Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry, Vol. 46, 653-660, May 1998, Copyright © 1998, The Histochemical Society, Inc.


ARTICLE

Detection and Localization by In Situ Molecular Biology Techniques and Immunohistochemistry of Hepatitis C Virus in Livers of Chronically Infected Patients

Francine M. Walkera, Marie-Christine Dazzaa,c, Marie-Christine Daugea,c, Olivier Bouchera, Christophe Bedela, Dominique Henina, and Therese Lehyb
a Department of Pathology, Hôpital Bichat-Claude Bernard, Paris, France
b INSERM U10, Hôpital Bichat-Claude Bernard, Paris, France
c INSERM U13, Hôpital Bichat-Claude Bernard, Paris, France

Correspondence to: Francine M. Walker, Service d’Anatomie Pathologique, Hôpital Bichat-Claude Bernard, 46 rue Henri Huchard, 75877 Paris Cédex 18, France.


  Summary
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Summary
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Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) detection in the livers of chronically infected patients remains a debatable issue. We used immunohistochemistry, in situ hybridization (ISH) alone or after microwave heating with FITC-labeled probes, RT-PCR with unlabeled primers followed by ISH (RT-PCR–ISH), and in situ RT-PCR with FITC-labeled primers (in situ RT-PCRd) to localize the virus in 38 liver biopsy specimens from 21 chronically infected HCV patients treated with interferon-{alpha} (IFN-{alpha}). Biopsies were taken at the beginning and end of IFN-{alpha} treatment and 1 year later. Results were compared with that of HCV-PCR in serum. RT-PCR–ISH and in situ RT-PCRd showed HCV signal in all liver biopsies even in responders with seronegative HCV PCR. This signal was intranuclear, diffuse, or peripheral, in hepatocytes, bile ductule cells, and lymphocytes. Cytoplasmic signals were occasionally observed. Whereas the percentage of labeled hepatocytes remained constant, the number of labeled lymphoid follicles decreased after INF-{alpha} therapy. Immunohistochemistry resulted in the same pattern of positivity but it was weaker and inconstant. This study indicates the persistency of HCV latency in IFN-{alpha} responders 1 year after IFN-{alpha} treatment cessation, a finding that certainly deserves confirmation. (J Histochem Cytochem 46:653–660, 1998)

Key Words: HCV, interferon-{alpha} therapy, in situ RT-PCR, in situ RT-PCRd, RT-PCR–ISH, immunohistochemistry, C100-3 protein, human liver


  Introduction
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Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
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Discussion
Literature Cited

HEPATITIS C VIRUS (HCV), a positive-stranded RNA virus and member of the Flaviridae family, has been reported to be the major causative agent of chronic HCV hepatitis. Liver-related death has been reported to occur in 20–25% of patients with cirrhosis. Interferon-{alpha} (IFN-{alpha}) is currently used as an antiviral agent for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C. However, only 50% of the treated patients respond to therapy and only 20% sustain a response (Houghton 1996 ). Although several techniques have been used to localize HCV in the liver, their reliability has not yet been proved. Immunohistochemistry (IHC) has limited sensitivity for detecting HCV proteins. In situ hybridization (ISH) is also insensitive because HCV replication is very low, estimated at about 20 copies per cell, which is at the detection limit of nonradioactive probes (Weiner et al. 1990 ). Recently, in situ amplification techniques after reverse transcriptase (in situ RT-PCR) were tested either with direct incorporation of labeled nucleotides or primers (in situ RT-PCRd) or with unlabeled primers and nucleotides followed by ISH (RT-PCR–ISH). Intracellular viral localization by these different techniques has led to conflicting results; it may be peri- or intranuclear (Nuovo 1994 ) or cytoplasmic (Barba et al. 1997 ). HCV has been detected in hepatocytes alone or in some bile duct cells, Kupffer cells, and portal lymphocytes.

The aims of the present study were to localize HCV by in situ molecular biology techniques (ISH, in situ RT-PCRd, and RT-PCR–ISH) in the livers of patients with chronic hepatitis C, to compare results obtained by these techniques with IHC detection of the viral protein (the superoxide dismutase–HCV recombinant polypeptide C100-3), and to compare these data to those of RT-PCR detection of HCV in serum before and after IFN-{alpha} therapy.


  Materials and Methods
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Summary
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Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

Patient Selection
Twenty-one white HCV-confirmed seropositive patients (11 women and 10 men) were selected for this study, as all had sera collected at the time of each liver biopsy. The median age was 33 years (range 21–60 years). Patients received the same therapeutic treatment (INF-{alpha}) for 6 or 12 months. The criterion for INF-{alpha} treatment was a persistently elevated serum alanine transaminase (ALT) for at least 6 months. None of the patients was seropositive for HIV or HBV. None had received previous treatment. For each patient, ALT level determination was performed at the same time as biopsy.

Tissue Sample Processing
Liver biopsies were attempted at three time points: just before INF-{alpha} treatment (B1) (n = 8), at treatment termination (B2) (n = 13), and 1 year after treatment termination (B3) (n = 17). In total, 38 biopsy specimens were studied. Five patients were able to tolerate all three biopsies, seven underwent initial and second biopsies, and 10 underwent the second and third biopsies.

Tissue specimens were fixed in 10% formalin and then paraffin-embedded. Liver samples from alcoholic and hepatitis B patients seronegative for HCV antibodies and for HCV RNA, as well as heterologous tissue samples (e.g., salivary glands and gastric tissue) from these same patients, were used as negative controls. Intrahepatic HCV detection was compared with HCV detection in each corresponding serum sample.

Serum Evaluation of HCV
Two methods were used on frozen serum specimens. (a) HCV RNA quantification by the bDNA method, only positive for at least 0.35 x 106 viral copies/ml, was performed with the quantitative bDNA signal amplification assay (Quantiplex TM HCV RNA 1.0; Chiron Diagnostics, Emeryville, CA) at each time point. All samples were run in duplicate. (b) If the bDNA quantification remained negative, the Nested RT-PCR was tested (Amplicor TM HCV; Roche, Paris, France).

In Situ Molecular Biology Techniques. Primers and probes were all located in the same 5' non-coding region of the HCV genome. Unlabeled and 5' FITC-labeled oligonucleotide primers were used. First, 20-mer primers were synthetized by Genset (Paris, France). They trigger amplification of a 260-BP product and correspond to the outer oligonucleotides sequences used by Feray et al. 1992 : sense, 5' GCC ATG GCG TTA GTA TGA GT 3' (recognizing codons 260–241) and anti-sense, 5' TGC ACG GTC TAC GAG ACC TC 3' (recognizing codons 22 to 3). The 36-mers ISH 5' FITC-labeled probe complementary to the amplicon was 5' ACA CCG GAA TTG CCA GGA CGA CCG GGT CCT TTC TTG 3' (codons 177–142). Other commercially produced oligonucleotide primers (either 5' FITC-labeled or unlabeled) were provided by Argene (Varhiles, France): sense (MJIG, 21-mer), 5' GAG GAA CTA CTG TCT TCA CGC 3' codons 292–271) and anti-sense (MJ2D, 22-mer), TGC ACG GTC TAC GAG ACC TCC C (codons 24 to 2). In this case, two different 5' FITC-labeled probes KB2 and KB5, 18 mers each, were used, complementary to the latter amplicon. As internal positive control we used the ß-actin RNA.

In situ hybridization was performed in a moist chamber for 18 hr at 37C with all the FITC-labeled probes. About 20 ng of probe was applied per section. To detect the hybridization complex, slides were incubated first with mouse anti-FITC antiserum, second with rabbit anti-mouse immunoglobulins, and then with a mouse anti-rabbit monoclonal antibody linked to APAAP complex (Dakopatts, Glostrup, Denmark). Alkaline phosphatase activity was revealed using NBT-BCIP chromogenic substrate. In some cases, citrate antigen retrieval by microwave heating before ISH was performed.

In Situ RT-PCR Method. As recommended by Nuovo 1994 , tissue sections were treated overnight with an RNase-free DNase solution (1 U/ml at 37C; Boehringer Mannheim, Meylan, France) before reverse transcription. They were then incubated in a thermocycler (PTC 100: Research Inc, Watertown, MA) with 10 ml of a solution containing buffer, MgCl2, the anti-sense primer (1 mM), reverse transcriptase, RNase inhibitor, and dNTPs (stock solution 10 mM each) according to the manufacturer's recommendation (RT-PCR kit provided by Perkin–Elmer, Norwalk, CT). PCR amplification was performed in all samples according to our previously published protocol (Walker et al. 1996 ) with unlabeled or labeled primers. For most samples, amplification was also performed using another thermocycler (Perkin–Elmer). In situ RT-PCR products with labeled primers were directly detected, and RT-PCR products with an unlabeled set of primers were revealed after ISH.

As controls for in situ PCR, liver tissues removed from HCV-positive patients who had a high expression of viral nucleic acids served as initial positive controls. Negative controls included (a) omission of the reverse transcription step and/or DNase pretreatment, (b) incubation of slides in an RNase solution immediately before reverse transcription, (c) for the amplification, omission of the DNA polymerase or primers and incubation of the liver tissue with DNase before PCR amplification and ISH, and (d) the use on HCV infected liver of heterologous human papillomavirus-related primers for amplification followed by ISH with HCV probes or of heterologous HBV probe after amplification with HCV sets of primers. HCV primers and probes were also applied to liver and heterologous tissues (gastric mucosa, salivary glands) from HCV-negative patients and to rat liver. Positive controls of PCR amplification included performance of RT-PCR–ISH with ß-actin primers and an FITC-labeled actin probe. The presence of HCV was also verified by a standard RT-PCR assay performed on homogenates obtained from frozen liver tissues of several patients.

Immunohistochemistry
Two mouse monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) corresponding to clone Tordji 32 and to a mixture of clones Tordji 22 and 32 were used (Clonatec; Paris, France). They recognize the superoxide dismutase–HCV recombinant polypeptide (Ortho Diagnostic C100-3 Elisa kit). Sections were treated with primary MAb at 1:50 dilution for 1 hr at RT, then with secondary biotinylated horse anti-mouse IgG (Vector Labs, Burlingame, CA) and with the avidin–biotin–peroxidase complex (Vectastain ABC kit; Vector Labs). Specificity of immunoreaction was tested by omitting primary antibodies. Citrate antigen retrieval by microwave heating before IHC was performed in all cases.

Quantification of In Situ RT-PCR Results and Statistical Analysis
For each biopsy, counting of HCV labeled vs unlabeled hepatocytes was done in 10 microscopic fields at x 400 magnification. Counts were expressed as percentage of labeled hepatocytes. The surface of the specimens was roughly estimated by measuring width and length. The number of lymphoid follicles in each biopsy was counted and was expressed per 10 mm .2. Counts were made by two independent observers. All values were expressed as mean ± 1 SEM. Differences in results between responders vs non-responders and different times (B1, B2, B3) were statistically analyzed by the nonparametric Mann–Whitney U-test for independent populations. Results relative to the same subjects were compared by the paired data test. Level of significance was set at p<.05.


  Results
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Histology
Histological features proved the chronic hepatitis with portal nodular lymphoid infiltration and patchy necrosis (Figure 1). Patients were classified as responders (n = 12) to INF-{alpha} vs non-responders (n = 9). The responders showed a normalization of serum ALT levels persisting 1 year after completion of INF-{alpha}; the non-responders had elevated ALT. Responders had a significantly decreased number of portal lymphoid follicles per 10 mm2 of liver tissue in B2 and B3 biopsies compared to B1 (Table 1). Four of the five patients with all three biopsies were responders. Time-course evolution in their livers of the numbers of lymphoid follicles showed the same significant variations as those observed in all responders (Figure 2).



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Figure 1. Histological alterations in liver biopsy specimens of HCV chronic hepatitis at B1 time. The portal area contains a nodular lymphocytic infiltrate with patchy necrosis (Mayer's hemalum–eosin–saffron). Bar = 30 µm.



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Figure 2. Numbers of lymphoid follicles in liver biopsies at B1 (before IFN-{alpha} treatment), B2 (at treatment cessation), and B3 (1 year later) in the same four patients responding to IFN-{alpha} therapy. * p<0.05 vs B1.


 
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Table 1. Evolution of HCV in situ RT-PCR signal in hepatocytes and lymphoid follicles in responders and non-responders in the course of IFN-{alpha} treatmenta

Serum RT-PCR for HCV
RT-PCR results were clear-cut (Figure 3). At B1, all patients were seropositive. At B2, no responders had measurable HCV copies per ml by bDNA assay, but one patient was seropositive by nested RT-PCR. In the non-responders, one was transiently seronegative. At B3, all responders were seronegative and all non-responders were seropositive with relative increased copy numbers compared to B2.



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Figure 3. Serum HCV RNA levels in 21 patients according to response to interferon therapy. The bDNA quantification was possible for at least 0.35 x 106 viral copies/ml. Below this value, nested RT-PCR was performed, indicating only the presence or absence of viral RNA in serum.

In Situ HCV Detection
ISH. ISH was negative with both Genset and Argene probes. A slight but inconstant signal was noted when microwave pretreatment was performed.

In Situ RT-PCR. The signal obtained by in situ RT-PCRd and by RT-PCR–ISH was identical in the 38 biopsies, regardless of primers and probes utilized (Figure 4A–E). Localization of HCV RNA was intranuclear, with either a diffuse or a peripheral pattern. Signal was generally strong in many hepatocytes and in nuclei of bile duct cells and portal lymphocytes, although in the latter case the number of labeled nuclei was lower. A signal located on the cytoplasm was also sometimes seen, especially with RT-PCR–ISH (Figure 4A, Figure 4B, and Figure 4E). No difference was seen between results obtained with the two different thermocyclers.



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Figure 4. (A) Liver biopsy of a non-responder patient at the end of IFN-{alpha} treatment (B2) after RT-PCR–ISH with FITC-labeled probe, at low magnification. In this strongly positive area, intranuclear signal is seen in many hepatocytes, lymphocytes, and bile duct cells (no counterstaining). Bar = 30 µm. (B) Same liver biopsy at higher magnification. The signal is evident over the nuclei of hepatocytes, bile duct cells (arrow), and lymphoid cells, and also within the cytoplasm of hepatocytes (no counterstaining). Bar = 30 µm. (C) In situ RT-PCRd with FITC-labeled primers 1 year after treatment cessation (B3) in a responder's liver. Strong nuclear signal is present in a diffuse or marginal pattern. No cytoplasmic signal is seen (no counterstaining). Bar = 30 µm. (D) Same liver biopsy at higher magnification. Bar = 10 µm. (E) In situ RT-PCRd in another responder's liver at B3. Signal is consistently intranuclear but weaker cytoplasmic staining is also evident (no counterstaining). Bar = 10 µm. (F) Liver biopsy from a non-responder at B1. In situ RT-PCR–ISH signal is abolished with postamplification DNase incubation (no counterstaining). Bar = 30 µm. (G) Liver biopsy from an HCV-negative patient with alcoholic cirrhosis. After in situ RT-PCRd, no signal is visible (Mayer's hemalum–eosin). Bar = 30 µm.

Controls. Controls for each step confirmed the specificity of signal. No signal was seen for RT-PCR–ISH and in situ RT-PCRd when RNase or DNase incubation was performed before or after reverse transcription, respectively. For RT-PCR–ISH, postamplification signal was abolished by incubation with DNase before ISH (Figure 4F). No signal was seen with heterologous probes or primers by in situ RT-PCRd or RT-PCR–ISH on HCV-seropositive patients' livers and also with homologous primers and probes on HCV-seronegative patients' livers (Figure 4G). HBV-positive liver biopsies sometimes had slight staining of the nuclear membrane with HCV probes and primers, quite different in intensity from that observed in HCV-positive liver.

Quantification of RT-PCR Signal
On the 38 hepatic biopsies studied, there was diffuse panlobular distribution of positive hepatocytes with variable staining intensity. Importantly, responders continued to have HCV nuclear signal at B2 and B3 times (Figure 5). The mean percentage of labeled hepatocytes in those patients remained constant (50–60%) and did not differ from non-responder values (Table 1).This was also checked in the four responders who underwent B1, B2, and B3 biopsies. Nevertheless, in all responders, not only did the number of lymphoid follicles decrease (Table 1) but the nuclear intensity labeling and the number of labeled nuclei in these lymphoid follicles were diminished, although no quantification was performed for this last variable. HCV RT-PCR assays were also performed on RNA extracted from frozen liver biopsies of four patients at B3. All these patients, including one responder to IFN-{alpha} therapy, appeared positive for HCV.



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Figure 5. Diagram showing the number of positive patients for HCV detection by in situ RT-PCR (A) and IHC (B) at B1, B2 and B3. By in situ RT-PCR, HCV detection was positive at all time points for responders and non-responders. +, positive signal; -, negative signal.

Immunohistochemical Results
The results were similar regardless of the antibody used. Treatment of slides by microwave heating did not improve signal specificity. The localization of signal, as with in situ amplification RT-PCR, was intranuclear in hepatocytes, bile duct cells, and portal lymphocytes (Figure 6A–C) and occasionally cytoplasmic (Figure 6C). However, the immunoreactivity in hepatocyte nuclei was sometimes very weak (Figure 6B), and the number of labeled hepatocytes was always less than that seen with in situ RT-PCR. In addition, IHC was relatively insensitive because half of the samples from HCV livers at B1 were negative (Figure 5), despite the presence of HCV signal by in situ RT-PCR. It is noteworthy that IHC positivity also persisted at B2 and B3 in most responders. No signal was observed in heterologous tissue or in liver tissue from HCV-negative patients used as controls.



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Figure 6. IHC with monoclonal antibodies against the superoxide dismutase-HCV recombinant polypeptide (C100-3 protein) clones Tordji 22 and 32 (counterstaining with Mayer's hemalum). (A) A nuclear signal is seen in the nuclei of two hepatocytes in a responder. (B) Nuclear signal in few hepatocytes and in bile duct cells (arrow). (C) Liver biopsy of a non-responder patient at B1. The nuclear signal is visible in relatively numerous nuclei of hepatocytes, bile ductule cells, and in lymphocytes (arrow). Diffuse cytoplasmic staining is also evident in some hepatocytes and in all duct cells. Bar = 30 µm.


  Discussion
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Our results are in agreement with previous findings describing viral localization at the perinuclear membrane (Lidonnici et al. 1995 ) or within the nuclei of hepatocytes (Haruna et al. 1993 ; Nouri-Aria et al. 1993 ). We noted with RT-PCR–ISH, but rarely with in situ RT-PCRd, as already observed by Nouri-Aria et al. 1993 and occasionally by Nuovo 1994 , a diffuse and inconstant staining within the cytoplasm, always associated with the nuclear signal. However, in our opinion, the specificity of the cytoplasmic signal is rather doubtful and could be due to some background. Nevertheless, it was not possible to totally eliminate it in spite of many high-stringency washings. Some authors (Komminoth et al. 1994 ) stated that the in situ RT-PCRd is not reliable and the nuclear signal not specific because in their control experiments, omitting primers yielded positive nuclear signals similar to those they observed with primers. In our experiment, omitting primers indeed yielded negative results and all controls confirmed the specificity of the signal reaction. It must be pointed out that Nuovo 1994 obtained the same perinuclear signal with a direct incorporation of digoxigenin-labeled nucleotides during the in situ amplification and with primers other than ours.

In the literature, HCV was found mainly in hepatocytes (Negro et al. 1992 ; Haruna et al. 1993 ; Nouri-Aria et al. 1993 ; Lau et al. 1994 ; Gastaldi et al. 1995 ) but also in Kupffer cells (Nuovo 1994 ), mononuclear cells (Nouri-Aria et al. 1993 ; Lau et al. 1994 ), sinusoidal cells (Nouri-Aria et al. 1993 ) and bile duct cells (Nouri-Aria et al. 1993 ), although rarely (Nuovo 1994 ). Our own results confirm most of these localizations. Unlike Park et al. 1996 , who obtained inconstant results by performing RT-PCR assay after HCV RNA extraction from formol-fixed, paraffin-embedded liver biopsies, we had no problem of sensitivity with the in situ RT-PCR directly realized in such liver tissues. These authors postulated that formalin-induced crosslinks may inhibit extension by reverse transcriptase. We also suggest that RNA extraction after dewaxing at high temperature could induce a large loss of HCV RNA copies, leading to false-negative results.

As already reported by Chamlian et al. 1993 , the first results obtained by IHC with antisera raised against either HCV structural and nonstructural proteins, core antigen, E1, E2, envelope or NS2, NS3, NS4 and NS5 antigens showed a cytoplasmic signal (Hiramatsu et al. 1992 ; Tsutsumi et al. 1994 ; Uchida et al. 1994 ; Nouri-Aria et al. 1995 ; Barba et al. 1997 ). When using the two MAb clones Tordji 22 and 32, which are currently the HCV antisera commercially available (Clonatec), Chamlian et al. 1993 obtained exclusively a nuclear signal in hepatocytes. We confirmed this signal but also noted some diffuse cytoplasmic staining in liver samples displaying higher numbers of immunoreactive hepatocytes. All control specimens were negative. However, IHC was less reliable than our in situ RT-PCR techniques.

In this work, HCV RNA was studied for the first time by in situ RT-PCR in infected patients' livers before and after IFN-{alpha} therapy. If our findings reflect the true HCV localization, they indicate the persistence of HCV latency within responder livers, even 1 year after IFN-{alpha} therapy cessation. Although the number of in situ RT-PCR-positive hepatocytes stayed quite constant in responders (about 50–60%), the number of lymphoid follicles decreased, as well as the HCV nuclear positivity in the lymphocytes. The two latter facts suggest that, as in other forms of chronic hepatitis, the lymphoid population in the liver is one of the factors that mediates disease activity (Navas et al. 1994 ) or relapse of the disease (Moldvay et al. 1994 ). Several hypotheses must be raised to explain the discrepancy between serum RT-PCR and in situ RT-PCR results: (a) a lack of sensitivity of serum RT-PCR (level detection 102 HCV genomes/ml) while in situ RT-PCR could evidence a very low viral copy number per cell, such as one or two HPV copies in Siha cells (Nuovo 1994 ), or (b) a level of viral replication in liver too low to be detected in serum. This viral form, probably in a latent state, may explain the relatively high chronic hepatitis C relapse. Some authors (Saleh et al. 1994 ) report negative RT-PCR assay in frozen liver tissues from responders to IFN-{alpha} therapy. We believe that the conditions of the cryoprotection, the very low level of viral copy numbers, and the presence in tissue of enzymes inhibiting the reaction may lead to false-negative results. In our experiment, RT-PCR assay performed on quickly extracted HCV RNA after liver biopsy was positive in one responder at B3. Certainly, our findings need to be confirmed by further investigations. In addition, we cannot rule out the possibility that the viral persistence is transient and that the virus does disappear in responder livers after a longer time following the IFN-{alpha} therapy cessation.


  Acknowledgments

Supported by the ARC, grant number 2003.

We thank Pr C. Degott and Pr P. Marcellin for having given us the opportunity to study HCV-infected liver biopsies and M. Martinot–Peignoux for performing HCV RNA RT-PCR in serum.

Received for publication June 2, 1997; accepted November 21, 1997.


  Literature Cited
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Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
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