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Infection and Immunity, March 2005, p. 1820-1827, Vol. 73, No. 3
0019-9567/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.73.3.1820-1827.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology & Immunology,1 Department of Pathology, College of Medicine,3 Department of Biological Sciences, College of Arts & Sciences, University of South Alabama, Mobile, Alabama,2 Departments of Environmental Toxicology and Molecular, Cell & Developmental Biology, University of California at Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, California4
Received 29 July 2004/ Returned for modification 28 September 2004/ Accepted 22 November 2004
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Chemotaxis, the ability of microorganisms to move in response to chemical cues, is widespread within the prokaryotic world, but its role in mammalian infection is poorly understood (19, 30). Motility and chemotaxis both promote initial H. pylori colonization, but nonchemotactic mutants are able to infect, albeit with various degrees of attenuation (3, 11, 15, 29, 39). The study of chemotaxis in vivo, therefore, may allow us to better dissect the steps of pathogenesis, because nonchemotactic mutants may be deficient in a specific subset of pathogenesis mechanisms.
Chemotaxis has been extensively studied in Escherichia coli (4, 6). In this microbe, chemoreceptors (also known as methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins) sense environmental cues such as amino acids and transmit the ligand-binding information to a signal transduction cascade that affects the direction of flagellar rotation. The core signal transduction proteins consist of the receptor-kinase coupling and adapter protein (CheW), the kinase (CheA), and the CheY response regulator, which interacts with the flagellar motor in its phosphorylated state. When an attractant ligand binds to the chemoreceptor, the kinase activity of CheA is squelched and unphosphorylated CheY predominates. In this form, CheY fails to interact with the flagellar motor, the flagella rotate counterclockwise, and the bacteria swim straight. When no ligand is bound to the chemoreceptor, the CheA kinase is active and CheY is phosphorylated (CheY-P) and interacts with the flagellar motor. In the presence of CheY-P, the flagellar motor rotates clockwise and the bacteria randomly reorient in space by using a behavior called tumbling.
H. pylori chemotaxis appears to be comprised of some similar components, as well as unique features, compared with E. coli (2, 28, 40). H. pylori has four chemoreceptors: TlpA, TlpB, TlpC, and HlyB. TlpA appears to sense arginine and bicarbonate (7), but the ligands of the other three chemoreceptors are unknown. H. pylori has CheW, CheA, and CheY homologues, and all of these have the predicted chemotaxis phenotypes based on the E. coli model (5, 15, 31). H. pylori additionally has three proteins that are hybrids of CheW and CheY, called CheVs. While Bacillus subtilis CheV is redundant with CheW (32), none of the H. pylori CheVs are redundant with its CheW (31), suggesting that H. pylori may have a number of unique features in its chemotaxis pathway.
Analysis of nonchemotactic mutants has shown that chemotaxis is important for H. pylori animal infection, although the degree that these mutants are impaired varies between different reports. One group reported that mutants lacking cheA or cheY were totally unable to infect mice and piglets (15), while some of us (39) have observed that mutants lacking cheA, cheY, or cheW infect mice but not as well as the wild type. To attempt to resolve these differences, a third model was sought to examine how H. pylori mutants defective in different parts of the chemotaxis pathway would behave. Gerbils have become a popular model for H. pylori pathogenesis studies because infection in these animals mimics the human-like spectrum of symptoms, including severe gastritis, ulcers, and cancer (17, 42). We show here that nonchemotactic cheY mutants are unable to infect gerbils, while cheY mutants complemented with a wild-type copy of cheY regain infection ability. In addition, a tlpB chemoreceptor mutant infects gerbils to levels that are indistinguishable from the wild type but causes significantly less gastritis.
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Plasmids were prepared using QIAGEN kits. For preparation of genomic DNA, DNeasy kits (QIAGEN) or Wizard Genomic kits (Promega) were used. All restriction and DNA modification enzymes were from New England Biolabs or Invitrogen. Amplification of DNA was carried out using Pfu-Turbo polymerase (Stratagene) or Taq polymerase (a generous gift of D. Kellogg). All DNA sequencing was performed at the University of California at Berkeley sequencing facility.
For gerbil inoculation, wild-type SS1, the isogenic tlpB and cheY mutants, and the cheY/cheY+-complemented strain were passaged an equal number of times from the frozen stock onto Campylobacter agar (Becton Dickinson, Sparks, Md.) containing 10% defibrinated sheep blood (Quad Five, Ryegate, Mont.). Strains were then grown overnight in a T25 cm2 tissue culture flask in a 5% CO2 atmosphere in humidified air without aeration in 5 ml of Ham's F-12 medium (Invitrogen) containing 2% heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum (FBS) plus vancomycin (10 µg/ml) and flucytosine (5 µg/ml). Strains were then diluted 1:40 in 40 ml of F-12 medium plus serum (2%), flucytosine (5 µg/ml), bacitracin (30 µg/ml), amphotericin B (5 µg/ml), vancomycin, and trimethoprim (10 µg/ml) in a T75 cm2 tissue culture flask and allowed to grow an additional 16 to 18 h. All strains grew equally well under these conditions and displayed motility. Bacteria were harvested by centrifugation, washed with 1x phosphate-buffered saline (PBS; Invitrogen), resuspended in 1 ml of PBS, and used for the inoculation of animals.
Assessment of motility and chemotaxis. Motility was determined by phase-microscopic inspection of cultures (Olympus IMT-2). Motility was further evaluated using soft-agar plates composed of brucella broth, 5% FBS, 0.35% agar, and H. pylori-selective antibiotics. A small portion of the strain to be tested was stabbed about three-fourths of the way into the thickness of the agar, and the diameter of the bacterial halo was measured each day for 7 days. Formation of the halo in this assay depends on both motility and chemotaxis, although the chemotactic component of this medium is unknown.
Mutagenesis of cheY The cheY gene (hp1067) was mutagenized using inverse PCR (iPCR) to create an in-frame deletion of the majority of cheY on pKO126 by using primers 126del1 and 126del2 (3). All plasmids are listed in Table 1, and primers are listed in Table 2. Because there are several genes downstream of cheY, we used a cat gene lacking transcriptional terminators to minimize polar effects. The terminatorless cat gene (cat-m) was digested from pCat-mut (39) with SmaI and HincII and ligated with the iPCR cheY product to create pKO127, in which the cat gene is oriented in the same direction as cheY. Plasmid pKO127 was verified by restriction enzyme analysis and DNA sequencing.
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TABLE 1. Plasmids used in this studya
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TABLE 2. Oligonucleotide primers used in this study
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cheY::cat-m architecture of chloramphenicol-resistant transformants (data not shown). In addition, reverse transcription-PCR showed that a gene downstream of cheY and transcribed from the same promoter, copA (5), was still transcribed at wild-type levels in the
cheY::cat-m mutants, confirming that this mutation is nonpolar (data not shown).
Complementation of cheY.
The cheY coding region and its promoter were amplified from pKO126 with primers cheY1 and LCcheY2. This PCR fragment was digested with BamHI and XbaI and cloned into BamHI- and XbaI-digested pLC292, an ampicillin-resistant version of pRdxA (38), to create pKO140. Plasmid pKO140 was verified by restriction enzyme analysis. This plasmid directs the integration of cheY to the rdxA locus (hp0954), where disruption is selectable by metronidazole resistance. Plasmid pKO140 treated with cell-free H. pylori SS1 wild-type extract (to methylate the DNA) (10) was used to transform H. pylori wild-type SS1 to metronidazole resistance. Genomic DNA from SS1 rdxA::cheY was used to transform SS1
cheY::cat-m to metronidazole resistance as described above to create strain SS1 cheY/cheY+. Verification of the rdxA::cheY insertion and retention of the cheY::cat-m was done by PCR using primers that flank the insertion sites (rdxAstart with rdxAend and cheY3 with cheY4).
Cloning and mutagenesis of tlpB. The tlpB gene (hp0103) with flanking sequences was amplified from H. pylori SS1 genomic DNA with primers tlpB-10 and tlpB-20 and with Pfu-Turbo polymerase. The 2.8-kb PCR product was ligated with EcoRV-cut pBluescript KS to create pTC-B101. Restriction enzyme analysis, DNA sequencing, and database comparison were used to confirm the construction of pTC-B101.
To generate the deletion of tlpB, we used primers tlpB-30 and tlpB-40 to perform iPCR, yielding a 4.1-kb product with a coding sequence for only 27 amino-terminal amino acids and 20 carboxy-terminal amino acids remaining. This product was ligated to cat from pBS-cat created by digestion with HincII to create pTC-B112 (cat has the same orientation as tlpB).
Plasmid pTC-B112 was transformed into H. pylori wild-type SS1, and chloramphenicol-resistant transformants containing
tlpB::cat were verified by PCR analysis (data not shown). Western blotting with an antichemoreceptor antibody demonstrated that SS1 tlpB mutants had lost an immunoreactive band (data not shown). This antibody was generated to the cytoplasmic domain of H. pylori TlpA and recognizes all H. pylori chemoreceptors (including TlpB) in the wild type (T. M. Andermann and K. M. Ottemann, unpublished data). Additionally, we verified that the tlpB mutation is not polar by determining that the downstream gene, hp0102, is expressed using reverse transcription-PCR analysis with primers HP102-1 and HP102-2 (data not shown).
Inoculation of gerbils, tissue processing, and recovery of H. pylori.
Animal experiments were carried out at the University of South Alabama with the approval of the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee. A total of 42 female 3-month-old Mongolian gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus; Charles River Laboratories) were used in this study. Six animals per group were employed. Animals were inoculated with SS1 wild type, the tlpB mutant, the cheY mutant, the cheY-complemented strain (cheY/cheY+), 1:1 mixtures of wild type with the tlpB mutant, or 1:1 mixtures of wild type and the cheY mutant (coinfection experiments). Each animal was orally inoculated with
5 x 108 viable CFU/ml in a volume of 50 µl (exact doses inoculated into gerbils are shown in figure legends). Six animals received 50 µl of PBS to serve as uninfected controls. At 4 weeks postinfection, animals were euthanized by cervical dislocation. Stomachs were removed and dissected longitudinally along the greater curvature, and the chyme was removed. A small section of the antrum was removed for histology. The rest of the stomach was excised into multiple slices, weighed, and then homogenized (10 to 15 s at a setting of 3; Ultra-Turrax T25, IKA Works, Inc.) in 1.5 ml of sterile PBS. Stomach homogenates and dilutions thereof in PBS were plated for viable counts in duplicate on Campylobacter blood agar plates containing flucytosine (5 µg/ml), vancomycin (10 µg/ml), amphotericin B (5 µg/ml), bacitracin (30 µg/ml), polymyxin B (10 U/ml), and trimethoprim (10 µg/ml) to suppress normal flora. Plates were incubated for 5 days in an anaerobic jar containing CampyPak Plus (Becton Dickinson). Data are presented as CFU/g of stomach.
Histology. A small portion of the distal end of the antrum was excised and fixed in 10% formalin. The tissue was embedded in paraffin, sectioned (5 µm thick; three consecutive sections), stained with hematoxylin and eosin stain, and evaluated in a blind fashion by a pathologist (J.E.C.). Each slide was read twice (independent sections) to ensure reproducibility, and identical grades were obtained in all cases. Grading of the antrum was conducted by two established methods. First, the method of Rugge et al. was used to assess the degree of gastric atrophy (34). Scores are as follows: 0, absent; 1, indefinite; 2, present. Second, the method of Eaton et al. was used to assess the degree of lymphocyte inflammation (12). Scores are as follows: 0, no infiltrates; 1, mild, multifocal infiltration; 2, mild, widespread infiltration; 3, mild, widespread, and moderate, multifocal infiltration; 4, moderate, widespread infiltration; 5, moderate, widespread, and severe, multifocal infiltration. Neutrophil infiltration was scored as present or absent. Pictures were taken using an Olympus C-5050 digital camera attached to an Olympus IMT-2 inverted phase-contrast microscope. Pictures were oriented apical side up, and all pictures were identically adjusted with brightness and contrast settings in Adobe Photoshop.
Stomach sections (from the above processing) from animals infected with the wild type or the tlpB mutant were analyzed further by counting 100 consecutive inflammatory cells in three fields per sample (magnification, x400) and scoring each cell as a neutrophil, lymphocyte, or eosinophil. Fields containing inflammation were selected at random, and the histologist was blind to the genotype of the infecting strain. The microscope used was an Olympus BX40. Other inflammatory cell types were never or very rarely observed.
Statistical analysis of data. For animals infected with the wild type or the tlpB mutant, the mean inflammatory scores were assessed only from animals that had been colonized with H. pylori to prevent undue skewing of the data. Statistical analysis of histology grading by atrophy and by inflammation was calculated by the Mann-Whitney U test using Instat 3.03 software (GraphPad Software, San Diego, Calif.). P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
The alternative Welch's two-tailed t test was used to determine whether a statistically significant difference occurred in the ratios of neutrophils to lymphocytes in wild-type versus tlpB mutant-infected gerbil stomach sections.
Colonization levels were analyzed statistically using the two-tailed t test (unpaired) at http://www.graphpad.com/quickcalcs/ttest1.cfm.
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Using brucella broth plus FBS soft agar, we confirmed that mutants lacking cheY are nonchemotactic whereas SS1 cheY/cheY+ and tlpB retain wild-type chemotactic abilities (Fig. 1). Because all these mutants retain motility, the defect in colonial expansion is consistent with the cheY mutant having a defect in chemotaxis.
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FIG. 1. Chemotactic abilities of SS1, SS1 tlpB, SS1 cheY/cheY+, and SS1 cheY. Scanned image of a 5-day-old soft-agar plate. The colonial diameters (in millimeters [mm]) are as follows: for SS1, 21.0 ± 1.2; for SS1 tlpB, 25.75 ± 1; for SS1 cheY/cheY+, 21.25 ± 1.7; for SS1 cheY, 3.25 ± 0.5. The table below the image shows the colonial expansion rate over 5 days; data are the averages (in millimeters) ± standard deviations (SD) of three separate assays. WT, wild type.
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FIG. 2. Colonization levels of nonchemotactic mutants after 4-week infection of gerbils. Gerbils (n = six per group, one experimental replicate) were infected with wild-type SS1 (WT) (3.2 x 108 CFU), SS1 cheY (1.6 x 108 CFU), SS1 tlpB (1.3 x 108 CFU), or SS1 cheY/cheY+ (3.3 x 108 CFU). Each animal is represented by an inverted triangle. The average, which includes the uninfected animals, is shown as a horizontal bar, and the limit of detection ( 100 CFU/g) is shown as a broken horizontal line. The number infected in each group was as follows: of WT, 6; of cheY, 0; of cheY/cheY+, 5; of tlpB, 4. There was no statistical difference between the wild type and tlpB or the wild type and cheY/cheY+.
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FIG. 3. Competition results from gerbils coinfected with the wild type (WT) plus cheY or tlpB. Gerbils (n = six per group, one experimental replicate) were infected with mixtures of cheY plus the wild type (mutant/WT ratio = [8.0 x 107]/[1.6 x 108] = 0.5) or tlpB plus wild type (mutant/WT ratio = [6.5 x 107]/[1.6 x 108] = 0.4). Average competitive index (horizontal bars) is the output ratio (mutant/wt) divided by the input ratio (mutant/wt). Each animal is represented by an inverted triangle. The broken horizontal line represents equally competitive strains. In the cheY coinfection group, none of the animals were infected with cheY but all were infected with the wild type. In the tlpB coinfection group, four of six animals were infected, and all of these had both tlpB and the wild type. We carried out statistical analyses by comparing each mutant's competitive index to 1, the number expected for a strain equal to the wild type, and found that the cheY mutant is significantly different from 1 (P < 0.01) and the tlpB mutant is not significantly different from 1 (P = 0.4).
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TABLE 3. Histology of antrums from uninfected gerbils and gerbils inoculated with wild-type SS1, the cheY mutant, or the tlpB mutant or with both the wild type and the tlpB mutant
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FIG. 4. Histology of antrum from uninfected gerbils or from gerbils inoculated with the wild type or the tlpB mutant of H. pylori. All sections were stained with hematoxylin and eosin. Magnification, x200. Arrows point to areas of lymphocytic inflammation. (A) Antrum from gerbil A4 inoculated with wild-type H. pylori strain SS1. (B) Antrum from gerbil A5 inoculated with wild-type H. pylori strain SS1. (C) Antrum from gerbil G1 inoculated with sterile buffer (uninfected control). (D) Antrum from gerbil C1 inoculated with the tlpB mutant. (E) Antrum from gerbil C2 inoculated with the tlpB mutant. (F) Antrum from gerbil C4 inoculated with the tlpB mutant.
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TABLE 4. Mice infected with the tlpB mutant show altered stomach neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratios
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Loss of the TlpB chemoreceptor does not affect the ability of H. pylori to colonize gerbils, a phenotype that is similar to that observed with tlpB mutants in mice (Chen and Ottemann, unpublished data). H. pylori is predicted to have four chemoreceptors that govern its chemotactic response. In contrast to TlpB, loss of either the TlpA or TlpC chemoreceptors causes a mouse colonization defect when the tlpA or tlpC mutants are coinfected with the wild type (3). The ability of the tlpB mutant to colonize gerbils even in the presence of the wild type strongly suggests that TlpB's function is not required for H. pylori growth or maintenance in vivo. Presumably, TlpB directs H. pylori's response to some environmental cues, but these cues are not needed for colonization in the gerbil. The ligand-binding portion of TlpB shares similarity only with uncharacterized proteins, and thus nothing is known about the types of signals sensed by this or related proteins. Furthermore, it is unknown whether TlpB-related proteins play roles in other bacterial-host interactions.
Consistent with their colonization abilities in gerbils, tlpB mutants display no chemotaxis defect in vitro. Loss of tlpB has no effect on the ability of H. pylori to chemotax in rich media in laboratory analyses, presumably because the bacterium has three other chemoreceptors that carry out redundant functions in this medium. Loss of any one of the other H. pylori chemoreceptors similarly has no effect in this assay (3; S. M. Williams and K. M. Ottemann, unpublished data).
Even though tlpB mutants colonize gerbil stomachs well, they do not produce the same type and level of inflammation. H. pylori induces inflammation in the gastric mucosa by causing the production of proinflammatory cytokines (14, 24, 37, 41). Several cells produce the cytokines, including gastric epithelial cells, Th1 lymphocytes, and other immune cells. Some Helicobacter spp. molecules that stimulate cytokine manufacture are known from studies of H. pylori or the related Helicobacter felis. For example, proteins encoded by the cag pathogenicity island (cag PAI) trigger epithelial cells to secrete the proinflammatory cytokines interleukin-8 (IL-8), IL-6, and tumor necrosis factor alpha (41). The same cytokines are released by macrophages confronted with H. pylori urease, while a different protein, OipA, has been shown to cause cultured gastric epithelial cells to produce IL-8 (43). Neutrophil-activating protein activates neutrophils such that they produce more reactive oxygen species and thus enhance inflammation. Lastly, lipopolysaccharide can stimulate Toll-like receptor 4 molecules to cause severe atrophic gastritis (35). Helicobacter proteins that directly stimulate Th1 cells are not yet known, although it is well known that these cells are critical for the development of gastritis (33). The strain used here, SS1, induces a strong inflammatory response in both gerbils and mice (9, 23), but is proposed to have an incomplete cag PAI (8). Whether the inflammation observed in gerbils in this study is cag dependent warrants further investigation.
While the possibility exists that the tlpB mutation could render polar effects on downstream genes possibly involved in inflammation, we found in vitro that expression of the downstream gene, encoding a predicted glycosyltransferase (hp0102), is similar in both the wild type and the tlpB mutant. Therefore, the polarity possibility is unlikely.
Other mutants are known to colonize gerbils well but lead to lessened inflammation, similar to the tlpB mutant reported here. In H. pylori strain TN2, mutants lacking the cag PAI lead to decreased inflammation while colonizing at wild-type levels (1, 18, 27). The cag PAI is known to trigger the secretion of proinflammatory cytokines from gastric epithelial cells, so it is easy to imagine why this mutant causes less inflammation (25). It is not known, however, why loss of a chemoreceptor leads to decreased inflammation. One hypothesis is that H. pylori cells missing TlpB fail to reach the proper stomach location to initiate inflammation, either by failure to deliver proteins to host cells or by failure to receive signals that induce the expression of bacterial genes involved in inducing inflammation. It is known that direct contact with the gastric epithelium enhances the severity of inflammation (16), and thus, one possibility is that TlpB guides H. pylori to contact epithelial cells. Another possibility is that tlpB mutants do not populate the antrum efficiently, and thus, there are fewer bacteria in that region to trigger inflammation. Such an idea comes from other studies showing that completely nonchemotactic mutants (lacking cheW) have a severe defect in antrum colonization and a mild defect in overall colonization of the mouse stomach (39). Unlike these fully nonchemotactic mutants, tlpB mutants infect the stomach to normal levels, and thus, the tlpB mutant defect in inflammation is probably not due to decreased numbers of H. pylori cells in the antrum.
In bacteria such as Vibrio cholerae, virulence gene regulation is controlled by the chemotaxis system (22). In this microbe, mutants in several chemotaxis genes, including cheA, cheY, cheZ, and one chemoreceptor (VC2161), do not induce expression of key virulence genes at the proper time. VC2161 has a similar architecture as TlpB (two predicted transmembrane domains) but is not homologous in the ligand-binding region and its ligand is unknown.
In H. pylori-infected stomachs, polymorphonuclear leukocytes such as neutrophils are the first inflammatory cells at the site, followed later by mononuclear cells such as T lymphocytes (37). The finding that stomach sections from the tlpB mutant-infected gerbils exhibit an altered ratio of neutrophils to lymphocytes, with higher neutrophils than the wild type, suggests that the tlpB mutants are still in the early neutrophil-heavy inflammatory gastritis phase, while wild-type-infected gerbils have already progressed to the latter lymphocyte-dominant phase. These observations suggest there is a significant delay in the inflammatory response in tlpB mutant-infected animals, and this delay may coincide with the reduced overall inflammation observed in these gerbils. Future studies will examine the inflammatory response at later infection times to see whether the tlpB mutant-derived inflammation remains defective or progresses to the more advanced inflammation observed in gastric tissue from wild-type-infected gerbils.
This study underscores the critical role H. pylori chemotaxis plays in animal infection and expands the possible roles for chemotaxis to include the induction of inflammation. Thus, the study of genes from the chemotaxis pathway may lead us to uncover different aspects of H. pylori pathogenesis. Deciphering the host signal transduction mechanisms behind the attenuated inflammation observed with the tlpB mutant will no doubt give us a better understanding of the complex and dynamic interactions of H. pylori with the host.
This work was supported by Public Health Service grants R01 CA101931 (to D.J.M.) and RO1 AI050000 (to K.M.O.) from the National Institutes of Health.
* Corresponding authors. Mailing address for D. J. McGee: Department of Microbiology & Immunology, University of South Alabama College of Medicine, 307 N. University Blvd., Mobile, AL 36688. Phone: (251) 460-7134. Fax: (251) 460-7931. E-mail: dmcgee{at}jaguar1.usouthal.edu. Mailing address for K. M. Ottemann: Department of Environmental Toxicology, University of California at Santa Cruz, 1156 High Street (ETOX), Santa Cruz, CA 95064. Phone: (831) 459-3482. Fax: (831) 459-3524. E-mail: Ottemann{at}ucsc.edu. ![]()
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