting of neural precursors prevents graft-derived tumor formation after transplantation, providing a promising strategy for cell transplantation therapy of neurodegenerative disorders.
  • Hong-Lin Su, Keiko Muguruma, Mami Matsuo-Takasaki, Mineko Kengaku, Kiichi Watanabe, Yoshiki Sasai
    Developmental biology 290(2) 287-96 2006年2月15日  
    Here, we report in vitro generation of Math1+ cerebellar granule cell precursors and Purkinje cells from ES cells by using soluble patterning signals. When neural progenitors induced from ES cells in a serum-free suspension culture are subsequently treated with BMP4 and Wnt3a, a significant proportion of these neural cells become Math1+. The induced Math1+ cells are mitotically active and express markers characteristic of granule cell precursors (Pax6, Zic1, and Zipro1). After purification by FACS and coculture with postnatal cerebellar neurons, ES cell-derived Math1+ cells exhibit typical features of neurons of the external granule cell layer, including extensive motility and a T-shaped morphology. Interestingly, differentiation of L7+/Calbindin-D28K+ neurons (characteristic of Purkinje cells) is induced under similar culture conditions but exhibits a higher degree of enhancement by Fgf8 rather than by Wnt3a. This is the first report of in vitro recapitulation of early differentiation of cerebellar neurons by using the ES cell system.
  • Hanako Ikeda, Fumitaka Osakada, Kiichi Watanabe, Kenji Mizuseki, Tomoko Haraguchi, Hiroyuki Miyoshi, Daisuke Kamiya, Yoshihito Honda, Noriaki Sasai, Nagahisa Yoshimura, Masayo Takahashi, Yoshiki Sasai
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 102(32) 11331-6 2005年8月9日  
    We report directed differentiaion of retinal precursors in vitro from mouse ES cells. Six3+ rostral brain progenitors are generated by culturing ES cells under serum-free suspension conditions (SFEB culture) in the presence of Wnt and Nodal antagonists (Dkk1 and LeftyA), and subsequently steered to differentiate into Rx+ cells (16%) by treatment with activin and serum. Consistent with the characteristics of early neural retinal precursors, the induced Rx+ cells coexpress Pax6 and the mitotic marker Ki67, but not Nestin. The ES cell-derived precursors efficiently generate cells with the photoreceptor phenotype (rhodopsin+, recoverin+) when cocultured with embryonic retinal cells. Furthermore, organotypic culture studies demonstrate the selective integration and survival of ES cell-derived cells with the photoreceptor phenotype (marker expression and morphology) in the outer nuclear layer of the retina. Taken together, ES cells treated with SFEB/Dkk1/LeftyA/serum/activin generate neural retinal precursors, which have the competence of photoreceptor differentiation.
  • Kiichi Watanabe, Yoshiki Sasai
    Tanpakushitsu kakusan koso. Protein, nucleic acid, enzyme 50(6 Suppl) 711-6 2005年5月  
  • Kiichi Watanabe, Daisuke Kamiya, Ayaka Nishiyama, Tomoko Katayama, Satoshi Nozaki, Hiroshi Kawasaki, Yasuyoshi Watanabe, Kenji Mizuseki, Yoshiki Sasai
    Nature neuroscience 8(3) 288-96 2005年3月  
    We demonstrate directed differentiation of telencephalic precursors from mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells using optimized serum-free suspension culture (SFEB culture). Treatment with Wnt and Nodal antagonists (Dkk1 and LeftyA) during the first 5 d of SFEB culture causes nearly selective neural differentiation in ES cells ( approximately 90%). In the presence of Dkk1, with or without LeftyA, SFEB induces efficient generation ( approximately 35%) of cells expressing telencephalic marker Bf1. Wnt3a treatment during the late culture period increases the pallial telencephalic population (Pax6(+) cells yield up to 75% of Bf1(+) cells), whereas Shh promotes basal telencephalic differentiation (into Nkx2.1(+) and/or Islet1/2(+) cells) at the cost of pallial telencephalic differentiation. Thus, in the absence of caudalizing signals, floating aggregates of ES cells generate naive telencephalic precursors that acquire subregional identities by responding to extracellular patterning signals.
  • Takashi Irioka, Kiichi Watanabe, Hidehiro Mizusawa, Kenji Mizuseki, Yoshiki Sasai
    Brain research. Developmental brain research 154(1) 63-70 2005年1月1日  
    Recent embryological studies have implicated several "caudalizing factors" in the caudal specification of the central nervous system (CNS). In this study, we have examined the effects of three candidate caudalizing factors on neural precursors induced from embryonic stem (ES) cells by the stromal cell-derived inducing activity (SDIA) method. Among retinoic acid (RA), Wnt and FGF signals, RA causes the strongest level of caudalization: inducing suppression of forebrain differentiation and promotion of caudal CNS specification. Obvious suppression of the telencephalic marker Bf1 and that of the forebrain marker Otx2 occur at 2x10(-8) and 2x10(-7) M, respectively. Activation of the caudal marker genes such as Hoxb9 is observed in a dose-dependent manner over the range of 2x10(-9)-2x10(-6) M. Suppression of the forebrain genes has a narrow critical period of RA response during the early culture phase. In contrast, significant induction of the caudal genes is evoked by a 1-day exposure to RA at any time between days 3 and 8. RA treatment not only induces caudal specification but also inhibits differentiation of ventral CNS tissues, particularly of floor plate cells. FGF4 induces partial caudalization while Wnt-3A exhibits weak caudalizing activities only in the presence of RA. These findings provide useful information on the proper selection of combination of signaling molecules, doses and timing for steering ES cell differentiation by caudalizing factors into caudal neural fates.
  • Kenji Mizuseki, Tatsunori Sakamoto, Kiichi Watanabe, Keiko Muguruma, Makoto Ikeya, Ayaka Nishiyama, Akiko Arakawa, Hirofumi Suemori, Norio Nakatsuji, Hiroshi Kawasaki, Fujio Murakami, Yoshiki Sasai
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 100(10) 5828-33 2003年5月13日  
    To understand the range of competence of embryonic stem (ES) cell-derived neural precursors, we have examined in vitro differentiation of mouse and primate ES cells into the dorsal- (neural crest) and ventralmost (floor plate) cells of the neural axis. Stromal cell-derived inducing activity (SDIA; accumulated on PA6 stromal cells) induces cocultured ES cells to differentiate into rostral CNS tissues containing both ventral and dorsal cells. Although early exposure of SDIA-treated ES cells to bone morphogenetic protein (BMP)4 suppresses neural differentiation and promotes epidermogenesis, late BMP4 exposure after the fourth day of coculture causes differentiation of neural crest cells and dorsalmost CNS cells, with autonomic system and sensory lineages induced preferentially by high and low BMP4 concentrations, respectively. In contrast, Sonic hedgehog (Shh) suppresses differentiation of neural crest lineages and promotes that of ventral CNS tissues such as motor neurons. Notably, high concentrations of Shh efficiently promote differentiation of HNF3beta(+) floor plate cells with axonal guidance activities. Thus, SDIA-treated ES cells generate naive precursors that have the competence of differentiating into the "full" dorsal-ventral range of neuroectodermal derivatives in response to patterning signals.
  • Hiroshi Kawasaki, Hirofumi Suemori, Kenji Mizuseki, Kiichi Watanabe, Fumi Urano, Hiroshi Ichinose, Masatoshi Haruta, Masayo Takahashi, Kanako Yoshikawa, Shin-Ichi Nishikawa, Norio Nakatsuji, Yoshiki Sasai
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 99(3) 1580-5 2002年2月5日  
    We previously identified a stromal cell-derived inducing activity (SDIA), which induces differentiation of neural cells, including midbrain tyrosine hydroxylase-positive (TH(+)) dopaminergic neurons, from mouse embryonic stem cells. We report here that SDIA induces efficient neural differentiation also in primate embryonic stem cells. Induced neurons contain TH(+) neurons at a frequency of 35% and produce a significant amount of dopamine. Interestingly, differentiation of TH(+) neurons from undifferentiated embryonic cells occurs much faster in vitro (10 days) than it does in the embryo (approximately 5 weeks). In addition, 8% of the colonies contain large patches of Pax6(+)-pigmented epithelium of the retina. The SDIA method provides an unlimited source of primate cells for the study of pathogenesis, drug development, and transplantation in degenerative diseases such as Parkinson's disease and retinitis pigmentosa.
  • T Asai, K Watanabe, K Ichihara-Tanaka, N Kaneda, S Kojima, A Iguchi, F Inagaki, T Muramatsu
    Biochemical and biophysical research communications 236(1) 66-70 1997年7月9日  
    Midkine (MK) is a heparin-binding growth factor, which promotes neurite outgrowth in embryonic neurons and enhances their survival. The three dimensional structure of MK clarified by NMR spectroscopy indicates that several basic amino acids are exposed on the surface of the C-terminal half domain, which retains heparin-binding and neurite-promoting activity. We performed site-directed mutagenesis of these amino acids, and found that mutation of arginine78 reduced the heparin-binding activity. Mutation of either lysine83 or lysine84 scarcely affected heparin-binding activity, while the double mutant involving both lysine residues showed reduction in the activity. Neurite-promoting activity of mutant MKs always correlated with their heparin-binding activity, illustrating the close relationship of the two activities. Thus, the present result verifies the occurrence of two distinct heparin-binding sites involved in neurite-promoting activity of MK molecule.

MISC

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その他

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