1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to the genetic manipulation of a parasite genome (such as Plasmodium falciparum) through the use of a piggyBac transposable element construct, as well as to piggyBac transposable element constructs themselves, and for applications to identify, characterize, and/or create therapies protective in people against malaria. The field of the invention also relates to the field of malaria, and methods for controlling malarial-transmitting organisms such as Plasmodium falciparum through the use of the herein described piggyBac constructs.
2. Related Art
Malaria is a deadly infectious disease annually causing clinical illness in 400-600 million people, and killing millions.5 Caused by several different Plasmodium species, malaria remains endemic in many tropical and temperate climates. Traditional measures to control malaria are becoming increasingly ineffective due to widespread resistance against many of the available antimalarial drugs and insecticide resistance in the mosquito vectors of the parasite.6-9 There is an urgent need for the development of new drugs and vaccines to reverse a progressive resurgence in malaria morbidity and mortality. Better understanding of the malaria parasite biology is essential for the development of new intervention therapies and their efficient use for long-lasting control of this insidious disease.
Application of new technologies has produced a wealth of information in recent years about the genomes, proteomes, and other aspects of the basic composition of the malaria parasites. Many aspects of the parasite's biology can be inferred through these approaches, and yet the ability to utilize this new information to reveal the complex biology of Plasmodium has been slow due, at least in part, to the lack of robust and user-friendly molecular genetic tools. Manipulating the Plasmodium genome has been a great challenge due to the very low efficiency of transfection of this parasite, estimated to be about 10−6.10 Gene-targeting to identify gene functions is a cumbersome process hindered by the need to build individual targeting plasmids for each homologous recombination and a lengthy selection process for obtaining genome integrants.1-4 Further complicating this process in P. falciparum is the tendency of the parasite to maintain extra-cellular plasmid DNA as stable self-replicating episomal concatamers.11
Transposable elements have been widely used as tools to manipulate genomes ranging from different microbes to higher invertebrates, like Drosophila, and even plants. Transposable elements do not occur naturally in many lower eukaryotes, including Plasmodium.12 Therefore, conditions needed for transposition might be harder to achieve in this parasite. So far, efficient transposon-mediated random mutagenesis in parasitic protozoa has been reported only in Leishmania.13 There has been a report of transposition in Plasmodium using the Drosophila mariner transposable element, but the transposition events occurred at a very low frequency, without the presence of the transposase, and with only two integrations in the same locus.14
The piggyBac transposable element is derived from the cabbage looper moth Trichoplusia ni and is a member of the TTAA-target site-specific class of transposable elements.15-18 piggyBac is a Class II transposable element that exclusively targets the tetra nucleotide target site, TTAA, and always inserts and excises in a precise manner. piggyBac-based transposon vectors have been widely used to manipulate genomes of various invertebrate species, and piggyBac is currently the preferred vector of choice for enhancer trapping, gene discovery and identifying gene function in Drosophila and other insects.19-23 The attribute of piggyBac to non-preferentially integrate into the genome of Drosophila has made it more attractive than the P-element, which seems to have preferential hot spots for insertion in 5′ regulatory sequences.19
A need continues to exist in the art of malarial disease control and molecular biology for a more complete functional analysis of the Plasmodium falciparum genome. However, this work continues to be restricted by the limited ability to effectively and efficiently genetically manipulate this malarial parasite using existing techniques and molecular tools.
The above and other long-felt needs in the art are met by the present invention.
According to one aspect of the present invention, there is provided a highly efficient method for transforming a disease-transmitting parasite, particularly a parasite that transmits malarial disease. In particular embodiments, the disease-transmitting parasite is Plasmodium falciparum. In particular, the method comprises a transposon-mediated insertional mutagenesis method for transforming a disease-transmitting parasite, such as Plasmodium falciparum, in a method that employs a helper plasmid and a piggyBac transposon construct. In some embodiments, the method employs a lepidopteran transposon construct, particularly a piggyBac transposon as described herein, having a selectable marker or a detectable expressed transgene, for transforming the malarial parasite, Plasmodium falciparum.
In some embodiments, the method employs a piggyBac transposon construct that includes a selectable marker defined as a drug selection marker. By way of example, the drug selection marker may comprise a drug resistance gene, such as human dihydrofolate reductase (hDHFR). In this manner, transformed disease transmitting parasites, such as transformed Plasmodium falciparum, may be selected according to the present method by selecting Plasmodium within a culture that are resistant to the selection drug.
In some embodiments, the method employs a piggyBac transposon construct that includes a detectable expressed transgene defined as a reporter gene that expresses a product detectable visually or at a molecular level, for example, by using methods known to those of skill in the molecular biological arts. By way of example, the reporter gene may comprise a detectable expressed transgene, such as Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP). In this manner, transformed disease transmitting parasites, such as transformed Plasmodium falciparum, may be selected according to the present method by selecting Plasmodium within a culture that express the detectable transgene product.
In some embodiments, the method provides for preparing transformed disease-transmitting parasites, such as Plasmodium falciparum, that possess a relatively large number of TTAA insertion sites. For example, the Plasmodium falciparum genome is relatively rich in TTAA insertion sites, having 328,961 insertion TTAA sites, and 159,841 of these TTAA insertion sites being located in the transcriptional units of P. falciparum, those parts of genes actively transcribed and translated into proteins or other functional products.
In some embodiments, the method provides for insertional transformation of a disease-transmitting parasite genome at high efficiencies, and at high saturation levels. For example, in some embodiments, the method provides for the transformation of a disease-transmitting parasite genome, such as P. falciparum, at an about 40%, 50% or more genome saturation level (about 10,000 mutations in the P. falciparum genome). In some embodiments, the saturation level of insertional transposition achieved using the described methods may be 40%, 50%, 60%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 90% or even 100% saturation level in the genome of the particular disease transmitting parasite being transmitted.
The methods of the invention also provide for very stable transformants. In some embodiments, the stable transformants may be described as capable of maintaining the inserted transformational modifications through 20 passages or more, even in the absence of a helper plasmid.
In some embodiments, the efficiency of the insertional mutagenesis achieved using the herein described methods and constructs is about 6.0 to about 13×10−4.
The number of insertions, and hence the level of insertional genome saturation achieved in a disease-transmitting parasite genome, using the presently described methods and constructs will, of course, vary, with the particular gene, as the number of TTAA potential insertional target sites is known to vary greatly between genes. However, the average number of potential insertional sites, particularly TTAA-targeted insertional sites, is 20 or greater. Hence, the presently described methods provide for efficient and highly saturating insertional transformation of virtually any disease-transmitting parasite that possesses a genome having TTAA regions. In some embodiments, the number of random insertion sites into the P. falciparum genome is 10, 9, 8, 7, 6 or 5.
The methods described herein, in some embodiments, provides for the insertional transformation of the P. falciparum genome primarily in the 5′ untranslated region (UTR), and just after the 5′ start site of a gene (See
In some aspects, the method employs a transposase-expressing helper plasmid in the transformation process/method. In some embodiments, the transposase-expressing helper plasmid is pHTHc-d. In particular embodiments, this helper plasmid is prepared as a modified pHTH helper plasmid that has been replaced with the calmodulin promoter, and the P. falciparum dhfr promoter is inserted head to head to the calmodulin promoter in an inverted arrangement (See
In some aspects, the invention provides a lepidopteran transposon construct. In some of these embodiments, the lepidopteron transposon is piggyBac. In some embodiments, the lepidopteran transposon construct includes a selectable marker. In some of these embodiments, the selectable marker is a drug resistance gene, such as human dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR). In particular embodiments, the drug selection cassette includes a hrp3 promoter. In specific embodiments, the drug selection cassette (that includes these substitutions and modifications) is pXL-BACIII-hDHFR. (See
In another aspect, the invention provides for a molecular model that may be used to identify a gene of interest using a non-specific targeting strategy. This strategy, in some embodiments, relies on phenotype for selection, and employs a lepidopteron transposon construct described as a promoter trap plasmid. In some embodiments, the promoter trap plasmid employs a design wherein the 5′ untranslated region (UTR) regulatory sequence of the construct is truncated and abrogates expression of the selectable marker gene contained therein, such as the selectable marker gene hDHFR. In some embodiments, the selectable marker gene hDHFR is obtained from the plasmid pXL-BACIII-DHFR. (See
By way of example, the promoter trap plasmid design may be prepared with a reporter gene of choice. By way of example, such a reporter gene may comprise green fluorescent protein (GFP) (See
In another aspect, the invention provides a method to evaluate Plasmodium genes and proteins that are putative vaccine targets by inserting these targets (or any one of these targets) as transgenes into the Plasmodium genome. In this particular transgene plasmid, the open reading frame (ORF) of a target gene, such as the vaccine candidate Merozoite Surface Protein-1, Erythrocyte Binding Protein-175, Apical Membrane Antigen-1, or Plasmodium vivax Duffy Binding Protein, may be placed in a piggyBac plasmid, such as pXL-BACII-DHFR, with a functional promoter and other regulatory sequences sufficient to express the target protein during parasite development. (See, e.g.,
In yet another aspect, the invention provides a vaccine comprising the identified Plasmodium genes and/or proteins identified and selected as useful for providing anti-parasite protection (i.e., as an anti-malarial), these genes and/or proteins being identified according to the method identified above.
The invention may also comprise a composition having an enriched concentration of attenuated transformed parasites, said attenuated transformed parasites comprising an orphan fragment of the piggyBac element. In some embodiments, the attenuated transformed parasites are Plasmodium falciparum.
In another application, the invention provides a method to evaluate Plasmodium genes and proteins that are the putative drug targets by inserting these targets as transgenes into the Plasmodium genome. In some embodiments, the open reading frame (ORF) of a target gene of a particular transgene plasmid, such as a gene for drug resistance, may be pfmdr, pfcrt, or dhfr. The target gene may be placed in a piggyBac plasmid, such as pXL-BACII-DHFR, with a functional promoter and other regulatory sequences sufficient to express the target protein during parasite development. Such a promoter may be the native gene promoter to replicate gene expression of the native gene or another promoter to express the target gene at different quantities or at different times during parasite development. Drug resistance genes of Plasmodium vivax and other related organisms may be evaluated similarly. In this manner, natural and artificial variants of the target gene for drug resistance can be evaluated for their sensitivity to anti-malarial drug action. Regulating factors and modifying traits associated with such drug resistance may be identified by introduction of such transgenes into different parasite genotypes.
In another aspect, the invention provides for a method to inactivate a gene permanently. In this method, the plasmid design has an asymmetric arrangement of inverted repeat (ITR) elements, for example two tandem 5′ ITR and one 3′ ITR, such that in the presence of the transposase, a single ITR element remains inserted in the genome when the functional parts of the piggyBac element are mobilized (
In yet another aspect, the invention provides for a method of codon optimization of the piggyBac trasposase. In this codon optimization method, the open reading frame (ORF) of piggyBac transposase, which has 50 rare codons compared to the P. falciparum codon sequence, is modified to include replacements codons that are common to P. falciparum. In the analysis of the piggyBac ORF region, it was determined that these rare codons occurred at every third base, and therefore, every third base of the piggyBac codon sequence will be replaced with the replacement codons identified in Table 2. In this manner, codon optimization may be achieved, and optimal expression in the organism of interest, such as the P. falciparum, may be achieved. The native ORF sequence for piggyBac appears in Table 3.
The invention will be described in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
It is advantageous to define several terms before describing the invention. It should be appreciated that the following definitions are used throughout this application.
Where the definition of terms departs from the commonly used meaning of the term, applicant intends to utilize the definitions provided below, unless specifically indicated.
For the purposes of the present invention, the term “spacer” refers to sequences, for example from 3 base pairs (bp) to about 31 base pairs (bp) or more in length, separating the 5′ and 3′ (respectively) terminal repeat and internal repeat sequences of the piggyBac transposon.
For the purposes of the present invention, the term “vector” refers to any plasmid containing piggyBac ends that is capable of moving foreign sequences into the genomes of a target organism or cell.
For the purposes of the present invention, the term “plasmid” refers to any self-replicating extrachromosomal circular DNA molecule capable of maintaining itself in bacteria.
For the purposes of the present invention, the term “transgenic organism” refers to an organism that has been altered by the addition of foreign or introduced DNA sequences (i.e., not naturally occurring or native DNA sequence and/or inserted at a new (non-native site) chromosomal location) in to its genome.
For the purposes of the present invention, the term “genetic construct” refers to any artificially assembled combination of nucleic acid, including DNA and/or RNA, sequences.
For the purposes of the present invention, the term “helper construct” refers to any plasmid construction that generates the piggyBac transposase gene product upon transfection of cells or injection of embryos.
For purposes of the present invention, the term “cell” referres to any eukaryotic or prokaryotic cell capable of being genetically manipulated from its native, wild type genetic content.
The methods of the present invention provide for more highly efficient and predictable techniques for manipulating and using the lepidopteron transposon derived piggyBac for the transformation and study of disease transmitting parasites, as well as the diseases that are manifest by these parasites.
The following non-limiting examples are illustrative of the present invention, and should not be construed to constitute any limitation of the invention as it is described in the claims appended hereto.
The present example demonstrates the utility of the present invention for use as a highly efficient method for transforming disease transmitting parasites, such as P. falciparum, using the piggyBac constructs and a helper plasmid as defined herein. These methods provide a P. falciparum transformation technique that is at least 100 times more efficient than those previously available.
A minimal piggyBac transposon vector, pXL-BACII-DHFR, was created by cloning the human dihydrofolate reductase (hdhfr) coding sequence under the control of Plasmodium 5′ and 3′ regulatory elements of calmodulin and histidine rich protein-2, respectively, in the plasmid vector, pXL-BACII.24 This drug resistance cassette was flanked by the 3′ inverted terminal repeat (ITR1) and the 5′ inverted terminal repeat (ITR2) of the piggyBac element (
A helper plasmid, pHTH, was created by cloning the piggyBac transposase coding sequence under the control of heat shock protein 86 (hsp 86) regulatory elements to mobilize the piggyBac element in the erythrocytic stages of P. falciparum (
Mature blood-stage P. falciparum NF54 parasites were purified by isolation on a magnetic column (Miltenyi Biotec). The paramagnetic hemozoin (heme polymer) present in the food vacuole of the parasites allows the separation of parasitized erythrocytes from the uninfected erythrocytes.25 The purified parasitized erythrocytes were then cultured in RBCs loaded with plasmids pXL-BACII-DHFR and pHTH26 (
After 1-4 generations of parasite growth in DNA-loaded erythrocytes, WR99210 was used to select parasites expressing hDHFR. Drug-resistant parasites were obtained from eight different transfected cultures, and Southern blot hybridizations were performed using an hdhfr probe. Novel hybridization bands were detected in each parasite population, in addition to the episomal band, indicating multiple unique integrations of the piggyBac element into the P. falciparum genome (
The average transformation efficiency of piggyBac was estimated from eight independently transfected parasite populations to be 6.4-12.6×10−4 (Table 1). This transformation efficiency is approximately 100 times more than what has previously been reported for Plasmodium.10 There was no evidence for piggyBac insertions in the absence of the helper plasmid.
The present example demonstrates the utility of the present invention for providing stable genetically modified malarial parasites, Plasmodium falciparum, that was achieved using the piggyBac construct defined herein in the presence of a helper plasmid. The transformed P. falciparum were stable for at least 20 generations in the absence of a helper plasmid. The present example also demonstrates the utility of the method for providing multiple random insertions into the P. falciparum genome using the piggyBac constructs in the presence of a helper plasmid.
In order to test the stability of piggyBac integrations in the genome, parasites from populations “1” and “2” were cloned by a limiting dilution method.27 Southern blot hybridizations with an hdhfr probe identified clones with integrations into the genome. Clones A1, B8, B12, C12 and F4 derived from population “1” appeared to have the same integration, “a”, while clones B4 and G5 that were derived from population “2” had two different integrations, “b” and “c” (
These clones were maintained in culture for 20+ generations in the absence of the helper plasmid. The integrated piggyBac cassette was stable in all the clones as seen by Southern blot hybridizations. Hence, there was not any endogenous transposase activity.
The present example demonstrates the utility of the present invention for providing multiple, random insertions into a P. falciparum genome.
To identify the sites of integration in the transformed populations, inverse PCR analyses were performed at the ITR2 of piggyBac28. The inverse PCR products were then cloned into the pGEM T-easy vector (Promega) and sequenced.
From the multiple integrations obtained in the transformed populations, nine (9) different insertion sites were isolated and identified. These insertions represented the predominant population in each transfection study, and therefore were identified with ease (
Integration of the ITR1 of the piggyBac element was confirmed in separate PCR reactions using locus-specific primers and a primer in the ITR1 of piggyBac. Sequence analysis confirmed the TTAA duplication at the ITR1 end of the insertion for all integrations, except for integrations “b”, “g”, and “h” due to the AT-rich repeat regions in those sequences. Instead, the complete integration of the DHFR cassette was confirmed in these populations by Southern hybridization RFLP analysis.
All of the identified piggyBac integrations occurred outside of the predicted ORFs,29-30 except for integration “b” which had the insertion approximately 100 bp downstream of the start codon of a hypothetical Asparagine-rich protein (PFD0200c), thereby disrupting the putative ORF of this gene.
Five insertions, “c”, “f”, “g”, “h”, and “i” were in the 5′ region of the closest ORFs. Insertions “c”, “i” and “j” were located approximately 1000 bp 5′ to the nearby ORF. Insertions “f” and “g” were approximately 300 bp upstream, respectively. Insertions “a”, “d” and “e” were 100 bp, 150 bp and 465 bp downstream of the closest ORFs, respectively. Further analysis will characterize the effects of these insertions on gene expression in these transgenic parasite-lines.
Based on the distribution of these piggyBac integration sites in the non-coding regions, it is not clear whether this apparent bias is significant. Given the higher AT richness of the non-coding regions (86%) of P. falciparum verses its coding regions (74.2%), such an apparent bias may reflect a greater probability of a TTAA target for piggyBac insertion occurring in the noncoding regions. Also, P. falciparum has a low gene density with long intergenic regions, which could increase the chances of insertions occurring in the intergenic regions.
The present example demonstrates the high distribution of TTAA sites in the P. falciparum genome, and the amenability of these sites for manipulating the P. falciparum genome using these sites as targets for genetic integration using the piggyBac transformation system and helper plasmid. The pattern of this distribution of TTAA target sites in the P. falciparum genome is also identified in the present example. The present example also demonstrates the utility of the piggyBac-transformation system as a useful tool in large-scale genetic screening protocols.
183,422 (59.5%) of TTAA sites were found in the non-coding regions of the P. falciparum genome, and 124,733 (40.5%) of TTAA sequences were found in the EST sequences of P. falciparum. From this, approximately five targets in each P. falciparum gene were identified.29,30 The identification of these multiple TTAA sites provided a mechanism for transforming P. falciparum at an extremely high efficiency.
Using an hdhfr-tagged piggyBac transposon, a transgenic P. falciparum population was generated by bonafide transpositional integration into the genome, in the presence of a transposase-expressing helper plasmid. Insertions were obtained randomly throughout the P. falciparum genome at high transformation efficiency, and the genomic insertion sites were rapidly identified by using an inverse PCR technique.
Parasites with single transposon insertions were cloned out from mixed populations and the integrated transposons in these transformed parasite lines were stable for many generations, thus confirming their utility for phenotypic analyses.
piggyBac-mediated transformation protocols were adapted for conditions compatible for large-scale genetic screening, further corroborating the tremendous utility of this technique. The practicality of such a useful application was demonstrated by the transfected parasite populations 3-6 (
The piggyBac transposition system is demonstrated to be an important new genetic tool for manipulation of the P. falciparum genome. This is the first report of high efficiency transposition in this deadly human pathogen. With this efficient integration system, many genetic strategies that have eluded Plasmodium research will now be feasible. This methodology, being used in the blood stages, is unable to modify genes that are absolutely essential for the blood-stage development of the parasite. To overcome this, piggyBac mobilization can be carried out in the other life cycle stages of the parasite by using a helper plasmid designed for sexual stage-specific expression with another selectable marker.
The ability of the piggyBac transposable system for use in large-scale mutagenesis of P. falciparum, will provide new insight into the complex genetic structure of the malaria parasite and greatly accelerate efforts to develop novel intervention strategies.
The present example describes an efficient helper plasmid that may be used in the practice of the herein described transformation methods using the piggyBac transposon construct.
In some initial studies, the pfhsp86 promoter was used to drive transposase expression in P. falciparum. This promoter was chosen because it is known to be effective for transgene expression in transfected P. falciparum.
This helper plasmid has been re-engineered to boost transposase expression (
This design of the helper plasmid may be further modified by addition of a selectable marker BSD (pHTH-BSD) or NEO (pHTH-NEO) in order to create a helper line of parasite that constitutively expresses transposase, carrying the helper plasmid as a stable episome. Mobilization of piggyBac in other development stages may be achieved by addition of a stage-specific promoter in place of hsp86 in the pHTH as well as a drug resistance cassette.
The present example is presented to demonstrate the utility of the present invention for providing a transformation system for a disease-transmitting parasite, such as Plasmodium falciparum, that provides a population of transformed P. falciparum having a highly saturated transformed genome.
In P. falciparum, the total number of target TTAA insertion sites is 328,861 with 159,841 in the CDS. Although the number of TTAA sites per gene varies considerably, the average number of TTAA sites per gene is >20. The pattern of piggyBac insertions within P. falciparum genes occur primarily in the 5′UTR and just after the 5′ start site (
High saturation mutagenesis may be used to demonstrate genes essential for parasite development in humans, genes vital for parasite survival, etc.
The present example is presented to demonstrate the utility of the present invention for use as a technique to annotate a genome of a parasite, such as the malarial parasite, P. falciparum, using the herein described piggyBac constructs and helper plasmid technique.
A simple promoter trap strategy was used that relied solely on an indigenous promoter upstream of the transposon insertion for expression (
The present example is provided to demonstrate the utility of the invention for providing an optimized piggyBac transformation vector that includes substituted codons. These substituted piggyBac constructs have enhanced transformation efficiency potential for transforming the P. falciparum genome.
piggyBac transposase has a single open reading frame (ORF) of 1785 nucleotides, and our analysis found that 50 of its 594 codons are rare codons for P. falciparum. Rare codons were defined as occurring in ≦10% of the all P. falciparum ORFs.29 Table 2 identifies the amino acids having rare P. falciparum codons present in the piggyBac transposase and the more common codon that will be used to replace the native piggyBac nucleotide. In all cases, it is the third base that is replaced. Codon usage in the rodent malaria parasites is similar. Codon optimization provides optimal expression in the organisms of interest.
The present example presents the native sequence of the open reading frame (ORF) of the piggyBac transposon. Particular identified “rare codons” within this sequence, rare relative to P. falciparum naturally occurring codons, are identified (See Table 2) and replaced so as to provide the modified piggyBac construct having improved efficiency as described in Example 8.
In pXL-BACIII-hDHFR, the drug selection cassette has been re-engineered to have the hrp3 promoter (
The present example is provided to demonstrate the utility of the invention for providing an asymmetric piggyBac transformation vector that includes an asymmetric arrangement of inverted repeat (ITR) elements. These asymmetric piggyBac constructs have the potential for permanently inactivating P. falciparum genes in a manner suitable for creation of an attenuated parasite vaccine.
An asymmetric arrangement of the inverted repeats necessary for piggyBac insertion and excision from genomic DNA flank a drug selection cassette or other transgene. piggyBac transposase does not operate by scanning, but identifies the ITR termini directly, so remobilization is unbiased in terms of the ITR used, and an equal number of mobilizations will occur with ITRs in tandem.
This strategy relies on a second mobilization, leaving an orphan arm of the original transposon, which will disrupt the targeted gene, to inactivate expression or generate a direct protein fusion.
All documents, patents, journal articles and other materials cited in the present application are hereby incorporated by reference.
Although the present invention has been fully described in conjunction with several embodiments thereof with reference to the accompanying drawings, it is to be understood that various changes and modifications may be apparent to those skilled in the art. Such changes and modifications are to be understood as included within the scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims, unless they depart therefrom.
The following references are hereby specifically incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/674,312, filed Apr. 25, 2005, entitled “Transposon-Mediated Mutagenesis Of Plasmodium Falciparum,” which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
The United States Government has rights in this invention pursuant to National Institutes of Health (NIH) Grant No. RO1 AI33656 and RO1 AI48561.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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7129083 | Handler | Oct 2006 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60674312 | Apr 2005 | US |