From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Viruses Portal
Welcome!

The capsid of SV40, an icosahedral virus
The capsid of SV40, an icosahedral virus

Viruses are small infectious agents that can replicate only inside the living cells of an organism. Viruses infect all forms of life, including animals, plants, fungi, bacteria and archaea. They are found in almost every ecosystem on Earth and are the most abundant type of biological entity, with millions of different types, although only about 6,000 viruses have been described in detail. Some viruses cause disease in humans, and others are responsible for economically important diseases of livestock and crops.

Virus particles (known as virions) consist of genetic material, which can be either DNA or RNA, wrapped in a protein coat called the capsid; some viruses also have an outer lipid envelope. The capsid can take simple helical or icosahedral forms, or more complex structures. The average virus is about 1/100 the size of the average bacterium, and most are too small to be seen directly with an optical microscope.

The origins of viruses are unclear: some may have evolved from plasmids, others from bacteria. Viruses are sometimes considered to be a life form, because they carry genetic material, reproduce and evolve through natural selection. However they lack key characteristics (such as cell structure) that are generally considered necessary to count as life. Because they possess some but not all such qualities, viruses have been described as "organisms at the edge of life".

Selected disease

Chickenpox rash in an adult male
Chickenpox rash in an adult male

Chickenpox is caused by initial infection with varicella zoster virus, a DNA virus of the Alphaherpesvirinae subfamily. The virus naturally infects only humans, but some other primates have been infected artificially. Symptoms appear 10–21 days after exposure: an itchy vesicular skin rash, and small ulcers in the oral cavity and tonsil areas. The rash usually resolves by 7 days, but the virus remains latent in nerve cell bodies, and can emerge years or decades later to cause shingles. Chickenpox is transmitted by the respiratory route, as well as direct contact with lesions.

A classic disease of childhood, the highest prevalence occurs at 4–10 years. Chickenpox is rarely fatal in people with a normal immune system, with around 6,400 deaths worldwide in 2015, about 1 in 60,000 infections. Adults often have more severe symptoms than children, and are at higher risk of complications such as pneumonia, bronchitis, hepatitis and encephalitis. Pregnant women and people with a suppressed immune system have the highest complication risk. Chickenpox during the first 28 weeks of gestation can lead to foetal malformations. Infection in adults is usually treated with antiviral drugs, such as aciclovir or valaciclovir, which reduces symptom severity and the risk of complications. A vaccine is available.

Selected image

Portrait of Louis Pasteur by Albert Edelfelt (1885)

Louis Pasteur invented a vaccine against rabies, and tested it on a boy bitten by a rabid dog in 1885.

Credit: Albert Edelfelt (1885)

In the news

Map showing the prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 cases; black: highest prevalence; dark red to pink: decreasing prevalence; grey: no recorded cases or no data
Map showing the prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 cases; black: highest prevalence; dark red to pink: decreasing prevalence; grey: no recorded cases or no data

26 February: In the ongoing pandemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), more than 110 million confirmed cases, including 2.5 million deaths, have been documented globally since the outbreak began in December 2019. WHO

18 February: Seven asymptomatic cases of avian influenza A subtype H5N8, the first documented H5N8 cases in humans, are reported in Astrakhan Oblast, Russia, after more than 100,0000 hens died on a poultry farm in December. WHO

14 February: Seven cases of Ebola virus disease are reported in Gouécké, south-east Guinea. WHO

7 February: A case of Ebola virus disease is detected in North Kivu Province of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. WHO

4 February: An outbreak of Rift Valley fever is ongoing in Kenya, with 32 human cases, including 11 deaths, since the outbreak started in November. WHO

21 November: The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) gives emergency-use authorisation to casirivimab/imdevimab, a combination monoclonal antibody (mAb) therapy for non-hospitalised people twelve years and over with mild-to-moderate COVID-19, after granting emergency-use authorisation to the single mAb bamlanivimab earlier in the month. FDA 1, 2

18 November: The outbreak of Ebola virus disease in Équateur Province, Democratic Republic of the Congo, which started in June, has been declared over; a total of 130 cases were recorded, with 55 deaths. UN

Selected article

Baltimore classification
Baltimore classification

Virus classification is the process of naming viruses and placing them into a taxonomic system. They are mainly classified by phenotypic characteristics, such as morphology, nucleic acid type, mode of replication, host organisms and the type of disease they cause.

Two schemes are in common use. The International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV), established in the early 1970s, classifies viruses into taxa (groups) similar to the biological classification used for cellular organisms, which reflect viruses believed to have a common ancestor. As of 2019, 9 kingdoms, 16 phyla, 36 classes, 55 orders, 168 families, 1,421 genera and 6,589 species of viruses have been defined. Since 2018, viruses have also been classified into higher-level taxa called realms. Four realms are defined, as of 2020, encompassing almost all RNA viruses; some DNA viruses have yet to be assigned a realm.

The older Baltimore classification (pictured), proposed in 1971 by David Baltimore, places viruses into seven groups (I–VII) based on their nucleic acid type, number of strands and sense, as well as the method the virus uses to generate mRNA. There is some concordance between Baltimore groups and the higher levels of the ICTV scheme.

Selected outbreak

The deer mouse was the reservoir for Sin Nombre hantavirus in the Four Corners outbreak.

The 1993 hantavirus outbreak in the Four Corners region of southwest USA was of a novel hantavirus, subsequently named Sin Nombre virus. It caused the previously unrecognised hantavirus pulmonary syndrome – the first time that a hantavirus had been associated with respiratory symptoms. Mild flu-like symptoms were followed by the sudden onset of pulmonary oedema, which was fatal in half of those affected. A total of 24 cases were reported in April–May 1993, with many of those affected being from the Navajo Nation territory. Hantavirus infection of humans generally occurs by inhaling aerosolised urine and faeces of rodents, in this case the deer mouse (Peromyscus; pictured).

Previously documented hantavirus disease had been confined to Asia and Europe, and these were the first human cases to be recognised in the USA. Subsequent investigation revealed undiagnosed cases dating back to 1959, and Navajo people recalled similar outbreaks in 1918, 1933 and 1934.

Selected quotation

Recommended articles

Viruses & Subviral agents: bat virome • elephant endotheliotropic herpesvirus • HIV • introduction to viruses  • Playa de Oro virus • poliovirus • prion • rotavirus  • virus

Diseases: colony collapse disorder • common cold • croup • dengue fever  • gastroenteritis • Guillain–Barré syndrome • hepatitis B • hepatitis C • hepatitis E • herpes simplex • HIV/AIDS • influenza  • meningitis  • myxomatosis • polio  • pneumonia • shingles • smallpox

Epidemiology & Interventions: 2007 Bernard Matthews H5N1 outbreak • Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations • Disease X • 2009 flu pandemic • HIV/AIDS in Malawi • polio vaccine • Spanish flu • West African Ebola virus epidemic

Virus–Host interactions: antibody • host • immune system  • parasitism • RNA interference

Methodology: metagenomics

Social & Media: And the Band Played On • Contagion • "Flu Season" • Frank's Cock  • Race Against Time: Searching for Hope in AIDS-Ravaged Africa  • social history of viruses  • " Steve Burdick" • "The Time Is Now" • " What Lies Below"

People: Brownie Mary • Macfarlane Burnet  • Bobbi Campbell • Aniru Conteh • people with hepatitis C  • HIV-positive people  • Bette Korber • Henrietta Lacks • Linda Laubenstein • Barbara McClintock  • poliomyelitis survivors  • Joseph Sonnabend • Eli Todd • Ryan White

Selected virus

X-ray crystallographic structure of the Norwalk virus capsid
X-ray crystallographic structure of the Norwalk virus capsid

Noroviruses are a genus of non- enveloped, single-stranded RNA viruses in the family Caliciviridae. The positive-sense RNA genome is approximately 7500 nucleotides long. Known noroviruses fall into five different genogroups (GI–GV); three groups infect humans, the other two mice, and cattle and other bovines. All are considered strains of a single species, Norwalk virus.

Noroviruses are extremely contagious, with fewer than 20 virus particles being infectious. They are transmitted directly from person to person and indirectly via contaminated water and food. After infection, the virus replicates in the small intestine, causing acute gastroenteritis, which develops 12–48 hours after exposure and lasts for 24–72 hours. The characteristic symptoms include nausea, forceful vomiting, watery diarrhoea and abdominal pain. Infection is usually self-limiting and rarely severe. Noroviruses cause 18% of acute gastroenteritis episodes in humans, with around 685 million cases and 200,000 deaths every year, mainly in very young, elderly or immunosuppressed people. No vaccine is available. Hand washing with soap and water is effective in reducing transmission.

Did you know?

Soybean aphid on a soybean leaf

Selected biography

Aniru Conteh

Aniru Sahib Sahib Conteh (6 August 1942 – 4 April 2004) was a Sierra Leonean physician and expert on the clinical treatment of Lassa fever, a viral haemorrhagic fever endemic to West Africa.

He joined the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Lassa fever programme in Segbwema, first as superintendent and then as clinical director. After the Sierra Leone Civil War began in 1991, Conteh moved to the Kenema Government Hospital, where he spent the next two decades running the only dedicated Lassa fever ward in the world. He collaborated with the British charity Merlin to promote public health in Sierra Leone through education and awareness campaigns intended to prevent Lassa fever. With little funding and few supplies, he successfully reduced mortality rates and saved many lives until an accidental needlestick injury led to his own death from the disease in 2004.

Conteh received renewed public attention in 2009 as the hero of Ross I. Donaldson's memoir, The Lassa Ward.

In this month

Diagram of the bacteriophage MS2 capsid

1 April 1911: Peyton Rous showed that a cell-free isolate could transmit sarcoma in chickens, an early demonstration of cancer caused by a virus

7 April 1931: First electron micrograph taken by Ernst Ruska and Max Knoll

8 April 1976: Bacteriophage MS2 (pictured) sequenced by Walter Fiers and coworkers, first viral genome to be completely sequenced

8 April 1990: Death from AIDS of Ryan White, haemophiliac teenager for whom the Ryan White Care Act is named

8 April 1992: Tennis player Arthur Ashe announced that he had been infected with HIV from blood transfusions

9 April 1982: Stanley Prusiner proposed proteinaceous prions as the cause of scrapie

12 April 1955: Success of trial of Jonas Salk's polio vaccine announced

12 April 2013: New order of double-stranded DNA bacteriophages, Ligamenvirales, announced

15 April 1957: André Lwoff proposes a concise definition of a virus

21 April 1989: Discovery of hepatitis C virus by Qui-Lim Choo and colleagues

28 April 1932: First yellow fever vaccine announced at an American Societies for Experimental Biology meeting by Wilbur Sawyer

29 April 2015: PAHO and WHO declared the Americas region free from rubella transmission

30 April 1937: Discovery of Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus, later a model for multiple sclerosis research

Selected intervention

Ball-and-stick model of nevirapine

Nevirapine (also Viramune) is an antiretroviral drug used in the treatment of HIV/ AIDS caused by HIV-1. It was the first non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor to be licensed, which occurred in 1996. Like nucleoside inhibitors, nevirapine inhibits HIV's reverse transcriptase enzyme, which copies the viral RNA into DNA and is essential for its replication. Unlike nucleoside inhibitors, it binds not in the enzyme's active site but in a nearby hydrophobic pocket, causing a conformational change in the enzyme that prevents it from functioning. Mutations in the pocket generate resistance to nevirapine, which develops rapidly unless viral replication is completely suppressed. The drug is therefore only used together with other anti-HIV drugs in combination therapy. The HIV-2 reverse transcriptase has a different pocket structure, rendering it inherently resistant to nevirapine and other first-generation NNRTIs. A single dose of nevirapine is a cost-effective way to reduce mother-to-child transmission of HIV, and has been recommended by the World Health Organization for use in resource-poor settings. Other protocols are recommended in the United States. Rash is the most common adverse event associated with the drug.

Subcategories

Topics

Things to do

WikiProjects & Portals

WikiProject Viruses
Related WikiProjects

MedicineMicrobiologyMolecular & Cellular BiologyVeterinary Medicine

Related Portals

Associated Wikimedia

The following Wikimedia Foundation sister projects provide more on this subject:

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Viruses Portal
Welcome!

The capsid of SV40, an icosahedral virus
The capsid of SV40, an icosahedral virus

Viruses are small infectious agents that can replicate only inside the living cells of an organism. Viruses infect all forms of life, including animals, plants, fungi, bacteria and archaea. They are found in almost every ecosystem on Earth and are the most abundant type of biological entity, with millions of different types, although only about 6,000 viruses have been described in detail. Some viruses cause disease in humans, and others are responsible for economically important diseases of livestock and crops.

Virus particles (known as virions) consist of genetic material, which can be either DNA or RNA, wrapped in a protein coat called the capsid; some viruses also have an outer lipid envelope. The capsid can take simple helical or icosahedral forms, or more complex structures. The average virus is about 1/100 the size of the average bacterium, and most are too small to be seen directly with an optical microscope.

The origins of viruses are unclear: some may have evolved from plasmids, others from bacteria. Viruses are sometimes considered to be a life form, because they carry genetic material, reproduce and evolve through natural selection. However they lack key characteristics (such as cell structure) that are generally considered necessary to count as life. Because they possess some but not all such qualities, viruses have been described as "organisms at the edge of life".

Selected disease

Chickenpox rash in an adult male
Chickenpox rash in an adult male

Chickenpox is caused by initial infection with varicella zoster virus, a DNA virus of the Alphaherpesvirinae subfamily. The virus naturally infects only humans, but some other primates have been infected artificially. Symptoms appear 10–21 days after exposure: an itchy vesicular skin rash, and small ulcers in the oral cavity and tonsil areas. The rash usually resolves by 7 days, but the virus remains latent in nerve cell bodies, and can emerge years or decades later to cause shingles. Chickenpox is transmitted by the respiratory route, as well as direct contact with lesions.

A classic disease of childhood, the highest prevalence occurs at 4–10 years. Chickenpox is rarely fatal in people with a normal immune system, with around 6,400 deaths worldwide in 2015, about 1 in 60,000 infections. Adults often have more severe symptoms than children, and are at higher risk of complications such as pneumonia, bronchitis, hepatitis and encephalitis. Pregnant women and people with a suppressed immune system have the highest complication risk. Chickenpox during the first 28 weeks of gestation can lead to foetal malformations. Infection in adults is usually treated with antiviral drugs, such as aciclovir or valaciclovir, which reduces symptom severity and the risk of complications. A vaccine is available.

Selected image

Portrait of Louis Pasteur by Albert Edelfelt (1885)

Louis Pasteur invented a vaccine against rabies, and tested it on a boy bitten by a rabid dog in 1885.

Credit: Albert Edelfelt (1885)

In the news

Map showing the prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 cases; black: highest prevalence; dark red to pink: decreasing prevalence; grey: no recorded cases or no data
Map showing the prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 cases; black: highest prevalence; dark red to pink: decreasing prevalence; grey: no recorded cases or no data

26 February: In the ongoing pandemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), more than 110 million confirmed cases, including 2.5 million deaths, have been documented globally since the outbreak began in December 2019. WHO

18 February: Seven asymptomatic cases of avian influenza A subtype H5N8, the first documented H5N8 cases in humans, are reported in Astrakhan Oblast, Russia, after more than 100,0000 hens died on a poultry farm in December. WHO

14 February: Seven cases of Ebola virus disease are reported in Gouécké, south-east Guinea. WHO

7 February: A case of Ebola virus disease is detected in North Kivu Province of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. WHO

4 February: An outbreak of Rift Valley fever is ongoing in Kenya, with 32 human cases, including 11 deaths, since the outbreak started in November. WHO

21 November: The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) gives emergency-use authorisation to casirivimab/imdevimab, a combination monoclonal antibody (mAb) therapy for non-hospitalised people twelve years and over with mild-to-moderate COVID-19, after granting emergency-use authorisation to the single mAb bamlanivimab earlier in the month. FDA 1, 2

18 November: The outbreak of Ebola virus disease in Équateur Province, Democratic Republic of the Congo, which started in June, has been declared over; a total of 130 cases were recorded, with 55 deaths. UN

Selected article

Baltimore classification
Baltimore classification

Virus classification is the process of naming viruses and placing them into a taxonomic system. They are mainly classified by phenotypic characteristics, such as morphology, nucleic acid type, mode of replication, host organisms and the type of disease they cause.

Two schemes are in common use. The International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV), established in the early 1970s, classifies viruses into taxa (groups) similar to the biological classification used for cellular organisms, which reflect viruses believed to have a common ancestor. As of 2019, 9 kingdoms, 16 phyla, 36 classes, 55 orders, 168 families, 1,421 genera and 6,589 species of viruses have been defined. Since 2018, viruses have also been classified into higher-level taxa called realms. Four realms are defined, as of 2020, encompassing almost all RNA viruses; some DNA viruses have yet to be assigned a realm.

The older Baltimore classification (pictured), proposed in 1971 by David Baltimore, places viruses into seven groups (I–VII) based on their nucleic acid type, number of strands and sense, as well as the method the virus uses to generate mRNA. There is some concordance between Baltimore groups and the higher levels of the ICTV scheme.

Selected outbreak

The deer mouse was the reservoir for Sin Nombre hantavirus in the Four Corners outbreak.

The 1993 hantavirus outbreak in the Four Corners region of southwest USA was of a novel hantavirus, subsequently named Sin Nombre virus. It caused the previously unrecognised hantavirus pulmonary syndrome – the first time that a hantavirus had been associated with respiratory symptoms. Mild flu-like symptoms were followed by the sudden onset of pulmonary oedema, which was fatal in half of those affected. A total of 24 cases were reported in April–May 1993, with many of those affected being from the Navajo Nation territory. Hantavirus infection of humans generally occurs by inhaling aerosolised urine and faeces of rodents, in this case the deer mouse (Peromyscus; pictured).

Previously documented hantavirus disease had been confined to Asia and Europe, and these were the first human cases to be recognised in the USA. Subsequent investigation revealed undiagnosed cases dating back to 1959, and Navajo people recalled similar outbreaks in 1918, 1933 and 1934.

Selected quotation

Recommended articles

Viruses & Subviral agents: bat virome • elephant endotheliotropic herpesvirus • HIV • introduction to viruses  • Playa de Oro virus • poliovirus • prion • rotavirus  • virus

Diseases: colony collapse disorder • common cold • croup • dengue fever  • gastroenteritis • Guillain–Barré syndrome • hepatitis B • hepatitis C • hepatitis E • herpes simplex • HIV/AIDS • influenza  • meningitis  • myxomatosis • polio  • pneumonia • shingles • smallpox

Epidemiology & Interventions: 2007 Bernard Matthews H5N1 outbreak • Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations • Disease X • 2009 flu pandemic • HIV/AIDS in Malawi • polio vaccine • Spanish flu • West African Ebola virus epidemic

Virus–Host interactions: antibody • host • immune system  • parasitism • RNA interference

Methodology: metagenomics

Social & Media: And the Band Played On • Contagion • "Flu Season" • Frank's Cock  • Race Against Time: Searching for Hope in AIDS-Ravaged Africa  • social history of viruses  • " Steve Burdick" • "The Time Is Now" • " What Lies Below"

People: Brownie Mary • Macfarlane Burnet  • Bobbi Campbell • Aniru Conteh • people with hepatitis C  • HIV-positive people  • Bette Korber • Henrietta Lacks • Linda Laubenstein • Barbara McClintock  • poliomyelitis survivors  • Joseph Sonnabend • Eli Todd • Ryan White

Selected virus

X-ray crystallographic structure of the Norwalk virus capsid
X-ray crystallographic structure of the Norwalk virus capsid

Noroviruses are a genus of non- enveloped, single-stranded RNA viruses in the family Caliciviridae. The positive-sense RNA genome is approximately 7500 nucleotides long. Known noroviruses fall into five different genogroups (GI–GV); three groups infect humans, the other two mice, and cattle and other bovines. All are considered strains of a single species, Norwalk virus.

Noroviruses are extremely contagious, with fewer than 20 virus particles being infectious. They are transmitted directly from person to person and indirectly via contaminated water and food. After infection, the virus replicates in the small intestine, causing acute gastroenteritis, which develops 12–48 hours after exposure and lasts for 24–72 hours. The characteristic symptoms include nausea, forceful vomiting, watery diarrhoea and abdominal pain. Infection is usually self-limiting and rarely severe. Noroviruses cause 18% of acute gastroenteritis episodes in humans, with around 685 million cases and 200,000 deaths every year, mainly in very young, elderly or immunosuppressed people. No vaccine is available. Hand washing with soap and water is effective in reducing transmission.

Did you know?

Soybean aphid on a soybean leaf

Selected biography

Aniru Conteh

Aniru Sahib Sahib Conteh (6 August 1942 – 4 April 2004) was a Sierra Leonean physician and expert on the clinical treatment of Lassa fever, a viral haemorrhagic fever endemic to West Africa.

He joined the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Lassa fever programme in Segbwema, first as superintendent and then as clinical director. After the Sierra Leone Civil War began in 1991, Conteh moved to the Kenema Government Hospital, where he spent the next two decades running the only dedicated Lassa fever ward in the world. He collaborated with the British charity Merlin to promote public health in Sierra Leone through education and awareness campaigns intended to prevent Lassa fever. With little funding and few supplies, he successfully reduced mortality rates and saved many lives until an accidental needlestick injury led to his own death from the disease in 2004.

Conteh received renewed public attention in 2009 as the hero of Ross I. Donaldson's memoir, The Lassa Ward.

In this month

Diagram of the bacteriophage MS2 capsid

1 April 1911: Peyton Rous showed that a cell-free isolate could transmit sarcoma in chickens, an early demonstration of cancer caused by a virus

7 April 1931: First electron micrograph taken by Ernst Ruska and Max Knoll

8 April 1976: Bacteriophage MS2 (pictured) sequenced by Walter Fiers and coworkers, first viral genome to be completely sequenced

8 April 1990: Death from AIDS of Ryan White, haemophiliac teenager for whom the Ryan White Care Act is named

8 April 1992: Tennis player Arthur Ashe announced that he had been infected with HIV from blood transfusions

9 April 1982: Stanley Prusiner proposed proteinaceous prions as the cause of scrapie

12 April 1955: Success of trial of Jonas Salk's polio vaccine announced

12 April 2013: New order of double-stranded DNA bacteriophages, Ligamenvirales, announced

15 April 1957: André Lwoff proposes a concise definition of a virus

21 April 1989: Discovery of hepatitis C virus by Qui-Lim Choo and colleagues

28 April 1932: First yellow fever vaccine announced at an American Societies for Experimental Biology meeting by Wilbur Sawyer

29 April 2015: PAHO and WHO declared the Americas region free from rubella transmission

30 April 1937: Discovery of Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus, later a model for multiple sclerosis research

Selected intervention

Ball-and-stick model of nevirapine

Nevirapine (also Viramune) is an antiretroviral drug used in the treatment of HIV/ AIDS caused by HIV-1. It was the first non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor to be licensed, which occurred in 1996. Like nucleoside inhibitors, nevirapine inhibits HIV's reverse transcriptase enzyme, which copies the viral RNA into DNA and is essential for its replication. Unlike nucleoside inhibitors, it binds not in the enzyme's active site but in a nearby hydrophobic pocket, causing a conformational change in the enzyme that prevents it from functioning. Mutations in the pocket generate resistance to nevirapine, which develops rapidly unless viral replication is completely suppressed. The drug is therefore only used together with other anti-HIV drugs in combination therapy. The HIV-2 reverse transcriptase has a different pocket structure, rendering it inherently resistant to nevirapine and other first-generation NNRTIs. A single dose of nevirapine is a cost-effective way to reduce mother-to-child transmission of HIV, and has been recommended by the World Health Organization for use in resource-poor settings. Other protocols are recommended in the United States. Rash is the most common adverse event associated with the drug.

Subcategories

Topics

Things to do

WikiProjects & Portals

WikiProject Viruses
Related WikiProjects

MedicineMicrobiologyMolecular & Cellular BiologyVeterinary Medicine

Related Portals

Associated Wikimedia

The following Wikimedia Foundation sister projects provide more on this subject:


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