14 results on '"Ge, Haobo"'
Search Results
2. Directed Molecular Stacking for Engineered Fluorescent Three‐Dimensional Reduced Graphene Oxide and Coronene Frameworks.
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Mao, Boyang, Cortezon‐Tamarit, Fernando, Ge, Haobo, Kuganathan, Navaratnarajah, Mirabello, Vincenzo, Palomares, Francisco J., Kociok‐Köhn, Gabriele, Botchway, Stanley W., Calatayud, David G., and Pascu, Sofia I.
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FLUORESCENCE resonance energy transfer ,ZINC porphyrins ,METALLOPORPHYRINS ,HOST-guest chemistry ,ARYL group ,WATER purification ,MEMBRANE separation ,GRAPHENE oxide - Abstract
Three‐dimensional fluorescent graphene frameworks with controlled porous morphologies are of significant importance for practical applications reliant on controlled structural and electronic properties, such as organic electronics and photochemistry. Here we report a synthetically accessible approach concerning directed aromatic stacking interactions to give rise to new fluorogenic 3D frameworks with tuneable porosities achieved through molecular variations. The binding interactions between the graphene‐like domains present in the in situ‐formed reduced graphene oxide (rGO) with functional porphyrin molecules lead to new hybrids via an unprecedented solvothermal reaction. Functional free‐base porphyrins featuring perfluorinated aryl groups or hexyl chains at their meso‐ and β‐positions were employed in turn to act as directing entities for the assembly of new graphene‐based and foam‐like frameworks and of their corresponding coronene‐based hybrids. Investigations in the dispersed phase and in thin‐film by XPS, SEM and FLIM shed light onto the nature of the aromatic stacking within functional rGO frameworks (denoted rGOFs) which was then modelled semi‐empirically and by DFT calculations. The pore sizes of the new emerging reduced graphene oxide hybrids are tuneable at the molecular level and mediated by the bonding forces with the functional porphyrins acting as the "molecular glue". Single crystal X‐ray crystallography described the stacking of a perfluorinated porphyrin with coronene, which can be employed as a molecular model for understanding the local aromatic stacking order and charge transfer interactions within these rGOFs for the first time. This opens up a new route to controllable 3D framework morphologies and pore size from the Ångstrom to the micrometre scale. Theoretical modelling showed that the porosity of these materials is mainly due to the controlled inter‐planar distance between the rGO, coronene or graphene sheets. The host‐guest chemistry involves the porphyrins acting as guests held through π‐π stacking, as demonstrated by XPS. The objective of this study is also to shed light into the fundamental localised electronic and energy transfer properties in these new molecularly engineered porous and fluorogenic architectures, aiming in turn to understand how functional porphyrins may exert stacking control over the notoriously disordered local structure present in porous reduced graphene oxide fragments. By tuning the porosity and the distance between the graphene sheets using aromatic stacking with porphyrins, it is also possible to tune the electronic structure of the final nanohybrid material, as indicated by FLIM experiments on thin films. Such nanohybrids with highly controlled pores dimensions and morphologies open the way to new design and assembly of storage devices and applications incorporating π‐conjugated molecules and materials and their π‐stacks may be relevant towards selective separation membranes, water purification and biosensing applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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3. Multiphoton fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) and super-resolution fluorescence imaging with a supramolecular biopolymer for the controlled tagging of polysaccharides.
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Ge, Haobo, Cortezon-Tamarit, Fernando, Wang, Hui-Chen, Sedgwick, Adam C., Arrowsmith, Rory L., Mirabello, Vincenzo, Botchway, Stanley W., James, Tony D., and Pascu, Sofia I.
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- 2019
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4. Synthesis, Radiolabelling and In Vitro Imaging of Multifunctional Nanoceramics.
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Lledos, Marina, Mirabello, Vincenzo, Sarpaki, Sophia, Ge, Haobo, Smugowski, Hubert J., Carroll, Laurence, Aboagye, Eric O., Aigbirhio, Franklin I., Botchway, Stanley W., Dilworth, Jonathan R., Calatayud, David G., Plucinski, Pawel K., Price, Gareth J., and Pascu, Sofia I.
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NANOPARTICLES ,QUANTUM dots ,NANOSTRUCTURED materials ,QUANTUM electronics ,IRON oxides - Abstract
Abstract: Molecular imaging has become a powerful technique in preclinical and clinical research aiming towards the diagnosis of many diseases. In this work, we address the synthetic challenges in achieving lab‐scale, batch‐to‐batch reproducible copper‐64‐ and gallium‐68‐radiolabelled metal nanoparticles (MNPs) for cellular imaging purposes. Composite NPs incorporating magnetic iron oxide cores with luminescent quantum dots were simultaneously encapsulated within a thin silica shell, yielding water‐dispersible, biocompatible and luminescent NPs. Scalable surface modification protocols to attach the radioisotopes
64 Cu (t1/2 =12.7 h) and68 Ga (t1/2 =68 min) in high yields are reported, and are compatible with the time frame of radiolabelling. Confocal and fluorescence lifetime imaging studies confirm the uptake of the encapsulated imaging agents and their cytoplasmic localisation in prostate cancer (PC‐3) cells. Cellular viability assays show that the biocompatibility of the system is improved when the fluorophores are encapsulated within a silica shell. The functional and biocompatible SiO2 matrix represents an ideal platform for the incorporation of64 Cu and68 Ga radioisotopes with high radiolabelling incorporation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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5. Encapsulation of Cadmium Selenide Nanocrystals in Biocompatible Nanotubes: DFT Calculations, X‐ray Diffraction Investigations, and Confocal Fluorescence Imaging.
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Calatayud, David G., Ge, Haobo, Kuganathan, Navaratnarajah, Mirabello, Vincenzo, Jacobs, Robert M. J., Rees, Nicholas H., Stoppiello, Craig T., Khlobystov, Andrei N., Tyrrell, Rex M., Como, Enrico Da, and Pascu, Sofia I.
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CADMIUM selenide ,NANOCRYSTALS ,NANOTUBES ,DENSITY functional theory ,BIOMEDICAL materials ,X-ray diffraction ,FLUORESCENCE - Abstract
Abstract: The encapsulation of CdSe nanocrystals within single‐walled carbon nanotube (SWNT) cavities of varying dimensions at elevated temperatures under strictly air‐tight conditions is described for the first time. The structures of CdSe nanocrystals under confinement inside SWNTs was established in a comprehensive study, combining both experimental and DFT theoretical investigations. The calculated binding energies show that all considered polymorphs [(3:3), (4:4), and (4:2)] may be obtained experimentally. The most thermodynamically stable structure (3:3) is directly compared to the experimentally observed CdSe structures inside carbon nanotubes. The gas‐phase DFT‐calculated energy difference between “free” 3:3 and 4:2 structures (whereby 3:3 models a novel tubular structure in which both Cd and Se form three coordination, as observed experimentally for HgTe inside SWNT, and 4:2 is a motif derived from the hexagonal CuI bulk structure in which both Cd and Se form 4 or 2 coordination) is surprisingly small, only 0.06 eV per formula unit. X‐ray powder diffraction, Raman spectroscopy, high‐resolution transmission electron microscopy, and energy‐dispersive X‐ray analyses led to the full characterization of the SWNTs filled with the CdSe nanocrystals, shedding light on the composition, structure, and electronic interactions of the new nanohybrid materials on an atomic level. A new emerging hybrid nanomaterial, simultaneously filled and beta‐ d‐glucan coated, was obtained by using pristine nanotubes and bulk CdSe powder as starting materials. This displayed fluorescence in water dispersions and unexpected biocompatibility was found to be mediated by beta‐ d‐glucan (a biopolymer extracted from barley) with respect to that of the individual inorganic material components. For the first time, such supramolecular nanostructures are investigated by life‐science techniques applied to functional nanomaterial characterization, opening the door for future nano‐biotechnological applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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6. Lysosomal tracking with a cationic naphthalimide using multiphoton fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy.
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Ge, Haobo, Mirabello, Vincenzo, Arrowsmith, Rory L., Kociok-Köhn, Gabriele, Pascu, Sofia I., James, Tony D., Li, Meng, Botchway, Stanley W., and Zhu, Weihong
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NAPHTHALIMIDES ,MULTIPHOTON processes ,FLUORESCENCE microscopy - Abstract
A naphthalimide-based chemosensing motif turns ON the fluorescence emission in solution in the presence of aqueous iron(iii) chloride, and maintains this property in living cancer cells. The emission response to Fe(iii) ions occurs simultaneously with a change in pH. The protonation of methyl piperazine-conjugated naphthalimide promotes its lysosomal localisation as assessed by co-localisation tests and fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) in vitro. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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7. Fluorescence-Lifetime Imaging and Super-Resolution Microscopies Shed Light on the Directed- and Self-Assembly of Functional Porphyrins onto Carbon Nanotubes and Flat Surfaces.
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Mao, Boyang, Calatayud, David G., Mirabello, Vincenzo, Kuganathan, Navaratnarajah, Ge, Haobo, Jacobs, Robert M. J., Shepherd, Ashley M., Ribeiro Martins, José A., Bernardino De La Serna, Jorge, Hodges, Benjamin J., Botchway, Stanley W., and Pascu, Sofia I.
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FLUORESCENCE ,HIGH resolution imaging ,PORPHYRINS ,CARBON nanotubes ,HOST-guest chemistry - Abstract
Functional porphyrins have attracted intense attention due to their remarkably high extinction coefficients in the visible region and potential for optical and energy-related applications. Two new routes to functionalised SWNTs have been established using a bulky Zn
II -porphyrin featuring thiolate groups at the periphery. We probed the optical properties of this zinc(II)-substituted, bulky aryl porphyrin and those of the corresponding new nano-composites with single walled carbon nanotube (SWNTs) and coronene, as a model for graphene. We report hereby on: i) the supramolecular interactions between the pristine SWNTs and ZnII -porphyrin by virtue of π-π stacking, and ii) a novel covalent binding strategy based on the Bingel reaction. The functional porphyrins used acted as dispersing agent for the SWNTs and the resulting nanohybrids showed improved dispersibility in common organic solvents. The synthesized hybrid materials were probed by various characterisation techniques, leading to the prediction that supramolecular polymerisation and host-guest functionalities control the fluorescence emission intensity and fluorescence lifetime properties. For the first time, XPS studies highlighted the differences in covalent versus non-covalent attachments of functional metalloporphyrins to SWNTs. Gas-phase DFT calculations indicated that the ZnII -porphyrin interacts non-covalently with SWNTs to form a donor-acceptor complex. The covalent attachment of the porphyrin chromophore to the surface of SWNTs affects the absorption and emission properties of the hybrid system to a greater extent than in the case of the supramolecular functionalisation of the SWNTs. This represents a synthetic challenge as well as an opportunity in the design of functional nanohybrids for future sensing and optoelectronic applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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8. Thermally Reduced Graphene Oxide Nanohybrids of Chiral Functional Naphthalenediimides for Prostate Cancer Cells Bioimaging.
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Tyson, James A., Mirabello, Vincenzo, Calatayud, David G., Ge, Haobo, Kociok‐Köhn, Gabriele, Botchway, Stanley W., Dan Pantoş, G., and Pascu, Sofia I.
- Subjects
GRAPHENE oxide ,PROSTATE cancer ,CANCER cells ,BIO-imaging sensors ,SMALL molecules ,HALOGENS - Abstract
This study reports on the supramolecular assemblies formed between planar carbon systems (PCSs) such as thermally reduced graphene oxide (TRGO) and its small-molecule model system coronene and a series of d- and l-α amino acid derivatized naphthalenediimides (NDIs) where the halogen substituents (X = F, Cl, Br, I) are varied systematically. Confocal fluorescence microscopy of NDIs, NDI•coronene, and NDI•TRGO complexes is performed proving the uptake and stability of such complexes in the cellular environment and suggesting their potential as prostate cancer imaging agents.
1 H NMR and UV-vis spectroscopy studies support the formation of charge transfer complexes whereby the increasing polarizability and general electronegativity of the aryl halide substituted at the NDI periphery influence the magnitude of the association constants in the ground state between NDI and coronene. Complexation between NDIs and PCSs also results in stable photoexcited assemblies within the solution (coronene) as well as the dispersed phased (TRGO). Fluorescence emission titrations and 2-photon time correlated single photon counting measurements suggest the existence of dynamic quenching mechanisms upon the excitation of the fluorophore in the presence of the carbon substrates, as these methods are sensitive proves for the subtle changes in the NDI environment. The series of halogenated species used exerts supramolecular control over the degree of surface assembly on the TRGO and over the interactions with the coronene molecule, and this is of relevance to the assembly of future biosensing platforms as these materials can both be viewed as congeners of graphene. Finally, MTT assays carried out in PC-3 cells demonstrate that the stable noncovalent functionalization of TRGO and coronene with either l or d NDIs remarkably improves the cellular viability in the presence of such graphene-like materials. These phenomena are of particular relevance for the understanding of the direct donor-acceptor interactions in solutions which govern the design of nanomaterials with future biosensing and bioimaging applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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9. Metallic nanoparticles as synthetic building blocks for cancer diagnostics: from materials design to molecular imaging applications.
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Mirabello, Vincenzo, Calatayud, David G., Arrowsmith, Rory L., Ge, Haobo, and Pascu, Sofia I.
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Metallic nanoparticles have been a matter of intense exploration within the last decade due to their potential to change the face of the medical world through their role as ‘nanotheranostics’. Their envisaged capacity to act as synthetic platforms for a multimodal imaging approach to diagnosis and treatment of degenerative diseases, including cancer, remains a matter of lively debate. Certain synthetic metal-based nanomaterials, e.g. gold and iron oxide nanoparticles, are already in clinical use or under advanced preclinical investigations following in vitro and in vivo preclinical imaging success. We surveyed the recent publications landscape including those reported metallic nanoparticles having established applications in vivo, as well as some of the new metallic nanoparticles which, despite their potential as cancer nanodiagnostics, are currently awaiting in vivo evaluation. The objective of this review is to highlight the current metallic nanoparticles and/or alloys as well as their derivatives with multimodal imaging potential, focusing on their chemistry as a springboard to discussing their role in the future of nanomedicines design. We also highlight here some of the fundamentals of molecular and nano-imaging techniques of relevance to the metal-based colloids, alloys and metallic nanoparticles discerning their future prospects as cancer nanodiagnostics. The current approaches for metallic and alloy surface derivatisation, aiming to achieve functional and biocompatible materials for multimodal bioimaging applications, are discussed in order to bring about some new perspectives on the efficiency of metallic nanoparticles as synthetic scaffolds for imaging probe design and forecast their future use in medical imaging techniques (optical, CT, PET, SPECT and MRI). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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10. A fluorescent Arg–Gly–Asp (RGD) peptide–naphthalenediimide (NDI) conjugate for imaging integrin αvβ3in vitro.
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Hu, Zhiyuan, Arrowsmith, Rory L., Tyson, James A., Mirabello, Vincenzo, Ge, Haobo, Eggleston, Ian M., Botchway, Stanley W., Dan Pantos, G., and Pascu, Sofia I.
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TRYPTOPHAN ,AMINO acids ,CONFOCAL fluorescence microscopy ,FLUORESCENCE microscopy ,CANCER cell analysis - Abstract
We have developed a fluorescent peptide conjugate (TrpNDIRGDfK) based on the coupling of cyclo(RGDfK) to a new tryptophan-tagged amino acid naphthalenediimide (TrpNDI). Confocal fluorescence microscopy coupled with fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIM) mapping, single and two-photon fluorescence excitation, lifetime components and corresponding decay profiles were used as parameters able to investigate qualitatively the cellular behavior regarding the molecular environment and biolocalisation of TrpNDI and TrpNDI–RGDfK in cancer cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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11. Synthesis and evaluation of a boronate-tagged 1,8-naphthalimide probe for fluoride recognition.
- Author
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Xu, Su-Ying, Sun, Xiaolong, Ge, Haobo, Arrowsmith, Rory L., Fossey, John S., Pascu, Sofia I., Jiang, Yun-Bao, and James, Tony D.
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- 2015
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12. Re and 99mTc complexes of BodP3 - multi-modality imaging probes.
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Davies, Laura H., Clegg, William, Harringtona, Ross W., Higham, Lee J., Kasten, Benjamin B., Benny, Paul D., Arrowsmith, Rory L., Ge Haobo, Pascu, Sofia I., and Botchway, Stan W.
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RHENIUM ,PHOSPHINE ,CANCER cells ,FLUORESCENT probes ,SINGLE-photon emission computed tomography - Abstract
A fluorescent tridentate phosphine, BodP
3 (2), forms rhenium complexes which effectively image cancer cells. Related technetium analogues are also readily prepared and have potential as dual SPECT/fluorescent biological probes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
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13. Extracellular Electrophysiology in the Prostate Cancer Cell Model PC-3.
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Cabello, Miguel, Ge, Haobo, Aracil, Carmen, Moschou, Despina, Estrela, Pedro, Manuel Quero, Jose, I. Pascu, Sofia, and R. F. Rocha, Paulo
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PROSTATE cancer ,NANOPARTICLES ,CELL proliferation ,ELECTRODES ,T cells - Abstract
Although prostate cancer is one of the most common cancers in the male population, its basic biological function at a cellular level remains to be fully understood. This lack of in depth understanding of its physiology significantly hinders the development of new, targeted and more effective treatment strategies. Whilst electrophysiological studies can provide in depth analysis, the possibility of recording electrical activity in large populations of non-neuronal cells remains a significant challenge, even harder to address in the picoAmpere-range, which is typical of cellular level electrical activities. In this paper, we present the measurement and characterization of electrical activity of populations of prostate cancer cells PC-3, demonstrating for the first time a meaningful electrical pattern. The low noise system used comprises a multi-electrode array (MEA) with circular gold electrodes on silicon oxide substrates. The extracellular capacitive currents present two standard patterns: an asynchronous sporadic pattern and a synchronous quasi-periodic biphasic spike pattern. An amplitude of ±150 pA, a width between 50–300 ms and an inter-spike interval around 0.5 Hz characterize the quasi-periodic spikes. Our experiments using treatment of cells with Gd
3 ⁺, known as an inhibitor for the Ca2 ⁺ exchanges, suggest that the quasi-periodic signals originate from Ca2 ⁺ channels. After adding the Gd3 ⁺ to a population of living PC-3 cells, their electrical activity considerably decreased; once the culture was washed, thus eliminating the Gd3 ⁺ containing medium and addition of fresh cellular growth medium, the PC-3 cells recovered their normal electrical activity. Cellular viability plots have been carried out, demonstrating that the PC-3 cells remain viable after the use of Gd3 ⁺, on the timescale of this experiment. Hence, this experimental work suggests that Ca2 ⁺ is significantly affecting the electrophysiological communication pattern among PC-3 cell populations. Our measuring platform opens up new avenues for real time and highly sensitive investigations of prostate cancer signalling pathways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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14. Frontispiece: Fluorescence-Lifetime Imaging and Super-Resolution Microscopies Shed Light on the Directed- and Self-Assembly of Functional Porphyrins onto Carbon Nanotubes and Flat Surfaces.
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Mao, Boyang, Calatayud, David G., Mirabello, Vincenzo, Kuganathan, Navaratnarajah, Ge, Haobo, Jacobs, Robert M. J., Shepherd, Ashley M., Ribeiro Martins, José A., Bernardino De La Serna, Jorge, Hodges, Benjamin J., Botchway, Stanley W., and Pascu, Sofia I.
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HIGH resolution imaging ,CARBON nanotubes ,PORPHYRINS - Abstract
Stimulated emission depletion (STED) super‐resolution imaging and multiphoton fluorescence lifetime imaging techniques are used to image the aggregation of ZnII porphyrin arrays onto flat and conductive, as well as insulating, surfaces. New synthetic routes using directed‐ as well as self‐assembling methods of new, luminescent hybrids incorporating these functional porphyrins and pristine single‐walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) are reported. Multi‐domain imaging and spectroscopy techniques shed light on the potential implications of the covalent and supramolecular functionalization approaches in solution, dispersion, on surfaces and in the solid state. For more information, see the Full Paper by S. I. Pascu et al. on page 9772 ff. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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