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Article |
miR-8 microRNAs regulate the response to osmotic stress in zebrafish embryos
Correspondence to James G. Patton: James.G.Patton{at}Vanderbilt.edu
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are highly conserved small RNAs that act as translational regulators of gene expression, exerting their influence by selectively targeting mRNAs bearing complementary sequence elements. These RNAs function in diverse aspects of animal development and physiology. Because of an ability to act as rapid responders at the level of translation, miRNAs may also influence stress response. In this study, we show that the miR-8 family of miRNAs regulates osmoregulation in zebrafish embryos. Ionocytes, which are a specialized cell type scattered throughout the epidermis, are responsible for pH and ion homeostasis during early development before gill formation. The highly conserved miR-8 family is expressed in ionocytes and enables precise control of ion transport by modulating the expression of Nherf1, which is a regulator of apical trafficking of transmembrane ion transporters. Ultimately, disruption of miR-8 family member function leads to an inability to respond to osmotic stress and blocks the ability to properly traffic and/or cluster transmembrane glycoproteins at the apical surface of ionocytes.
Abbreviations used in this paper: ANOVA, analysis of variance; BCIP, 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl phosphate; dpf, day postfertilization; hpf, hour postfertilization; HRC, H+ pump–rich cell; LNA, locked nucleic acid; miRNA, microRNA; MRC, mitochondria-rich cell; MRE, miRNA recognition element; NBT, nitro blue tetrazolium; NHE, Na+/H+ exchanger; NRC, Na+-K+ pump–rich cell; SG, stress granule; UIC, uninjected control; UTR, untranslated region.
© 2009 Flynt et al.
This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.jcb.org/misc/terms.shtml). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 3.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/).
| Introduction |
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22 nt) noncoding RNAs that negatively regulate gene expression (Reinhart et al., 2000; Lagos-Quintana et al., 2001). Functional miRNAs are derived from larger precursors that mature through sequential nuclear and cytoplasmic cleavages performed by the RNase III enzymes Drosha and Dicer, respectively (Bernstein et al., 2001; Ketting et al., 2001; Lee et al., 2002, 2003). The longer primary miRNA transcripts contain hairpin folds that are recognized and excised by a Drosha-containing complex and are required for nuclear export and final maturation by Dicer in the cytoplasm (Lee et al., 2003). Normally, one strand of the fully processed 22-nt double-stranded miRNA is incorporated into the RNA-induced silencing complex, a multisubunit complex that associates with polyribosomes and is responsible for inhibiting translation of associated mRNAs (Tuschl et al., 1999; Zamore et al., 2000; Ishizuka et al., 2002; Okamura et al., 2004). miRNAs target specific mRNAs for down-regulation, usually by pairing imperfectly to miRNA recognition elements (MREs) in 3' untranslated regions (UTRs; Lai, 2002; Enright et al., 2003; Lewis et al., 2003; Brennecke et al., 2005). Higher eukaryotic genomes encode anywhere from hundreds to thousands of miRNAs to enable precise control of gene expression (Kloosterman and Plasterk, 2006). Understanding and identifying the exact genes regulated by specific miRNAs remain a difficult problem. The prediction of miRNA targets through genome-wide analysis of 3' UTR sequences is complicated by imperfect complementarity between most miRNAs and their targets. Therefore, reporter assays and direct functional tests are required to verify prediction algorithms.
The expression patterns of multiple miRNAs have been described in different organisms, tissues, and developmental time points (Miska et al., 2004; Sempere et al., 2004; Giraldez et al., 2005; Thatcher et al., 2007). In vertebrate embryos, particularly zebrafish, temporal expression patterns have been complemented by in situ localization using locked nucleic acid (LNA) oligonucleotides to hybridize to mature miRNA sequences (Wienholds et al., 2005; Kloosterman et al., 2006a,b). These analyses have revealed a striking variety of expression patterns of different miRNAs during early vertebrate development. The sequences of many miRNAs are conserved, showing similar expression patterns, genomic organization, and copy numbers, suggesting that the use of genetically tractable organisms such as zebrafish could yield insight into the role of miRNAs in humans and their potential role in physiology and disease.
One such conserved family of miRNAs is the miR-8 family, which has five members in vertebrates. These miRNAs (miR-200a, miR-200b, miR-200c, miR-141, and miR-429) are very similar in sequence, particularly at their 5' ends, and appear to have descended from miR-8 in insects (Ambros, 2003; Griffiths-Jones, 2004; Griffiths-Jones et al., 2006). All vertebrates encode miR-8 homologues arranged identically in two polycistrons and, at least in zebrafish, show identical tissue specificity in nasal epithelia, neuromasts, the pronephros, and a subset of epidermal cells (Wienholds et al., 2005).
Although the aforementioned tissues may seem quite distinct, they all are composed of cells that can be readily stained with dyes that are reported to mostly target mitochondria-rich cells (MRCs). In this study, we focused on ionocytes, which are cells that are interspersed among keratinocytes in the skin of developing zebrafish embryos. Functionally, these cells mimic intercalated cells in the mammalian distal nephron and collecting duct that function to regulate ion flux (Hsiao et al., 2007; Janicke et al., 2007). We show that in zebrafish, these cells express miR-8 family miRNAs that participate in osmoregulation through the targeting of nherf1. Nherf1 was originally shown to regulate the activity of NHE3 in renal brush border cells (Weinman et al., 2000), but it also controls apical presentation and trafficking of membrane proteins such as ion transporters and receptors (Lin et al., 2006; Hsiao et al., 2007; Janicke et al., 2007). Disruption of miR-8 miRNAs results in zebrafish embryos deficient in responding to osmotic stress and incapable of properly maintaining ion and acid base homeostasis.
| Results |
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To determine the effectiveness of the morpholinos alone and in combination, we performed Northern blotting against miR-200 family members with RNA extracted from 36-hpf embryos that were injected at the single-cell stage with different combinations of morpholinos (Fig. 2 D). The greatest knockdown was achieved through injection of either the AMO1 + BMO1 (ABMO1) or AMO2 + BMO2 (ABMO2) combination of morpholinos. Injection of single morpholinos or a scrambled morpholino did not result in significant decreases in miRNA levels except for BMO2 (Fig. 2 D). Even though detectable levels of miR-8 family members were still observed when combinations of morpholinos were used, the resulting decreases were sufficient to generate phenotypic effects on ionocyte function (see next section).
miR-8 function and osmotic stress
Next, we sought to determine the effects of knockdown of the miR-8 family on zebrafish development. Injection of the ABMO1 and ABMO2 combinations did not result in detectable defects in gross zebrafish embryo morphology at 36 hpf. Uninjected control (UIC) embryos and those injected with the ABMO1 or ABMO2 combination were virtually indistinguishable when examined under either light microscopy (not depicted) or after DASPEI staining (Fig. 3, A–C). Thus, at this time point and with this level of knockdown, there was no apparent defect in either overall development or in the specification of mitochondria-rich ionocytes. Because normal morphology and cell specification appeared intact, we next sought to test whether the miR-8 family functions to regulate the physiology of ionocytes.
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The miR-8 family participates in the regulation of Na+ accumulation in ionocytes
Next, we sought to determine whether changes in ion homeostasis could be observed in control and morphant embryos. To examine the accumulation of Na+ in HRC ionocytes, we used Sodium green, which emits fluorescence in correlation with increasing Na+ concentration (Esaki et al., 2007). As with DASPEI and MitoTracker red, Sodium green is cell permeable and can be used to stain live embryos. After a 60-min incubation of embryos in the presence of Sodium green, Na+ accumulation in ionocytes was readily observed using fluorescence microscopy (Fig. 4). We used a combination of Sodium green and MitoTracker red to visualize ionocytes in normal zebrafish embryos at three different pHs in 1x buffer (Fig. 4, A–C). The combination of dyes allowed verification that the Sodium green fluorescence was indeed derived from ionocytes. The accumulation of Na+ in zebrafish embryos depended on the pH of the culture water, with embryos raised at low pH exhibiting the greatest accumulation (Fig. 4 A). This is because Na+ accumulation in HRCs depends on the function of Na+/H+ exchangers (NHEs) and, therefore, is linked to H+ efflux (Esaki et al., 2007; Horng et al., 2007). These antiporters are important for ion movement and pH homeostasis in several different organisms (Claiborne et al., 2002). Interestingly, acidosis increases localization of NHEs at the apical membranes of mammalian renal cells, which, in turn, leads to enhanced rates of Na+/H+ exchange (Claiborne et al., 2002). A similar phenomenon is apparently occurring in zebrafish HRCs, in which the need for increased acid secretion is balanced by Na+ accumulation. This is evident from the increased number of Sodium green–positive cells at decreasing pH (Fig. 4, A–C).
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nherf1 is a target of the miR-8 family
To better understand how the miR-8 family influences the physiology and function of ionocytes, we sought to identify miR-8 target genes that could be responsible for regulating Na+ accumulation. A variety of algorithms have been created to predict the targets of specific miRNAs based on sequence complementarity, sequence context, and conservation across species (Lewis et al., 2003; Chen et al., 2005a; Grimson et al., 2007). One of the predicted targets for both miR-200a and miR-200b is slc9a3r2 (located on chromosome 12 bp 30,682,734–30,726,868), which is also known as Nherf1 (Chen et al., 2005b). This gene encodes a phosphoprotein containing two N-terminal PDZ domains that interacts with a variety of membrane-associated partners, including NHEs and other ion transporters (Yun et al., 1997; Murthy et al., 1998; Lederer et al., 2003; Morales et al., 2007; Wheeler et al., 2007). The C-terminal domain of Nherf1 interacts with the cytoskeletal proteins merlin, ezrin, radixin, and moesin, enabling Nherf1 to serve as an adapter molecule linking membrane proteins to cytoskeletal actin filaments (Fig. 5 A; Weinman et al., 2000; Morales et al., 2007). There are multiple mammalian Na+/H+ exchange regulatory factor isoforms that are similar in domain structure but associate with different partners and exhibit tissue-specific expression patterns (Yun et al., 1997; Weinman et al., 2000). Like mammals, zebrafish possess multiple Na+/H+ exchange regulatory factor isoforms, most of which are uncharacterized. nherf1 is expressed in several regions of the brain, pronephros, and epidermis (Thisse et al., 2001). In addition to being an excellent candidate based on the regulation of Na+ accumulation by Nherf1, the MREs in the nherf1 3' UTR are exceptionally strong, matching the current criteria described for efficient targeting by miRNAs (Fig. 5 B). These criteria include nearby adenine uracil–rich elements and targeting by tightly coexpressed miRNAs, which is consistent with the nherf1 3' UTR structure and the polycistronic arrangement of miR-8 family members (Fig. S2; Grimson et al., 2007).
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MRE1 and nherf1
MRE2). No silencing was observed when both MREs were deleted (nherf1
MRE1 and 2). The increase in fluorescence upon injection of the entire nherf1 3' UTR and the ABMO1 morpholinos shows the effect of knockdown of endogenous levels of the miR-8 family and also serves as a specificity control. For all injections, detection of GFP protein levels via Western blotting of embryo lysates confirmed the trends of GFP fluorescence (Fig. 5). Together, the results are consistent with targeting of nherf1 by miR-8 family members.
Epistatic interaction between nherf1 and miR-8 family members
If nherf1 is indeed a target of miR-8 family members, the defect in Na accumulation in the ABMO1 morphants should be rescued by direct repression of nherf1. Nherf1 has been shown to be a negative regulator of NHE activity by promoting phosphorylation and subsequent internalization of NHEs (Yun et al., 1997; Murthy et al., 1998). To repress nherf1, we designed a morpholino complementary to the translation start site of nherf1 (nherf1MO). These morphants exhibited mild edema (similar to Fig. 3, E and G), suggesting compromised osmoregulation (not depicted). Thus, we monitored Na+ accumulation in ionocytes with Sodium green and MitoTracker red in embryos injected with the ABMO1 combination, the nherf1MO, or all three morpholinos (Fig. 6, A–D). Consistent with nherf1 expression being up-regulated in ABMO1 morphants because of a lack of repression by the miR-8 family, repression of nherf1 by the nherf1MO allowed restoration of Na+ accumulation in ABMO1 morphants (Fig. 6, B and D). To verify this result, we quantified Sodium green fluorescence (Fig. 6 E). The mean pixel intensity at 488 nm was determined for individual ionocytes and divided by the local background to determine the fold increase in Na+ accumulation. This analysis showed no significant differences in Na+ accumulation between UIC and nherf1MO- and ABMO1+ nherf1MO– injected embryos. In contrast, Na+ accumulation in ABMO-injected embryos was significantly decreased. These results are consistent with targeting of nherf1 by miR-8 miRNAs in HRC ionocytes.
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| Discussion |
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We have also shown that regulation of nherf1 by the miR-8 family is responsible for maintaining the apical character of ionocytes. The apical domains of ionocytes were revealed using FITC–Con A staining. Although the exact identity of the specific zebrafish glycoproteins that are recognized by Con A remains to be determined, the overall resemblance of the ionocytes studied in these experiments to mammalian renal brush border cells is striking (Tyska et al., 2005). In brush border cells, Nherf1 has been shown to be recruited to apical membranes by overexpression of podocalyxin, which is an obligate apical glycoprotein (Nielsen et al., 2007). Because of the large number of apical glycoproteins on the membranes of HRC ionocytes, Nherf1 may be constitutively recruited to the membranes of these cells. This would necessitate attenuation of nherf1 expression to permit NHE activity in these cells. In zebrafish, neuromasts and the nasal epithelium are also strongly labeled by Con A (unpublished data). Down-regulation of nherf1 may be essential for the appropriate presentation of specific glycoproteins on the apical membranes of these cell types.
nherf1 is predicted to be a target of miR-200b in mammals
The miRanda algorithm predicts that miR-200b should target both zebrafish and mammalian nherf1 (John et al., 2004). In mammals, miR-200b is expressed in the colon, kidney, prostate, pancreas, and thymus, all of which contain polarized secretory cells (Beauchamp et al., 2007). In the colon and kidney, Nherf1 is known to be an active participant in the regulation of many ion transporters in addition to Na+/H+ exchange (Stemmer-Rachamimov et al., 2001). Both of these organs contain brush border membranes that are reactive to Con A staining (Tyska et al., 2005; Nielsen et al., 2007). If miR-200b regulation of nherf1 in the colon and kidney has effects similar to our observations in zebrafish ionocytes, it will be critical to determine whether expression of miR-200b is restricted to specific cell types within these organs. Nherf1 expression in the colon is restricted, suggesting precise regulation of expression between cell types, potentially through the activity of miR-200b in these tissues (Stemmer-Rachamimov et al., 2001). Additionally, the cells of both the prostate and pancreas, which express miR-200b, are highly secretory and similarly reactive to Con A, requiring apical localization of multiple membrane proteins (Gheri et al., 1997; Arenas et al., 1999). It is also noteworthy that Nherf1 is up-regulated in proliferative endometrium compared with secretory endometrium (Stemmer-Rachamimov et al., 2001). Down-regulation of nherf1 by miR-200b may be essential for secretory epithelial cells to adjust their physiology toward a permanently differentiated state. Indeed, increased expression of Nherf1 has been observed in breast and liver cancer cells (Stemmer-Rachamimov et al., 2001).
Recently, miR-8 family members were shown to play a role in terminal olfactory differentiation in zebrafish (Choi et al., 2008). In this study, we did not observe defects in ionocyte differentiation in the absence of miR-8 family members, with the caveat that our knockdowns were not complete. Nevertheless, we observed a striking effect on ionocyte physiology, suggesting these miRNAs may have cell type–specific functions and that miR-8 family members may play key roles both during development and after terminal differentiation. It will be interesting to determine whether Nherf1 is expressed during olfactory differentiation and whether targeting by miR-8 family members affects membrane trafficking of olfactory receptors.
Other studies have shown a role for the miR-8 family in promoting epithelial fate in mammalian cells (Bracken et al., 2008; Burk et al., 2008; Gregory et al., 2008; Korpal et al., 2008). These miRNAs operate in a genetic bistable loop configuration with ZEB1 and ZEB2 transcription factors. We did not see a loss of ionocytes when inhibiting the miR-8 family. If ionocytes were losing their epithelial character, one might expect them to be extruded from the epidermis. It will be interesting to investigate whether these miRNAs take on such a function during later development.
miRNAs and stress
The function of the miR-8 family may be required for mounting appropriate stress responses in mammalian cells, as we have shown in zebrafish. During our efforts to describe the role of the miR-8 family in zebrafish, we attempted to determine whether the expression of miR-200b changes in response to salt concentration or pH. The results of these experiments demonstrated little alteration in the level of miR-8 family expression in whole embryo RNA extracts, at least at the time points tested. However, this may be caused by a lack of sensitivity when comparing whole embryos with ionocytes, especially given the high expression levels observed in nasal epithelium.
Originally, miRNAs were found to regulate developmental timing in worms, and a role for miRNAs in development is a continuous theme, translating into other phyla (Bartel and Chen, 2004). However, miRNAs have been found to have diverse functions beyond regulating development. Experiments in Drosophila uncovered a role for miR-14 in fat metabolism and stress (Xu et al., 2003), and miRNAs have been shown to play a role in triggering cardiac hypertrophy in response to stress (van Rooij et al., 2006). Additionally, the activity of CAT-1 (cationic amino acid transporter 1) is controlled by miR-122 in response to nutrient starvation (Bhattacharyya et al., 2006). The expression of a subset of miRNAs also appears to be up-regulated by p53 in response to oncogenic stress (He et al., 2007; Raver-Shapira et al., 2007). When coupled to our findings related to osmotic stress, a clear theme emerges in which a major function of miRNAs is to regulate the response to a variety of cellular stresses (Leung and Sharp, 2007).
Subcellular localization of Argonaute proteins, the effectors of RNA-induced silencing complexes and binding partners of miRNAs, shows localization with cytoplasmic foci called processing bodies (Zamore et al., 2000; Carmell et al., 2002; Hutvagner and Zamore, 2002; Liu et al., 2005). Argonaute proteins also accumulate in a stress-dependent manner in separate cytoplasmic foci called stress granules (SGs; Leung et al., 2006). Interestingly, miRNAs localize to SGs and have been shown to dynamically accumulate and dissociate from SGs in a stress-dependent manner. The unique mechanism of miRNA-mediated gene regulation may be used as a method of effecting rapid changes in gene expression, particularly during stress. Regulation of nherf1 by the miR-8 family serves as a particularly crucial stress response in that it links extracellular events to membrane trafficking, enabling sensitive and precise control of gene expression caused by changes in environmental cues and stresses.
| Materials and methods |
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In situ hybridization and Northern blots
Detection of mature miR-200b was accomplished by in situ hybridization using a digoxigenin-labeled LNA oligonucleotide, 5'-TCATCATTACCAGGCAGTATTA-3' (Wienholds et al., 2005; Kloosterman et al., 2006b). Visualization of miR-200b expression was performed after nitro blue tetrazolium (NBT)/5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl phosphate (BCIP) color development. Embryos were mounted in 50% glycerol and photographed in color with a 20x objective in Fig. 1 (B', C', and D'). miR-200b localization was detected by in situ hybridization using a digoxigenin-labeled LNA probe and Cy3-labeled antidigoxigenin secondary antibodies (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories). Images of embryos stained by NBT/BCIP were acquired by using a compound microscope (Axiophot; Carl Zeiss, Inc.) and a digital camera (Axiocam; Carl Zeiss, Inc.). Images were acquired with Axiovision software (Carl Zeiss, Inc.) and imported into Photoshop for orientation. Northern blotting was performed as described previously (Sempere et al., 2003; Flynt et al., 2007).
Microinjection
Fertilized single-cell zebrafish embryos were injected with 1-nl volumes. Morpholino oligonucleotides were injected as follows per embryo: 2 ng AMO1 5'-ACATCGTTACCAGACAGTGTTA-3', 2 ng BMO1 5'-TCATCATTACCAGGCAGTATTA-3', 2 ng AMO2 5'-GACAAAAGATTGTGACAGACCATTG-3', 2 ng BMO2 5'-TGAAAAAGATTATGACGGACCATTA-3', and 1 ng nherf1MO1 5'-CCTGAGGTCGCTGGACATTTT-3'. 40 pg in vitro–synthesized, capped mRNA encoding either GFP without a UTR (–UTR) or GFP fused to the nherf1 UTR (GFPnherfUTR) were injected alone or with 200 pg synthetic miR-200b into embryos.
Induction of osmotic stress
Embryos were raised in 1x egg water for the initial 24 h of development before transfer into 10x Danieau buffer. After 24 h, embryos were transferred to distilled water by multiple brief washes. The percentage of embryos exhibiting edema after transfer to distilled water was calculated after 24 and 48 h. Paired Student's t tests were performed to determine statistical differences between embryos exhibiting edema. Images acquired with the MZFIII dissecting microscope using an Axiocam digital camera were captured with Axiovision software.
GFP reporter analyses
Reporter analyses and Western blotting were performed as described previously (Flynt et al., 2007). To generate the nherf1 GFP reporter, the GFP ORF was fused to the 3' UTR sequence of zebrafish nherf1. The nherf1 UTR was cloned from zebrafish embryo RNA extracts using oligo (dT) primed reverse transcription followed by PCR amplification with gene-specific primers (5'-GCCTCCTGCGTGC-3' and 5'-GACTTTTCATAATATTTAATAACAAAAATCAT-3'). Internal deletions of the nherf1 3' UTR were created using the QuikChange Site-Directed Mutagenesis kit (Agilent Technologies) with the following primers: Nherf1-MRE1 forward, 5'-GATTAGAAAACCCTTTACGTTCTGCTTGAGATTTTCC-3'; Nherf1-MRE1 reverse, 5'-GGAAAATCTCAAGCAGAACGTAAAGGGTTTTCTAATC-3'; Nherf1-MRE2 forward, 5'-GTATATTTTCTTGCTTCGCTTTGACCCTTCAAGAGCGAG-3'; and Nherf1-MRE2 reverse, 5'-CTCGCTCTTGAAGGGTCAAAGCGAAGCAAGAAAATATAC-3'. Images were acquired with an MZFIII dissecting microscope equipped with a fluorescent laser using a cooled mono 12-bit camera (Retiga 1300; QImaging) with QCapture 3.1.1 software (QImaging) and were imported into Photoshop for orientation and cropping.
Con A labeling
Embryos were incubated for 30 min in 1x Danieau buffer containing MitoTracker red. 50 µg/ml FITC-conjugated Con A was then added for an additional 10 min (Esaki et al., 2007). Excess Con A was removed by several brief washes in 1x Danieau buffer. After 1 h, embryos were mounted in 1x Danieau buffer, and FITC–Con A–labeled cells were visualized by fluorescent confocal microscopy using a 100x objective on an LSM 510 laser-scanning confocal microscope. The mean number of unclustered and internalized Con A foci was determined by examining Z stacks. In both assays, statistical differences between UIC and embryos injected with ABMO, nherf1MO, and nherf1MO + ABMO were determined by analysis of variance (ANOVA) at
0.05.
Online supplemental material
Fig. S1 shows that loss of miR-8 miRNAs blocks Na+ accumulation in ionocytes. Fig. S2 shows the genomic organization of zebrafish miR-8 miRNAs. Online supplemental material is available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200807026/DC1.
| Acknowledgments |
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This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grant GM 075790 to J.G.Patton. A.S. Flynt was supported in part by National Institutes of Health grant T32 GM 008554.
Submitted: 7 July 2008
Accepted: 25 February 2009
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