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Together with the existence of new neutral gauge bosons, models based on extended gauge groups (rank >4) often predict also new charged fermions. A mixing of the known fermions with new states with {\it exotic} weak-isospin assignments (left-handed singlets and right-handed doublets) will induce tree level flavour changing neutral interactions mediated by Z exchange, while if the mixing is only with new states with {\it ordinary} weak-isospin assignments, the flavour changing neutral currents are mainly due to the exchange of the lightest new neutral gauge boson Z′. We show that the present experimental limits on μ−e conversion in nuclei give a nuclear-model-independent bound on the Z-e-μ vertex which is twice as strong as that obtained from μ→eee. In the case of E6 models these limits provide quite stringent constraints on the Z′ mass and on the Z−Z′ mixing angle. We point out that the proposed experiments to search for μ−e conversion in nuclei have good chances to find evidence of lepton flavour violation, either in the case that new exotic fermions are present at the electroweak scale, or if a new neutral gauge boson Z′ of E6 origin lighter than a few TeV exists.
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