{"id":65963,"date":"2000-07-19T12:50:19","date_gmt":"2000-07-19T15:50:19","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/revistapesquisa.fapesp.br\/?p=65963"},"modified":"2015-07-31T17:39:18","modified_gmt":"2015-07-31T20:39:18","slug":"the-new-brazilian-product","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/revistapesquisa.fapesp.br\/en\/the-new-brazilian-product\/","title":{"rendered":"The new Brazilian product"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>The original scientific findings of the research team from Brazil &#8211; responsible for the genetic sequencing of the<em> Xylella fastidiosa <\/em>bacterium &#8211; as much as the cultural and political significance for the country of the success of this project, a pioneer in the world, on the genome of a plant pathogen, a microorganism that causes disease in plants \u2013 gained new and enlarged international visibility with the issue of <em>Nature<\/em> that began to circulate on July 13 last.\u00a0 The scientific article \u2013 or paper, as the jargon of research scientists has it &#8211; of seven pages about<em> Xylella<\/em>, with new contributions to genome research, prepared and signed by 116 of the 192 scientists who concluded last January the genetic decoding of this bacterium, made it no less than the cover of issue n\u00b0 6792, volume 406 of the magazine, one of the most prestigious and respected scientific publications in the world.<\/p>\n<p>In the 131 years of <em>Nature<\/em>\u2019s existence, never before has an article produced by a Brazilian research group reached the cover of the magazine. But if that were not enough, the decoding of the genome of the bacteria that causes CVC, Citrus Variegated Chlorosis, or\u00a0the yellowing disease, by researchers linked to ONSA, the Organization for Nucleotides Sequencing and Analysis (the \u201cvirtual\u201d chain of laboratories created by FAPESP in 1997, which has a jaguar as its logo), was commemorated in the editorial of this English publication, and explained in detail, in journalistic language, in its News and Views section.<\/p>\n<p>In the editorial (see the full text in the box), pointed out that the successful sequencing of the plant pathogen \u201cis as much a political achievement as a scientific one\u201d. And\u00a0 furthermore, that the current concept that only the more industrialized countries have the potential and the qualified people to work in the vanguard of research was proved false by the Brazilian project. In conclusion, the editorial states that the success of the <em>X. fastidiosa<\/em> project, plus the unusual fact of an agency from the advanced and industrialized world \u2013 the US Department of Agriculture \u2013 having hired genome research on a variant of Xylella from a developing country \u201cendorses Brazil\u2019s determination to enter the post-genome age hand in hand with scientists from the more prosperous countries\u201d.<\/p>\n<p>In terms of publicity, the effects of this spotlight on the Brazilian project, focused by one\u00a0of the greatest icons of the international scientific community, took no time to appear. On the very night of Wednesday July 12, after the embargo was lifted on the publication of the weekly material of <em>Nature<\/em> on the Internet, the online version of the <em>New York Times<\/em> gave the news that <em>\u201cGenes of plant disease mapped\u201d<\/em>, and <em>BBC News Online<\/em> reported <em>\u201cBrazil hails scientific first\u201d<\/em>. Later, on July 18, the science supplement of the <em>NYT<\/em> published the story <em>\u201cAgriculture takes its turn in the genome spotlight\u201d<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>The BBC material told how the research into the<em> Xylella genome<\/em> was being hailed as \u201ca triumph for Brazilian science\u201d, and based an interview with the project\u2019s DNA coordinator, Andrew Simpson, showed some of the results that represented new contributions to science and which were kept secret until the publication of the paper by <em>Nature<\/em>. One of these is that many of <em>X. fastidiosa\u2019s<\/em> 2900 genes (about a third) are totally new to science, that is, they are genes that have never been described before, while others are analogous to genes found in other organisms. Another fundamental result of the research, highlighted by the BBC, was the identification of genes in <em>X. fastidiosa <\/em>that codify molecules whose existence has only been described in pathogens of human beings and animals, and whose job to stick them to the cells of their host.\u00a0 Now what is being unveiled is a clear and important indication of the pathogenic mechanisms of bacteria, whether they affect plants, human beings or other animals.<\/p>\n<p>And then, there was the story published in the online <em>New York Times<\/em> by the international news agency, Associated Press, highlighting the pioneering nature of the genetic mapping of a pathogen, and putting it as an advance capable of leading to new approaches in the fight against \u201ca bacteriological scourge that causes devastation in orange groves and other plantations\u201d. In continuation, it also said that the work throws light on the way how bacteria infect equally plants and human beings and neutralize their defenses, giving room for the enthusiastic comments of Charles J. Arntzen, president of Cornell University\u2019s Boyce Thompson Institute, on this and other important scientific contributions shown in <em>Nature<\/em>\u2019s cover article.<\/p>\n<p>On Thursday 13, a new sample of the international repercussion of the cover of the British scientific magazine was to be seen in the pages of <em>Le Figaro<\/em>.\u00a0 Under the heading \u201cLes m\u00e9canismes de la virulence d\u00e9voil\u00e9s\u201d, the French newspaper published an enthusiastic article, written, shall we say, an eighth above the tone that a good part of the Brazilian press finds recommendable to herald the national conquests outside from the field of sports. There was a summary of the scientific results of the <em>X. fastidiosa<\/em> project, there was an explanation of how the structure of ONSA was set up to allow the project to be carried out, and there was a presentation of the situation of the CVC disease in Brazil.\u00a0 <em>Le Figaro<\/em> found space, of course, to note that the French scientists Joseph Bov\u00e9 and Monique Garnier who identified <em>Xylella<\/em> as the causal agent of CVC, at the beginning of the 90s.\u00a0 And to recall that when FAPESP, in 1997, launched the project for the sequencing of <em>X. fastidiosa<\/em>, Bov\u00e9 offered to supply clones of the bacterium, produced by Inra (National Institute of Agronomic Research) in Bordeaux, at the same time that Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Laigret, a research scientist with the Bordeaux 2 University, was supporting the setting up of a bacteria DNA bank to supply the fragments to be sequenced. But amid all this, what sounded like sweet music to Brazilian ears was the title of the box of the report <em>\u201cLe Br\u00e9sil parmi les grands<\/em>\u201d, which begins with the statement that Brazil had risen to the level of the planet\u2019s powers in biology: the United States, Great Britain, France, Japan, Germany\u201d (read the full text on page 14).<\/p>\n<p>On the following Thursday, July 20, an article in the well-regarded English magazine, <em>The Economist<\/em>, added to the positive assessments of some of the most important organs of the major international press on science carried out in Brazil. \u201cSamba, football and&#8230; genomics.\u00a0 The list of things for which Brazil is renowned has suddenly got longer\u201d was how the article opened, under the title \u201c<em>Fruits of co-operation<\/em>\u201d. An explanation followed\u00a0 that, just a few days after publishing the first genome of a plant pathogen, scientists at FAPESP were due to announce, on July 21st, \u201canother success\u201d: the identification of 279,000 human genetic sequences, a number, according to the magazine, second only to the number of sequences identified in the United States and Great Britain. The reference at this point is to the results of FAPESP\u2019s Human Cancer Genome project, which indeed were announced at a press conference in the Pal\u00e1cio dos Bandeirantes (The\u00a0 State of S\u00e3o Paulo Governmental Palace) on the 21st (the event will be covered in the next issue of <em>Pesquisa FAPESP<\/em>).<\/p>\n<p>The text of <em>The Economist<\/em> goes on to give a series of details about FAPESP\u2019s Genome Program and about the Foundation itself, to conclude by saying that \u201cthe lesson of all this is that there is no reason why countries such as Brazil cannot compete in leading-edge science if they put their minds to it\u201d. And to wrap it up, considering \u201cthe benefits of co-operation and a secure source of financing, and with more than 200 young geneticists trained as a result of the <em>X. fastidiosa<\/em> project alone\u201d, the article makes a shining prognostic of Brazil\u2019s share in the world scientific production, which, in terms of papers published, jumped from 0.4% to 1.2% of the world total, from 1985 to 1999.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Significant contributions<br \/>\n<\/strong>On the home front, where the attention of the media to projects for genomic research carried out in Brazil has become much greater since the announcement of the conclusion of the sequencing of <em>X. fastidiosa<\/em> last February, the significance of the <em>Nature<\/em> cover for this research was told to dozens of millions of Brazilians. On that very Wednesday, radio and TV stations, beginning with Globo TV in its Jornal Nacional (National News), which gave broad coverage to the subject, and, on the Thursday 13th, the main Brazilian newspapers announced, with details, what the British magazine had published. Often the news was put as something like a brilliant goal scored in the field of research in Brazil.\u00a0 On Wednesday too, the brand new electronic media joined in the coverage of \u201ccame out in <em>Nature<\/em>\u201d line, the inevitable idea for a headline to translate the deed, with a genuinely Brazilian trace of humor, and which ended up actually being used by the magazine, Isto \u00c9, on Friday July 14th. On Saturday 15th, \u00c9poca showed the faces of some of those who were most responsible for the success of the <em>X. fastidiosa<\/em> project. They were days of such exposure in the media of Brazilian genomics research that the way suddenly seemed open to show science, not only as a privileged space for solving the innumerable problems that affect the individual and society, but also as a field capable of contributing with a fillip to the debilitated national self-esteem.<\/p>\n<p>In fact, a special indication of the fascination exerted by the recognized success of the Brazilian research scientists, in the scientific area most in evidence in the world today, had already been seen on Tuesday July 11th, during the 52nd meeting of the SBPC, the Brazilian Society for the Progress of Science, which gathered in Brasilia some 15,000 people, among senior scientists, young researchers and students still defining their professional paths. There, in an overcrowded auditorium, full of young people, Andrew Simpson was given an impressive ovation, after showing that the <em>X. fastidiosa<\/em> project, in about two years, had made Brazil jump forward 10 years in its scientific competence.<\/p>\n<p>During his lecture, the researcher showed, for a few seconds, the cover of <em>Nature<\/em> that was still kept secret, and declared that having an article published by the magazine was the dream of any researcher \u2013 he and the other researchers who signed the paper, he stressed, were seeing this dream come true. It was this same declaration that Simpson was to repeat on the following day, in a state of grace, back in S\u00e3o Paulo, at the press conference organized by FAPESP, so that, along with Jo\u00e3o Set\u00fabal, one of the two coordinators of bio-information technology for the project (the other is Jo\u00e3o Meidanis), they could explain the scientific findings that would soon be public knowledge all over the world.\u00a0 Also taking\u00a0 part in the press conference were the president of FAPESP, Carlos Henrique de Brito Cruz, the foundation\u2019s scientific director, Jos\u00e9 Fernando Perez, the deputy secretary for Science, Technology and Economic Development of the State of S\u00e3o Paulo, Betty Abramowicz, USP\u2019s pro-rector for research, Hernan Chaimovich, the vice-rector at Unicamp, Fernando Galembeck, and the pro-rector of post graduation and research at Unesp, Fernando Mendes Pereira.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Biology deciphered<br \/>\n<\/strong>The sequence of the genome of <em>X. fastidiosa<\/em> is the 24th complete genome of a bacterium known by science until now, and is the first of a plant pathogen. <em>Xylella<\/em> has almost 2.7 million nitrogen pairs or nucleotides in its chromosome (more precisely, 2,679,305), which shows that it is one third bigger than the researchers imagined, when they started\u00a0 the sequencing in the beginning of 1998.<\/p>\n<p>In these basic pairs, there are 2,904 genes, protein codifying regions, of which one third are new to science and 47% have their functions precisely described.\u00a0 This percentage is a little below what other genome research groups have achieved \u2013 for example, it came to 54% with<em> Thermotoga mar\u00edtima<\/em>, 52.5% with <em>Deinococcus radiodurans<\/em>, and 53.7% with <em>Neisseria meningiditis<\/em>. The Brazilian researchers attribute this slightly lower result to the fact that there had never been any other complete sequence of a plant pathogen bacterium genome before <em>Xylella<\/em>, which in principle would help the job of giving the genes a functional definition. This is to say that it is part of the cost of being a pioneer.<\/p>\n<p>The bacterium multiplies in the glassy-winged sharpshooter, and this vector insect introduces it straight into the vessels that transport the sap of the plants, the so-called xylem. Once installed there, it multiplies, as fastidious as the name suggests, and acts slowly. The symptoms of Citrus Variegated Chlorosis take time to appear, but the final result is vessel obstruction, chlorophyll loss, yellowing, blotches on the leaves, and the premature production of small, hard fruit, which are therefore useless for consumption.\u00a0 The economic result of this process in Brazil, which produces almost half the concentrated orange juice placed on the international market, are losses estimated at US$ 100 million a year. We must remember that orange cultivation provides an annual income of almost US$ 2 billion a year, and that in S\u00e3o Paulo this business generates 400,000 jobs, both in the direct jobs and the indirect ones.<\/p>\n<p><em>X. fastidiosa <\/em>has a refined metabolism. It has adapted to use sugars freely found in the sap of the xylem and to use the glucose from the breakdown of the cellulose, the main component of the walls of the plant cells. The carbohydrates supply energy for all the biosynthetic reactions of this bacterium, which does not have codifying genes of the enzymes needed for the production of sugar from amino acids and other metabolisms.<\/p>\n<p>Another discovery made by the researchers:\u00a0 67 of <em>X. fastidiosa\u2019s<\/em> genes are dedicated to withdrawing iron and other metals from the plant\u2019s sap, which they say, contributes towards some of CVC\u2019s typical symptoms.<\/p>\n<p>One more important scientific finding: <em>X. fastidiosa <\/em>shows two different systems for adhering to the cell. The first one comprises a matrix of extra cellular polysaccharides synthesized and set free by the so-called gum genes, which stick the bacterium onto the cellular wall of the xylem and on other bacteria, and have the effect of clogging up the vessels, blocking the sap, and leading the plant to water stress. It is precisely for this operon or set of genes that synthesizes the xanthan gum that FAPESP asked last year for the patent to be registered in the United States. The other system for adhesion, specified by 26 genes that codify the so-called fimbriate cells, probably serves to stick the bacterium to the sharpshooter\u2019s tract.<\/p>\n<p>The other far-reaching discovery, mentioned above, was the identification of the genes that codify the molecules involved in adhering to the cell, previously only identified in pathogens of human beings and of other animals. They are molecules directly associated with the cellular surface of the bacterium, which account for the adherence to the epithelial tissue of the hosts, whose discovery in <em>X. fastidiosa<\/em> increases the evidence that the bacteria pathogenic mechanisms &#8211; the mechanisms that cause diseases &#8211; are the same, whether they infect plants, animals, or human beings.<\/p>\n<p>What the researchers organized through Onsa did is well described in the final conclusions of the paper in <em>Nature<\/em>. They ascertained \u201cOur complete genetic analysis has determined not only the basic metabolic and replicative characteristics of the bacterium, but also a number of potential pathogenicity mechanisms. Some of these have not previously been postulated to occur in\u00a0 hytopathogens, providing new insights into the generality of these processes.\u201d The results achieved will now make it possible, says the article, to begin a detailed comparison between animal and plant pathogens. Finally, the new information should provide the basis for an experimental, accelerated and rational investigation into the interactivity between <em>X. fastidiosa<\/em> and its hosts, which should lead to new findings in the approaches to the control of CVC, the famous yellowing disease.<\/p>\n<p>They are conclusions that, beyond the success, also mark the beginning of a new phase \u201cin which Brazil begins to take part in the setting of a world scientific agenda\u201d, as Brito Cruz, FAPESP\u2019s president, pointed out. \u201cIn which our country is already revealing scientific competence on the frontiers of knowledge\u201d, as Perez observed. A phase that the widespread use of vanguard knowledge can now be foreseen, on an equal footing with the most developed countries, stresses Betty Abramowicz, for the production of wealth.<\/p>\n<p><strong>* Authors:<\/strong> <em>A. J. Simpson, F. C. Reinach, P. Arruda, F. A. Abreu, M. Acencio, L. M. C. Alves, J. E. Araya, G. S. Baia, C. S. Baptista, M. H. Barros, E. D. Bonaccorsi, S. Bordin, J. M. Bov\u00e9, M. R. S. Briones, M. R. P. Bueno, A. A. Camargo, L. E. A. Camargo, D. M. Carraro, H. Carrer, N. B. Colauto, C. Colombo, F. F. Costa, C. M. Costa-Neto, L. L. Coutinho, M. Cristofani, E. Dias-Neto, C. Docena, H. El-Dorry, A. P. Facincani, A. J. S. Ferreira, V. C. A. Ferreira, J. A. Ferro, J. S. Fraga, S. C. Fran\u00e7a, M. C. Franco, M. Frohme, L. R. Furlan, M. Garnier, G. H. Goldman, S. L. Gomes, A. Gruber, P. L. Ho, J. D. Hoheisel, M. L. Junqueira, E. L. Kemper, J. P. Kitajima, J. E. Krieger, E. E. Kuramae, F. Laigret,\u00a0 M. R. Lambais, L. C. C. Leite, E. G. M. Lemos, S. A. Lopes, C. R. Lopes, J. A. Machado, M. A. Machado, A. M. B. N. Madeira, H. M. Madeira, C. L. Marino, M. V. Marques, E. A. L. Martins, E. M. F. Martins, A. Y Matsukuma, C. F. M. Menck, E. C. Miracca, C. Y. Miyaki, C. B. Monteiro-Vitorello, D. H. Moon, M. A. Nagai, A. L. T. O. Nascimento, L. E. S. Netto, A. Nhani Jr, F. G. Nobrega, L. R. Nunes, M. A. Oliveira, M. C. de Oliveira, R. C. de Oliveira, D. A. Palmieri, A. Paris, B. R. Peixoto, G. A. G. Pereira, H. A. Pereira Jr, J. B. Pesquero, R. B. Quaggio, P. G. Roberto, V. Rodrigues, A. J. de M. Rosa, V. E. de Rosa Jr, R. G. de S\u00e1, R. V. Santelli, H. E. Sawasaki, A. C. R. da Silva, A. M. da Silva, F. R. da Silva, W. A. Silva, J. F. da Silveira, M. L. Z. Silvestri, W. J. Siqueira, A. A. de Souza, A. P. de Souza, M. F. Terenzi, D. Truffi, S. M. Tsai, M. H. Tsuhako, H. Vallada, M. A. Van Sluys, S. Vejovski-Almeida, A. L. Vettore, M. A. Zago, M. Zatz, J. Meidanis &amp; J. C. Setubal \u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em><strong>Brazil amongst the great <\/strong>(<em>from the french newspaper<\/em>\u00a0<\/em>Le Figaro<em>)<\/em><\/p>\n<p>With the sequencing of the\u00a0<em>Xylella fastidiosa<\/em>\u00a0bacterium, Brazil rises to the level of the biological powers of the planet: the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Japan and Germany.\u00a0 The venture arose, three years ago, at FAPESP, the State of S\u00e3o Paulo Research Foundation. Anxious to develop molecular biology, this institution, which manages the state taxes intended for science, therefore launched a sort of Keynesian plan for growth in the sphere of science. FAPESP supplied each one of the thirty laboratories that answered the invitation a sequencer with a unit price around 700,000 francs. These efforts have been rewarded. Better still, the United States has just put in an order for the Brazilians to sequence a variant of\u00a0<em>X. fastidiosa<\/em>\u00a0that is infesting vineyards there. And that perfectly well could threaten Europe, and France, one day. It causes no surprise that this great country has been invited, along with China, India and Mexico, to take part in the meeting of the G8 research ministers at the end of June, in Bordeaux.<\/p>\n<p><em><strong>Genome sequencing for all<\/strong> (<\/em><em>from\u00a0<\/em>Nature\u00a0<em>magazine)<br \/>\nThe successful sequencing of a plant pathogen by Brazilian researchers is a political as well as a scientific achievement<\/em><\/p>\n<p>There is a common misconception that only advanced industrialized\u00a0nations have the wherewithal and skilled human resources needed to achieve cutting-edge science. This misconception is fanned by the number of researchers from developing\u00a0countries who find it necessary to obtain their research training abroad \u2014 and frequently decide not to return, citing a lack of scientific opportunity. But it is given the lie by a paper published in this issue which describes the result of a project carried out by a consortium of research centres in the state of S\u00e3o Paulo in Brazil to sequence\u00a0the bacterium\u00a0<em>Xylella fastidios<\/em>a. This bacterium causes a disease that affects citrus fruit and other important crops, resulting in many millions of dollars of damage each year.<\/p>\n<p>As the first public sequence of a free-living plant pathogen, the paper represents a significant scientific milestone. But it also sends a clear political signal, namely both the\u00a0 desire and ability of countries such as Brazil to play in the big league. The sequencing project was deliberately chosen by the project\u2019s main funding agency, FAPESP, to\u00a0play a catalytic role in helping research teams equip themselves for the challenge of the post-genome era. It was also intended to send a signal to Brazil\u2019s young scientists that they do not need to leave the country to engage in world-class science. In both respects, it appears to have succeeded.<\/p>\n<p>Of course, sequencing the genome of the bacterium is only the first step towards controlling the damage that it causes. The next is to apply functional genomics to understand how the bacterium\u2019s genes operate, opening up routes to possible intervention in limiting its spread by insects. Eventually, knowledge of the genome could\u00a0provide the information required to breed resistant varieties of the affected crops. This raises a separate set of challenges \u2014 to persuade the Brazilian public that transgenic plants can play an important economic role, and at the same time to take firm steps to avoid untoward social and environmental consequences.<\/p>\n<p>On the technical side, much of this lies some way in the future. But the success of the\u00a0<em>X. fastidiosa\u00a0<\/em>project has already attracted significant expressions of interest for similar\u00a0 projects from other parts of the farming community \u2014 one proposal high on the list is for the same sequencing centres to turn their attention to chicken expressed\u00a0sequence tags (ESTs). It has also given rise to the welcome and relatively unusual phenomenon of an agency in the advanced industrialized world \u2014 in this case the US Department of Agriculture, worried about the impact of a variety of\u00a0<em>X. fastidiosa\u00a0<\/em>on citrus* crops in California \u2014 contracting research from a developing country. Both achievements endorse Brazil\u2019s determination to enter the post-genome age hand-in-hand with scientists in richer countries.<\/p>\n<p><em>*In fact, the variant of<\/em>\u00a0X. fastidiosa\u00a0<em>affects the vines of California<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"Genome research done in Brazil attracts the attention of the world","protected":false},"author":5,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"_exactmetrics_skip_tracking":false,"_exactmetrics_sitenote_active":false,"_exactmetrics_sitenote_note":"","_exactmetrics_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[156],"tags":[],"coauthors":[124],"class_list":["post-65963","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-cover"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/revistapesquisa.fapesp.br\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/65963","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/revistapesquisa.fapesp.br\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/revistapesquisa.fapesp.br\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/revistapesquisa.fapesp.br\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/5"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/revistapesquisa.fapesp.br\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=65963"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/revistapesquisa.fapesp.br\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/65963\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/revistapesquisa.fapesp.br\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=65963"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/revistapesquisa.fapesp.br\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=65963"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/revistapesquisa.fapesp.br\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=65963"},{"taxonomy":"author","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/revistapesquisa.fapesp.br\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/coauthors?post=65963"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}