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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, December 2003, p. 3799-3805, Vol. 47, No. 12
0066-4804/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.47.12.3799-3805.2003
Copyright © 2003, American
Society for
Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Division of AIDS, STD, and TB Laboratory Research, National Center for HIV, STD and TB Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia 30333
Received 16 June 2003/ Returned for modification 24 July 2003/ Accepted 19 September 2003
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50 µg/ml. The ethA
mutations were all different, previously unreported, and distributed
throughout the gene. In eight of the isolates, a missense mutation in
the inhA structural gene occurred. The ETH MICs for seven of
the InhA mutants were
100 µg/ml, and these isolates
were also resistant to
8 µg of INH per ml. Only a
single point mutation in the inhA promoter was identified in
14 isolates. A katG mutation occurred in 15 isolates, for
which the INH MICs for all but 1 were
32 µg/ml. As
expected, we found no association between katG mutation and
the level of ETH resistance. Mutations within the ethA and
inhA structural genes were associated with relatively high
levels of ETH resistance. Approximately 76% of isolates
resistant to
50 µg of ETH per ml had such
mutations. |
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The molecular genetics of INH resistance in Myobacterium tuberculosis has been extensively investigated. INH is classified as a prodrug, meaning that it must undergo in vivo transformation to an active form. katG-encoded catalase-peroxidase (KatG) performs this function in M. tuberculosis (30), and mutations in katG, particularly at codon 315, confer INH, but not ETH, resistance (5). The primary target of activated INH is an NADH-dependent enoyl-acyl carrier protein reductase, designated InhA (16). Mutations within the inhA structural gene (1, 3, 15, 23) or within the inhA promoter (15, 17, 21, 22, 24) have been identified and are associated with both INH and ETH resistance (16, 17). Missense mutations within the inhA structural gene cause INH resistance by reducing the NADH binding affinity of InhA and thus protecting the enzyme from INH inactivation (25). The inhA promoter mutations upregulate target expression, producing INH and ETH resistance via a drug titration mechanism (1, 16). The structural similarity and shared molecular target of INH and ETH led to the hypothesis that ETH must, like INH, undergo cellular activation (4).
Recently two groups have reported the discovery of an enzyme capable of activating ETH (4, 10). Both groups initially identified a protein that when overexpressed produced ETH resistance. This protein showed homology with members of the TetR family of transcriptional regulators (4, 10). The open reading frame (ORF) encoding this protein is designated Rv3855 in the M. tuberculosis genome database. An adjacent, transvergently transcribed ORF (Rv3854c), separated from the other by a 76-bp intergenic region, encodes a protein with homology to known monooxygenases (4, 10). Overexpression of Rv3854c in Mycobacterium smegmatis resulted in substantially increased ETH sensitivity relative to wild-type M. smegmatis (4, 10). Mycolic acid synthesis was also dramatically inhibited in the Rv3854c expression construct (4). Attempts to overexpress Rv3854c in M. tuberculosis were unsuccessful (10). These results led both groups to conclude that Rv3854c activates ETH and that this enzyme is under the regulatory control of Rv3855. The DeBarber group designated Rv3855 and Rv3854c as etaR and etaA, respectively, while the Baulard group used the designations ethR and ethA, respectively.
The identification and characterization of the ethAR loci represent a significant advance in understanding the biochemistry of ETH and the mechanistic relationship of this drug to its structural analog, INH. ETH must undergo activation via an EthA-mediated process in a manner analogous to the KatG activation of INH. The putative final metabolites for both drugs are very similar, and they share the same cellular target, namely InhA. Genetic alterations leading to reduced EthA activity would be expected to result in increased ETH resistance, just as katG mutations confer INH resistance. The ethA genes of 11 ETH-resistant isolates were sequenced, and coding sequence mutations were found in all of them (10).
While the ability of EthA to activate ETH has been convincingly demonstrated, very limited data exist on the occurrence of ethA mutations in ETH-resistant M. tuberculosis clinical isolates. This investigation was undertaken to provide additional data regarding the relative prevalence of ethA and inhA mutations in such isolates. We sequenced either all or part of the ethA, inhA, and katG genes of 41 ETH-resistant clinical isolates of M. tuberculosis. To evaluate the relative phenotypic impact of mutations within these genes, we determined the MICs of ETH and INH for all isolates.
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Genomic DNA was prepared by a minibead cell disruption protocol. One milliliter of a 2-week-old 7H9 broth culture was added to a 2.0-ml screw-cap microcentrifuge tube containing Lysing Matrix B (Qbiogene, Inc., Carlsbad, Calif.). The tubes were then incubated for 20 min at 95°C to kill the cells. Next, 200 µl of chloroform and 300 µl of Tris-EDTA (TE) buffer were added to each tube. This mixture was vigorously agitated for 1 min with a Mickle cell disrupter (Brinkman Instruments, Inc., Westbury, N.Y.) and then centrifuged at 10,000 rpm for 5 min. The aqueous phase, which contained genomic DNA, was collected and stored at 4°C.
DNA amplification and sequencing. The entire ethA ORF was PCR amplified. Because of the large size of this ORF (1,470 bp), three reactions were performed for each sample, producing three overlapping PCR amplicons: ETH1, ETH2, and ETH3. The primers used and the sizes of the amplicons generated are as follows: primers ethA-1 and ethA-5 produced a 667-bp product designated ETH1, primers ethA-4 and ethA-9 produced a 692-bp product (ETH2), and primers ethA-8 and ethA-10 produced a 342-bp product (ETH3). All reaction mixtures contained 12.5 µl of HotStartTaq master mix (Qiagen Inc., Santa Clarita, Calif.), 1.0 µl of template DNA, and each primer at a final concentration of 0.3 µM. Each reaction was adjusted to a final volume of 25 µl with Type 1 water. The amplification profile for ETH1 and ETH2 consisted of an initial 15-min denaturation and enzyme activation at 95°C followed by 35 cycles of 95°C denaturation for 30 s and 65°C annealing and elongation for 1.25 min and a final 5-min elongation. The profile for ETH3 was identical, except that the annealing and elongation temperature was 68°C. All amplifications were performed in a Gene-Amp PCR system 2400 thermal cycler (Perkin-Elmer, Inc., Foster City, Calif.).
A 322-bp fragment of katG encompassing codon 315 was PCR amplified with primers katG-1 and katG-2. A 248-bp fragment containing the inhA promoter was amplified with primers inhA-1 and inhA-2. Nucleotide residues 13 to 379 of the 810-nucleotide (nt) inhA ORF were amplified with primers inhA-3 and inhA-4. The PCR mixtures and thermal cycler used to amplify these three loci were the same as those described for ethA amplification. All three loci were amplified with the same thermal cycling profile of 15 min of denaturation and enzyme activation at 95°C followed by 35 cycles of 95°C denaturation for 30 s, 60°C annealing for 30 s, 72°C elongation for 30 s, and a final 5-min elongation. The entire katG structural gene was sequenced in a select subset (n = 12) of the isolates.
Automated DNA sequencing was performed by dichlororhodamine BigDye terminator chemistry (Perkin-Elmer, Inc.). The protocol supplied by the manufacturer was modified by halving the volume of master mix used and adjusting the ionic strength of the reaction mixture with 5x sequencing buffer (Perkin-Elmer, Inc.). The fluorescent elongation products were electrophoresed on a model 373XL DNA sequencer (Perkin-Elmer, Inc.). Amplicons ETH1 and ETH2 of ethA were each sequenced with four internal primers and the katG, inhA promoter, inhA ORF, and ETH3 amplicons were sequenced with the primers used for amplification. A complete list of all PCR and sequencing primers, with their nucleotide sequences, is found in Table 1. All ethA primers were designed with Oligo version 6.0 primer analysis software (Molecular Biology Insights, Inc., Cascade, Colo.). Sequence analyses were performed with Sequence Navigator version 1.0.1 software (Perkin-Elmer, Inc.), and all sequencing runs included the pan-susceptible strain M. tuberculosis H37Rv (ATCC 27294) as a wild-type control. Each sequence was compared with that of both the control strain and the appropriate published sequence.
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TABLE 1. Oligonucleotide
primers used in this study
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ETH and INH susceptibility testing. ETH and INH susceptibility testing was performed with the microplate alamar blue assay (MABA) (12). A 32-mg/ml stock solution of ETH (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, Mo.) was prepared in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO; J. T. Baker, Inc., Phillipsburg, N.J.), and a 10-mg/ml stock solution of INH (Sigma Chemical Co.) was prepared in sterile water. The stock solutions were aliquoted and stored at -70°C. The ETH stock was diluted with Middlebrook 7H9 broth to a concentration of 400 µg/ml, and the solution was subsequently twofold serially diluted, resulting in solutions ranging in concentration from 400 to 50 µg/ml. Four additional twofold serial dilutions ranging in concentration from 40 to 5.0 µg/ml were formulated by the same approach.
The perimeter wells of 96-well, clear microtiter plates (Costar 3596; Corning, Inc., Corning, N.Y.) were filled with 200 µl of sterile water to prevent the plates from drying out during incubation. The wells in rows B through F of each column received 100 µl of test medium, with the drug concentration highest in column 2 and diminishing in order through column 9. Columns 10 and 11 received 100 and 200 µl of drug-free medium, respectively. To control for any possible inhibitory effect of the DMSO on cell growth, the wells in row G received 100 µl of DMSO-containing media. The concentration of DMSO in each column was equivalent to that of the ETH-containing wells in that column. The INH assay plate was prepared in a similar manner, with concentrations ranging from 64 to 0.5 µg/ml.
The M. tuberculosis strains were cultured for 2 weeks, after which the turbidity was visually adjusted with 7H9 broth to that equivalent to a McFarland no. 1 standard. The inocula were prepared by diluting the standardized cultures 1:25 with 7H9 broth. Each test well received 100 µl of inoculum. The wells in column 11 were not inoculated and served as a sterility control. The plates were sealed with transparent tape. The pan-susceptible M. tuberculosis strains H37Rv and "circle 8" (a clinical isolate routinely used as a control in our laboratory) were used as controls.
The plates were incubated at 35°C under ambient conditions. The detection reagent was prepared by diluting a 10x alamar blue (Trek Diagnostic Systems, Inc., Westlake, Ohio) solution 1:1 with freshly prepared 10% Tween 80 (Sigma Chemical Co.). After 9 days of incubation, 25 µl of alamar blue solution was added to the drug-free control wells (columns 10 and 11). The plates were incubated for another 24 h, after which the control wells were examined. A color change from blue to pink in the inoculated wells and no color change in the uninoculated wells validated the controls. Once the controls were validated, 25 µl of alamar blue solution was dispensed into the remaining test wells. The plates were examined, and results were recorded after another 24 h of incubation. The MIC was defined as the lowest drug concentration that prevented a color change. All strains were tested in duplicate on separate occasions.
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200 µg/ml. |
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TABLE 2. Characteristics
of 41 clinical M. tuberculosis isolates
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Thr or Val and Ser
94
Ala) and one was silent (Leu 44
Leu). Twenty-seven
(66%) of the 41 isolates displayed a mutation in the
inhA regulatory region. All but one of these involved the
substitution of cytosine for thymine at the position 15 nt upstream
(-15) of the mabA initiation codon. The one exception
was a thymine-to-cytosine transition at position -17. Six of
the eight inhA ORF missense mutants also displayed
inhA regulatory mutations. Only one isolate (isolate 15)
possessed mutations in all of the regions examined; however, the
inhA ORF mutation was silent. Three isolates were wild type at
both the ethA and inhA loci, two of which were
susceptible to the lowest concentration of ETH tested, while the MIC
for the third isolate was 50 µg/ml.
The complete
katG ORF of 12 isolates and a fragment encompassing codons 249
through 342 (741 total codons) of the remaining isolates were
sequenced. Mutations in katG were found in 15 (37%) of
the 41 isolates. Eleven of those mutants had a guanine-to-cytosine
transversion at nt 944, resulting in the substitution of threonine for
serine at amino acid residue 315. The four other katG
mutations identified were Asn 138
Thr, Glu 195
Lys, Gly
279
Asp, and Trp 341
Ser. The INH MICs for all but one
of the katG mutants were
32 µg/ml: the INH
MIC for the Glu 195
Lys mutant (isolate 35) was 1
µg/ml. Tables
3 and 4 list the number of
isolates with mutations in each locus, or combination of loci,
stratified according to
MIC.
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TABLE 3. ETH
MICs for and mutations in the ethA and inhA loci of
41 clinical M. tuberculosis isolates
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TABLE 4. INH
MICs for and mutations in the katG and inhA loci of
41 clinical M. tuberculosis isolates
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ETH
and INH MICs.
We determined
the MICs of ETH and INH for all 41 isolates in order to compare the
types of mutations identified with drug resistance levels. The INH MICs
showed perfect concordance between replicates in 39 (95%) of the
isolates. The MICs of the two discrepant isolates differed by only 1
dilution. The end points for INH were sharp and unambiguous, as
indicated by the absence of a color change from blue to pink in the MIC
well. The end points for ETH were somewhat less obvious, since color
changes were gradual as the end point was approached. This
"trailing" effect typically occurred over 1 to 2 drug
dilutions, but did not occur for isolates that were either fully
susceptible or resistant to
200 µg of ETH per ml. To
confirm our 24-h readings, we allowed the plates to incubate for an
additional 24 h, after which time, the color change from blue
to pink became more pronounced. The ETH MICs for 27 (66%) of the
isolates were identical between tests: 10 (24%) differed by 1
dilution, and 4 (10%) differed by 2 dilutions. In all cases, we
defined the MIC as the lowest concentration that prevented any color
change compared with the negative control.
The ETH MICs for 15
isolates with ethA mutations, either alone (n
= 9) or in combination with inhA promoter mutations,
were
50 µg/ml. No isolate for which the ETH MIC was
25 µg/ml possessed ethA mutations. Six
isolates displayed both inhA ORF and promoter mutations, and
the ETH MIC for all of them was
100 µg/ml. Two strains
with Ser 94
Ala substitutions in InhA had a wild-type promoter;
one of these (isolate 2) was wild type at all other loci examined,
while the other (isolate 35) also had a Glu 195
Lys
substitution in katG. Isolate 35 was much less resistant to
both ETH and INH than was isolate 2.
In 14 of the isolates, only
inhA promoter mutations were identified. The ETH MICs for
these isolates varied greatly, with six being resistant to
100
µg/ml, seven being in the range of 10 to 25 µg/ml, and
one being susceptible to the lowest concentration tested. The INH
resistance level of these isolates was much more consistent, with INH
MICs for 13 being either 2 or 4 µg/ml. The sole exception
(isolate 17) was resistant to >32 µg of INH per ml.
This strain was also resistant to 200 µg of ETH per
ml.
The INH MICs for 17 (41%) of the study isolates were
32 µg/ml. Fourteen of these possessed katG
mutations, either alone (n = 9) or in combination with
inhA promoter mutations (n = 5). Two strains
(isolates 1 and 14) resistant to 32 µg of INH per ml had both
an Ile 21
Thr substitution in InhA and an inhA
promoter mutation. The INH MICs for four strains with both
inhA ORF and promoter mutations, one strain with only an ORF
mutation (isolate 2), and one strain with only a promoter mutation
(isolate 4) were 8 µg/ml. At least one example of each of the
three InhA substitutions identified in this study is represented in
this group. In the case of the Ile 21
Thr substitution, this
change occurred in conjunction with a point mutation within the
inhA promoter, resulting in the replacement of guanine with
thymine at position -17. This contrasts with two strains
resistant to 32 µg of INH per ml that had the same
inhA ORF mutation but in combination with the -15
promoter mutation. The INH MIC for one isolate (isolate 35) with a Ser
94
Ala substitution in InhA and a Glu 195
Lys
substitution in KatG was 1 µg/ml. No INH resistance-associated
mutations were identified in four INH-resistant
isolates.
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Thr being the
most prevalent. The predominance of the codon 315 mutations has been
explained by the need for the cell to maintain a minimum basal level of
catalase-peroxidase activity to protect against organic peroxides.
Alterations that reduce KatG activity below this critical level would
be lethal, and changes that lead to little or no reduction in enzyme
activity would result in little or no decrease in INH
susceptibility. The fact that no such well-adapted ethA mutation has emerged in the ETH-resistant bacilli investigated suggests the existence of one or more enzymes with functional redundancy to EthA. In fact, the genome of M. tuberculosis possibly encodes more than 30 monooxygenases (4). The proliferation of such enzymes in M. tuberculosis may have evolved as a protective mechanism against various xenobiotic substances (10). The exact role of EthA is not known, but the gene is highly conserved throughout the genus, suggesting it serves an important function (4). Diminution, or loss, of EthA activity would thus be expected to have a deleterious effect on the cell. Given the proliferation of EthA homologs, it seems likely that one or more of these enzymes may be capable of compensating for a loss of EthA activity.
Clearly further study is needed to substantiate the association between ethA mutations and ETH resistance and to establish the extent of genetic diversity in this gene. Should the initial finding that a wide array of mutations occur in ETH-resistant strains be verified by future investigation, such a phenomenon would resemble that seen in the pncA gene of M. tuberculosis strains resistant to PZA (20). This gene encodes pyrazinamidase, the enzyme responsible for the conversion of the PZA into its metabolically active derivative pyrazinoic acid (26). ETH, INH, and PZA are all nicotinamide analogs, and all three drugs rely on fortuitous enzymatic conversion to their respective active metabolites.
The predominance of a single, well-adapted mutation in the katG gene of high-level INH-resistant strains reflects this enzyme's critical function of detoxifying reactive oxygen species. Under those rare circumstances in which KatG expression is completely lost, this loss occurs in conjunction with a mutation in the ahpC promoter that up-regulates expression of AhpC, an enzyme also involved in antioxidant defense (27). In contrast, PZA-resistant strains display a wide diversity, both in number and spatial distribution, of pncA mutations, and no particular mutation predominates. The ethA genes of high-level ETH-resistant strains appear to possess a similar degree of genetic diversity, and no evidence of selective pressure favoring a particular mutation has emerged.
While all of the ethA mutants
identified were resistant to
50 µg of ETH per ml,
together they accounted for only 15 (52%) of the 29 isolates
displaying that phenotype. An inhA missense mutation was found
in half of the remaining 14 isolates. Two isolates (isolates 1 and 7)
with a shared spoligotype pattern had mutations in adjacent nucleotides
of inhA codon 21 that resulted in different amino acid
substitutions. These two isolates have very different levels of INH
resistance. The higher INH MIC for isolate 1 may result from the
replacement of an aliphatic isoleucine residue with a weakly polar
hydroxyl-containing threonine residue. Such a replacement can produce a
greater disruption of InhA structure than is produced when an aliphatic
valine residue is substituted, as in isolate 7. X-ray crystallography
of InhA has shown that Ile 21 is located in the NADH binding site
(11). The fact that no
similar disparity was seen in ETH MICs may result from subtle
differences in drug-target interactions between ETH, INH, and the
InhA-NADH complex. Alternatively, differences in ETH resistance between
the two mutants may have gone undetected because they occur at
concentrations >200 µg/ml. An Ile 21
Thr
substitution occurred in an unrelated strain from Brazil (isolate 14)
that was also resistant to >200 µg of ETH per ml and
>32 µg of INH per ml, suggesting that the phenotype
associated with that particular mutation is consistent across strains.
The phenotype associated with the Ile 21
Val substitution also
recurred in a second strain (isolate 6); however, this strain differed
from the matched pair by one spacer.
InhA structural gene mutations were far more prevalent in this study than in previous investigations. This inconsistency presumably reflects the different criteria used for selecting the study specimens. We selected our isolates on the basis of ETH resistance, whereas in previous investigations, isolates were selected on the basis of INH resistance (21, 22, 24).
We identified
a Ser 94
Ala mutation in the inhA structural gene of
three strains (isolates 2, 20, and 35). This mutation was first
described in the seminal paper identifying InhA as the target of ETH
and INH (1). Curiously, we
are not aware of any prior report describing the originally identified
Ser 94
Ala alteration in clinical isolates. In one strain
(isolate 2), this was the only mutation identified, while in the
others, it occurred in combination with either a katG (isolate
35) or an inhA promoter mutation (isolate 20). The resistance
phenotypes of these strains differed dramatically. The inconsistency of
these results is difficult to reconcile but suggests the involvement of
other, strain-specific factors.
An inhA promoter
mutation was identified in 15 isolates with wild-type ethA and
inhA structural genes. The ETH MICs for eight of these
isolates were in the range of 10 to 25 µg/ml, a moderate
increase in ETH resistance that is consistent with a drug titration
mechanism. Four of the 15 promoter mutants were resistant to
>200 µg of ETH per ml, and the MIC for 2 mutants each
was100 µg/ml. It is highly improbable that the promoter
mutation alone can account for the high-level ETH resistance seen in
those isolates. This assertion is supported by the fact that the INH
MICs for five of these strains were
4 µg/ml. Were the
promoter mutation alone responsible for the high-level ETH resistance
seen in these strains, we would expect a concomitant and proportional
increase in INH resistance.
A more plausible explanation for the high-level ETH resistance of those strains is that other, ETH-specific mechanisms of resistance are involved. Expression of EthA is under the negative regulatory control of the protein repressor EthR. An increase in EthR expression would then down-regulate ethA, ultimately leading to less drug activation and increased resistance to ETH. Hyperexpression of EthR has been experimentally proven to cause ETH resistance (4, 10) and could therefore explain the highly ETH-resistant phenotype of the six strains with only an inhA promoter mutation. How EthR production is controlled and to what stimuli it responds are unknown. The potentially important involvement of ethR in clinical ETH resistance shows the need for additional studies to determine which factors mediate EthR production.
The MABA method proved itself a very useful research tool for correlating specific mutations in ETH and INH drug resistance markers with relative resistance phenotypes. The INH MICs obtained were highly reproducible between tests. Establishing a precise end point for ETH was somewhat technically challenging because of "trailing" effect, but there was good reproducibility between replicates. The different end point characteristics of ETH and INH presumably reflect the in vitro bactericidal potency of the two drugs: INH is considered to be bactericidal at or near its MIC, while ETH is bactericidal at concentrations 2 to 4 times its MIC (13). The MICs we report here are specific to the MABA method, and we caution the reader against extrapolating these results to other drug susceptibility testing methods.
In summary, our finding of ethA mutations in
52% of clinical isolates for which ETH MICs were
50
µg/ml provides substantial new evidence confirming the role of
this gene in ETH resistance. As expected, mutations in ethA
had no detectable association with INH resistance. The level of INH
resistance in the study isolates was explainable by and consistent with
mutations in katG and inhA. Twenty-four percent of
the high-level ETH-resistant strains had mutations in the inhA
structural gene. With the exception of Ser 94
Ala, these
mutations always occurred in combination with inhA promoter
mutations. Only an inhA promoter mutation was identified in
approximately a third of the isolates. The majority of those isolates
displayed intermediate levels of ETH and INH resistance. Six of the
promoter mutants were resistant to
100 µg of ETH per
ml, a high level of resistance that we believe is not exclusively
attributable to the promoter mutations but rather results from another
mechanism. Because the regulatory protein EthR mediates ethA
expression, it seems reasonable that activator and target mutations
alone cannot account for all observed high-level ETH resistance. While
mechanisms of ETH resistance exclusive of the ethAR loci
cannot be discounted, it seems probable that mutation in ethA
is not the only ETH resistance-associated mechanism involving these
loci. While the identification of the ethAR loci has
contributed greatly to the understanding of ETH resistance, additional
investigation is clearly needed.
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