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Not Exactly Rocket Science
« Orangutans are masters of conserving energy
Pakasuchus – the crocodile that’s trying to be a mammal »

You are what you eat – how your diet defines you in trillions of ways

Gutbacteria

We depend on a special organ to digest the food we eat and you won’t find it in any anatomy textbook. It’s the ‘microbiome’ – a set of trillions of bacteria living inside your intestines that outnumber your own cells by ten to one. We depend on them. They wield genes that allow them to break down molecules in our food that we can’t digest ourselves. And we’re starting to realise that this secret society within our bowels has a membership roster that changes depending on what we eat.

These changes take place across both space and time. Different cultures around the world have starkly contrasting diets and their gut bacteria are different too. As we grow older, we eat increasingly diverse foods, from the milk of infancy to the complex menus of adulthood. As our palate changes, so do our gut bacteria.

It all starts from the moment we’re born, when we inherit our first microbiome from our mums – a zeroeth birthday present that give us the digestive abilities that we need from day one. These first colonists are laden with genes for digesting milk proteins, allowing babies to make full use of their only source of nourishment.

But breast milk isn’t just a meal for baby, but for baby’s first gut bacteria. After lactose and fat, the third most common ingredients in breast milk are small sugar molecules called ‘oligosaccharides’. Gut bacteria thrive on these and Angela Zivkovic from the University of California, Davis thinks that they evolved as part of breast milk, to selectively feed the right bacteria in a baby’s bowels.

Breast milk contains over 200 types of oligosaccharides. They’re part of a baby’s immune system by acting as decoys for disease-causing bacteria. They look like molecules on the surface of human cells, which infectious bacteria recognise and stick to. By presenting alternative targets, the oligosaccharides divert these bacteria away from actual cells.

But they also feed helpful bacteria just as they distract harmful ones. The bifidiobacteria, which are common in the guts of breast-fed infants, have a preference for milk oligosaccharides, and some species can survive on these molecules alone. So when mum suckles her infant, she’s looking after both her baby and its partners-in-digestion.

Of course, babies  are eventually weaned off milk and as they move to solid foods, their guts are the sites of tumultuous change. Jeremy Koenig from Cornell University studied these shifts by tracking the gut bacteria of one specific baby for its first 2.5 years. Koenig had the unenviable task of collecting over 60 samples from the baby’s soiled diapers. As the child grew up, the bacteria in his guts became gradually more diverse, but the roster went through four bigger shifts all associated with big life events – getting fever, starting on solid foods, taking antibiotic treatments, and shifting from breast milk to cow milk.

With each change, the baby’s microbiome started wielding different genetic tools. His first group were rife with genes for digesting milk proteins. Just before he was weaned on solid food, his microbiome started activating genes that break down the complex sugars and starches in plant food. It was already prepared for the arrival of peas and other table food. And when he actually started eating these foods, the bacteria changed even further to include more members of the Bacteroidetes, a family that specialises in digesting plant molecules.

In the baby’s second year, when he started scoffing increasingly complex foods, the abilities of his microbiome diversified again. They started activating genes that can use carbohydrates effectively, produce vitamins, and break down unusual and diverse chemicals. Koenig thinks that things settle down at this point and the make-up of our bacterial cartel becomes relatively stable. Even after an antibiotic assault, the same species bounce back in the same numbers. But once again, the food we eat determines which species set up shop in the first place.

Burkina_Faso

Carlotta de Filippo compared the gut bacteria of 14 children from a village in Burkina Faso with those of 14 children in Florence, Italy. The African children came from families of subsistence farmers and their menus were mostly vegetarian. The eat little in the way of fat or animal protein and their diet is heavy in fibre, starch and plant carbohydrates. By contrast, the Italian kids ate a typical Western diet, high in animal protein, sugar, starch and fat and low in fibre. They ate about half as much fibre as their African peers and about 50% more calories.

These differences are reflected in their bowels. The bacterial community in the African guts were dominated by those plant-digesting specialists, the Bacteroidetes. They probably helped the children to break down the tough fibres that they eat and extract more energy from their meals. Meanwhile, the Italian bowels were dominated by another group, the Firmicutes, which are generally more common in obese people compared to lean ones.

Of course, diet is just one of many traits that separate children from Italy and Burkina Faso, including genes, hygiene and climate. But the youngest babies in de Filippo’s sample show that diet wields by far the greatest influence on the microbiome. The toddlers, unlike their older peers, all ate the same food – breast milk – and as a result, their microbiomes were very similar to one another’s, despite the gulf of differences between their cultures. It’s only at the point of weaning when their diets diverged that their gut communities did too.

The African children also had a greater diversity of gut bacteria, which probably hitch a ride into their bodies via their food. In Europe, generic, uncontaminated food presents a blockade to bacteria from the outside world, which means that Western gut communities have become gentrified. They lack genetic diversity, and they have few ways of increasing it.

This is bad news, for bacteria from the outside world provide a reservoir of useful genes that could help the microbiome to adapt to unusual diets. The fibre-digesting abilities of the Burkina Faso children are probably one example of this. A more striking one was discovered just last year: Japanese gut bacteria have borrowed genes from an oceanic species, which allow them to digest carbohydrates in seaweed. Western diets hold back this evolutionary potential.

But De Filippo thinks that the problems are bigger. An unbalanced or simplified microbiome could be damaging the health of Westerners more directly, affecting the risk of a variety of other medical conditions, including allergies, inflammatory bowel disease, bowel cancer and obesity. A diverse microbiome could also prevent more harmful species from setting up shop – indeed, and somewhat unexpectedly, food poisoning bacteria like Shigella and Escherichia were less common in the Burkinabe children than the Italian ones.

As we learn more about our bacterial partners, we might eventually find ways of influencing them to improve our health, just as breast milk appears to selectively nourish helpful species. The prospect of combating obesity, allergies or infections by inoculating people with the right bacteria might seem far-fetched but it’s already happening. In 2008, Alexander Khoruts from the University of Minnesota managed to cure a woman with a “vicious gut infection” by giving her a transplant of her husband’s gut bacteria.

A success like this is just the beginning, based on a fairly limited understanding of the microbiome. Koenig’s study demonstrates how important it is to look at gut bacteria over time while de Filippo shows that it’s equally essential to look at how they vary from place to place. This is the sort of deeper understanding that future triumphs will be built from.

References:

  • PNAS http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1000083107
  • PNAS http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1005963107
  • PNAS http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1000081107

More on the microbiome:

  • Baby’s first bacteria depend on route of delivery
  • Gut bacteria in Japanese people borrowed sushi-digesting genes from ocean bacteria
  • The bacterial zoo in your bowel
  • The bacterial zoo living on your skin
  • Gut bacteria – fat or thin, family or friends, shared or unique
  • Human gut bacteria linked to obesity

If the citation link isn’t working, read why here
//

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An introduction to the microbiome

<p>You could be sitting alone and still be completely outnumbered for your body is home to trillions upon trillions of tiny passengers – bacteria. Your body is made up of around ten trillion cells, but you harbour <em>a hundred </em>trillion bacteria. For every gene in your genome, there are 100 bacterial ones. This is your ‘microbiome’ and it has a huge impact on your health, your ability to digest food and more. We, in turn, affect them. Everything from the food we eat to the way we’re born influences the species of bacteria that take up residence in our bodies.</p>
<p>This slideshow is a tour through this “<a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/20/opinion/20tue4.html?_r=1">universe of us</a>”. Every slide has links to previous pieces that I’ve written on the subject if you want to delve deeper. Or download a podcast of <a href="blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2011/10/19/i-microbes-my-radio-4-talk-on-the-hordes-of-microbes-inside-us/">my Radio 4 programme on these hidden partners</a>.</p>
<p>Image by David Gregory &amp; Debbie Marshall, Wellcome Images</p><p>To our microbiome, the human body must seem like an entire planet, full of different ecosystems. This is especially true for those that <a title="Permanent Link to The bacterial zoo living on your skin" href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/notrocketscience/2010/06/23/2009/05/28/the-bacterial-zoo-living-on-your-skin/">live on our skin</a>. At the microscopic scale, the hairy, moist surface of your armpits is as different from the smooth, dry skin of your forearms as a rainforest is to a desert.</p>
<p>In a thorough survey of our skin microbiome, Elizabeth Grice identified species from at least 205 different genera. Your forearm has the richest community with an average of 44 species, while your nostril, ears and inguinal crease (between leg and groin) are the most stable habitats. Grice also found at bacteria from a specific body part have more in common than those from a specific person. Your butt microbes have more in common with mine than they do with your elbow microbes.</p><p>Despite its diversity, the skin microbiome is a tiny country village compared to the <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/notrocketscience/2010/06/23/2010/03/03/the-bacterial-zoo-in-your-bowel/">bustling metropolis inside your bowels</a>. The dark corridors of your intestine house more bacteria than any other part of your body. A team of international scientists led by Junjie Qin and Ruiqiang Li discovered that each of our bowels carries at least 160 bacterial species. Together, our collective guts have just under 3.3 million bacterial genes, more than 150 times as many as reside in our own genomes. They also showed that the gut microbiome of a healthy person looks very different to that of someone with a bowel condition like Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis.</p>
<p>Despite this diversity, Peer Bork has shown that the gut bacteria of people from Europe, North American and Japan collapse <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2011/04/20/divided-by-language-united-by-gut-bacteria-%e2%80%93-people-have-three-common-gut-types/">into three enterotypes, or gut types</a>. These clusters cut across age, gender, body weight and nationality. Each produces energy in a slightly different way, manufactures a different vitamin and may affect our susceptibility to different diseases.</p>
<p>The quest to understand gut microbes may seem like an arcane niche of science, but it’s actually very important for public health. We rely on these microscopic passengers more than we realise. They harvest energy from our food, provide us with nutrients that would otherwise be denied to us, prevent the growth of harmful bacteria, and more. In many ways, they’re like a forgotten organ. They can also go rogue, changing their community in ways that are linked to obesity or bowel diseases.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Image by Med. Mic. Sciences Cardiff Uni, Wellcome Images</p><p><a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/notrocketscience/2010/06/23/baby%e2%80%99s-first-bacteria-depend-on-route-of-delivery/">We inherit our microbiomes from our mother</a>, picking up billions of them as we slide from her largely bacteria-free womb through her microbe-laden vagina. Being slathered in vaginal microbes might not seem like much of a treat but it’s vital for a newborn.</p>
<p>Babies end up with a very different portfolio of skin and gut bacteria depending on how they are delivered. Those who are born naturally harbour a more diverse array of bacteria, which resemble those in their mother’s vagina, including several species that are important for digestion. Those who are delivered by C-section are colonised by a less diverse array of bacteria, including some like <em>Staphylococcus</em> that are picked up from the hospital environment.</p>
<p>These early differences could directly affect a baby’s health for these first colonisers determine which the species that will follow. The bacterial heirlooms that babies inherit from their mothers might act as a shield, preventing more dangerous microbes like from setting up shop. By changing baby’s first bacteria, C-sections could alter the make-up of their later communities, leading to long-term effects on health and nutrition.</p><p><a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/notrocketscience/2010/08/03/you-are-what-you-eat-%e2%80%93-how-your-diet-defines-you-in-trillions-of-ways/">Our microbiome is like a hidden organ</a>, helping us to break down foodstuffs that our own cells cannot cope with. And in turn, our food affects our microbiome. Our first set is laden with genes for digesting milk proteins, allowing us to make full use of our only source of nourishment as babies. Breast milk might even have evolved to nourish the most beneficial bacteria with special sugars.</p>
<p>Just before we move onto solid foods, our microbiome starts activating genes that break down the complex sugars and starches in plants, preparing us for the menu to come. As our diet diversifies, so do our bacteria. They activate genes that use carbohydrates effectively, produce vitamins, and break down unusual and diverse chemicals. As adults, our microbiome becomes relatively stable, but its membership roster depends on the food we eat. The guts of African villagers who eat high-fibre diets are dominated by plant-digesting specialists, which are much rarer in the guts of Europeans who eat high-fat diets.</p><p>Before the age of better food hygiene, our meals used to provide a rich source of foreign bacteria that our microbiome could plunder for genetic tools. Bacteria trade genes as easily as humans trade gifts. For example, the gut bacteria of Japanese people have borrowed genes from a marine species, which now <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/notrocketscience/2010/04/07/gut-bacteria-in-japanese-people-borrowed-sushi-digesting-genes-from-ocean-bacteria/">allows them to digest the special carbohydrates in seaweed</a>. The marine bacterium eats seaweed, including the types that are used to make nori, a common sushi ingredient.  In the past, when diners wolfed down morsels of nori, some also swallowed seaweed-eating bacteria, which traded genes with those in their own guts.</p>
<p>This wouldn’t happen nowadays because nori is roasted before being eaten. In fact, processing food presents a blockade to bacteria from the outside world and as a result, Western gut communities have become gentrified. They lack genetic diversity, and they have few ways of increasing it.</p>
<p>Images by Alice Wiegand, Alex Kovach, Tristan Barbeyron and Mirjam Czjzek</p><p>The microbiome is more than just our partners-in-digestion – they affect our health too. They have been linked to a variety of medical conditions, including allergies, immune diseases, and even obesity. For example, the balance of the two major groups – the Bacteroidetes and Firmicutes – <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/notrocketscience/2010/06/23/2008/10/06/human-gut-bacteria-linked-to-obesity/">could influence our body weight</a>.</p>
<p>Fat mice and humans have a less diverse milieu of gut bacteria, with a <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience//notrocketscience/2008/12/01/gut-bacteria-fat-or-thin-family-or-friends-shared-or-unique/">greater proportion of Firmicutes to Bacteroidetes in their bowels</a>. This ratio increases if we eat high-fat diets and falls if we eat low-fat diets. And if the gut bacteria from fat mice are transplanted into mice with no gut bacteria of their own, they can make the new hosts overeat and pile on the pounds. This research suggests that gut bacteria could be manipulating us for their own ends. Some species send out signals that make us hungrier, encourage us to eat more, and affect the way we store fat. And some of our immune genes help to moderate these signals.</p>
<p>As we learn more about our bacterial partners, we might eventually find ways of influencing them to improve our health. This is already happening. In 2008, Alexander Khoruts from the University of Minnesota managed to cure a woman with a “vicious gut infection” by giving her <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/13/science/13micro.html?_r=2&amp;pagewanted=1">a transplant of her husband’s gut bacteria</a>.</p><p>What happens in the gut doesn’t stay in the gut – it sometimes affects the brain. Animal studies have started to show that the microbiome, from its staging ground in the bowel, can influence the development of its host’s brain.</p>
<p>Rochellys Diaz Heijtz found that <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/notrocketscience/2011/01/31/gut-bacteria-steer-the-development-of-the-young-brain/">germ-free mice, without any microbiome</a>, were more active, less anxious and less risk-averse than usual. Their brains differed in the activity of over a hundred genes that provide cells with energy, influence chemical communications in the brain and strengthen the connection between nerve cells. Heijtz could even shift her germ-free mice towards “normal” behaviour and genetic activity by giving them a microbiome transplant, but this only worked early in their lives.</p>
<p>But later,  Javier Bravo  at University College Cork managed to<a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2011/08/29/from-guts-to-brains-%e2%80%93-eating-probiotic-bacteria-changes-behaviour-in-mice/"> change the behaviour of normal adult mice</a> by feeding them with a probiotic bacterium  called <span id="apture_prvw1" class="aptureLink"><span class="aptureLinkIcon" style="background-position: right -1348px;"> </span><span class="aptureLink snap_noshots"><em>Lactobacillus rhamnosus</em></span></span>,  often found in yoghurts and dairy products. The bacterial menu changed  the levels of signalling chemicals in the rodents’ brains, and reduced  behaviours associated with stress, anxiety and depression.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Gil Sharon found that <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/notrocketscience/2010/11/01/gut-bacteria-change-the-sexual-preferences-of-fruit-flies/">gut bacteria can shape the sexual choices of flies</a>. Flies that are raised on diets of starch prefer to mate with other “starch flies” while those raised on maltose prefer “maltose flies”. When Sharon dosed the flies with antibiotics, she killed both their gut bacteria <em>and </em>their sexual preferences. If she inoculated the sterile flies with the microbiome of their peers, their preferences reappeared instantly. It’s possible that the bacteria influence the levels of sex pheromones that affect the fly’s attractiveness.</p>
<p>These studies show that you can’t understand an animal’s evolution simply by considering the evolutionary pressures that act on its genome. You also have to consider the genes of the bacteria and other passengers that live inside it. We’re each like a superorganism – a unified alliance between the genes of several different species, only one of which is human.</p>The teeming masses of the microbiome also contain a record of our evolutionary past. Howard Ochman found that the <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/notrocketscience/2010/11/16/gut-bacteria-recap-the-evolution-of-apes/">evolution of the gut microbes in great apes</a> perfectly recaps that of their host. The bacteria from the two species of gorilla are more closely related to each other than they are to human gut bacteria. Geography, diet and disease aside, the main thing that influences the members of these bacterial cities is the species of the host. You could reconstruct the evolution of the apes, simply by comparing the bacteria in their bowels.<p>The bacteria of our microbiome are mostly our allies. <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2011/10/13/beneficial-gut-bacteria-can-become-virus-collaborators/">But they can also they can be turned against us.</a> Two new studies in mice have found  that viruses - including one that causes polio, and another that causes cancer - can exploit gut bacteria to infect our bodies.</p>
<p>They use molecules on the bacteria's surfaces as reins, to ride towards host cells, or backstage passes to sneak past the immune system. Our microscopic allies can turn into  unwitting collaborators for dangerous infections.</p>
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August 3rd, 2010 by Ed Yong in Anthropology and social science, Bacteria, Child development, Genetics, Medicine & health, Microbiome, Obesity | 18 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

18 Responses to “You are what you eat – how your diet defines you in trillions of ways”

  1. 1.   Jim Says:
    August 3rd, 2010 at 10:53 am

    I’m reminded of a study a while back that found links between children who grew up in more sterile environments with adolescent onset allergies and asthma.

  2. 2.   Antonia Says:
    August 3rd, 2010 at 1:10 pm

    Super interesting, but I’m confused. Were they Dutch children or Italian children? Can people in Western cultures retrain their bacteria or cultivate a greater variety into adulthood by eating from a greater range of sources? The similarities in the breastmilk fed babies seems to indicate yes.

  3. 3.   Chris Says:
    August 3rd, 2010 at 2:11 pm

    Really interesting; nice writeup!
    Besides the rather obvious (and maybe correct) point, that vegetable with a history of soil, rain, insects and dust has probably more to offer than taste (I’m thinking dutch green houses here); I’m wondering, when the first dietary supplements/pills with bacteria will appear in the supermarket shelves.

  4. 4.   Lara Says:
    August 3rd, 2010 at 2:34 pm

    I’m so glad someone is talking about this!

  5. 5.   Kloro Says:
    August 3rd, 2010 at 6:01 pm

    “I’m wondering, when the first dietary supplements/pills with bacteria will appear”

    They’re already here. Pills are available from sources like Whole Foods (a grocery chain on the West Coast of the US) and products like Activa Yogurt are available.

    From what I understand, though, only one species of bacteria is available so far.

  6. 6.   zackoz Says:
    August 3rd, 2010 at 9:11 pm

    Amazing stuff – I’m getting used to regarding myself as some sort of hybrid or chimera consisting of some of my own genes and plenty of bacterial ones.

    Since I eat Asian food fairly often, I wonder whether that increases the diversity of my bacterial friends, or – since most of the eating is done here in Australia – whether Western-style bacterial blandness has taken over.

    I share the confusion about the Dutch/ Italian children, though, I must say.

  7. 7.   sittingoverhere Says:
    August 3rd, 2010 at 11:55 pm

    @ Kloro
    I believe there are many species currently in use for either therapies or in active culture fermented milk products from the Lactococcus casei (Shirota) used in Yakult products, Bifidobactia strains found in other fermenting milk products such as yoghurts and even some E.coli and Yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) strains.

    I was at a microbiology conference recently and a couple of people presented work on microbiomes. I think its important to emphasise that functionality is more important that phylogeny. It doesn’t matter what species are present in your gut so long as the required functions are being performed. For this reason I don’t think there will ever be a definitive ‘healthy microbiome’ as its far too dependent on diet, geography and lifestyle.

  8. 8.   Sheri Says:
    August 4th, 2010 at 12:34 am

    Nice, and yes the Dutch escaped me. After exciting adventures in gut-searching, I have a distinct re-population taking place from drinking the OrganoGold coffee with ganoderma lucidum. Not sure the demographics of my intestinal buddies but sure am grateful this ‘red reishi’ process reached me. Anyone know more on the intestinal impact of this product?

  9. 9.   Luca Says:
    August 4th, 2010 at 2:33 am

    “And when he actually started eating these foods, the bacteria changed even further to include more members of the Bacteroidetes, a family that specialises in digesting plant molecules.”

    This is fascinating. I had always ingenuously assumed that they were all there and would just shift in proportion, or maybe activate different metabolic pathways depending on th food ingested.

  10. 10.   Ed Yong Says:
    August 4th, 2010 at 3:01 am

    Sorry folks – they’re Italian kids. The researchers are Dutch. Corrected.

  11. 11.   jez abbott Says:
    August 4th, 2010 at 7:30 am

    Hi Ed, trying to make contact with you about a book proposal for a London publisher on equations – science, maths, the universe, that kind of thing. Cannot make heads or tails of twitter or your blog and Cancer Research aren’t much help either. But I like your writing and want to make contact. Can you email me and I’ll tell all about the book, the publisher and anything else you’d like to know. 30,000 words, deadline 22 Nov. Be good to make contact and chew the fat on Schwarzschild’s black hole equation etcetc…

  12. 12.   Ahcuah Says:
    August 4th, 2010 at 1:08 pm

    I’ve occasionally wondered just how much of the “obesity epidemic” is really due to certain bacteria in our guts. Maybe a lot of folks are getting “infected” with a new strain.

    For that matter, maybe the general increase in weight as we get older is related to being more likely to acquire such a strain the longer we live. I know I am just as active in my 50s as I was in my 30s (maybe moreso–more time), yet fat seems to want to stick to me. Folks call that metabolism slowing down as we age, but we might at least consider the possibility that it has something to do with our gut bacteria.

  13. 13.   Dionigi Says:
    August 5th, 2010 at 7:14 am

    Nice of you to call it a transplant of her husband’s gut bacteria.

  14. 14.   Kal Says:
    August 5th, 2010 at 6:22 pm

    @Dionigi:

    Hey, if it would save my life, I don’t care WHAT they’d call it… I just hope my wife’s, er, bacteria would be up to the job.

    Man that poor lady… diarrhea is never fun, but EIGHT MONTHS?!? Yikes.

  15. 15.   Michael Meadon Says:
    August 10th, 2010 at 11:00 am

    Ed, this is probably the single best science article I’ve read in a month. Well done, really.

  16. 16.   Ursula Ferreira Says:
    August 12th, 2010 at 8:52 am

    Thank you! More proof that breastfeeding is important for one’s lifelong health!

  17. 17.   Don Says:
    September 6th, 2010 at 7:46 pm

    Great article!
    I wonder what preservatives in food do to gut bacteria.

  18. 18.   Cedar Says:
    June 10th, 2011 at 4:04 pm

    Do you think that a baby who only got 10 days of breastmilk, then switched to formula supplemented with probiotics would retain enough bacteria from the initial breastmilk to populate their guts with healthy bacteria? I am not asking this hypothetically.

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