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101. Laserbeschriftung Stand der Technik

102. From quasi-elastic to quasi-compound nucleus reactions induced by a 140 Mev $^{19}$F beam bombarding $^{89}$Y target nuclei

104. Assignments ofJπinNi58via (α, α′) and (Li6,d) reactions

105. Association of ADAM family members with proliferation signaling and disease progression in multiple myeloma.

106. Bone mechanical properties were altered in a mouse model of multiple myeloma bone disease.

107. 3D osteocyte lacunar morphometry of human bone biopsies with high resolution microCT: From monoclonal gammopathy to newly diagnosed multiple myeloma.

108. A 3D bioreactor model to study osteocyte differentiation and mechanobiology under perfusion and compressive mechanical loading.

109. Modeling Myeloma Dissemination In Vitro with hMSC-interacting Subpopulations of INA-6 Cells and Their Aggregation/Detachment Dynamics.

111. Assessing Osteolytic Lesion Size on Sequential CT Scans Is a Reliable Study Endpoint for Bone Remineralization in Newly Diagnosed Multiple Myeloma.

112. Prognostic value of extracellular matrix gene mutations and expression in multiple myeloma.

113. Clinical exercise therapy program with multiple myeloma patients: Impacts on feasibility, adherence and efficacy.

114. Prevention of Bone Destruction by Mechanical Loading Is Not Enhanced by the Bruton's Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor CC-292 in Myeloma Bone Disease.

115. Mechanical loading prevents bone destruction and exerts anti-tumor effects in the MOPC315.BM.Luc model of myeloma bone disease.

116. Impact of whole-body vibration exercise on physical performance and bone turnover in patients with monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance.

117. An Early Myeloma Bone Disease Model in Skeletally Mature Mice as a Platform for Biomaterial Characterization of the Extracellular Matrix.

119. Interactions between Muscle and Bone-Where Physics Meets Biology.

120. NOTCH Signaling Is Activated through Mechanical Strain in Human Bone Marrow-Derived Mesenchymal Stromal Cells.

121. Nanogels Enable Efficient miRNA Delivery and Target Gene Downregulation in Transfection-Resistant Multiple Myeloma Cells.

122. Up-regulated MSI2 is associated with more aggressive chronic myeloid leukemia.

123. Eosinophils and megakaryocytes support the early growth of murine MOPC315 myeloma cells in their bone marrow niches.

124. Notch pathway inhibition controls myeloma bone disease in the murine MOPC315.BM model.

126. Pathogenic long-lived plasma cells and their survival niches in autoimmunity, malignancy, and allergy.

127. Notch is an essential upstream regulator of NF-κB and is relevant for survival of Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg cells.

128. A novel mouse model for multiple myeloma (MOPC315.BM) that allows noninvasive spatiotemporal detection of osteolytic disease.

129. Eukaryotic initiation factor 2alpha phosphorylation is required for B-cell maturation and function in mice.

130. High-level expression of Mastermind-like 2 contributes to aberrant activation of the NOTCH signaling pathway in human lymphomas.

131. Notch and NF-κB signaling pathways in the biology of classical Hodgkin lymphoma.

133. Aberrant expression of the Th2 cytokine IL-21 in Hodgkin lymphoma cells regulates STAT3 signaling and attracts Treg cells via regulation of MIP-3alpha.

134. Aberrant expression of Notch1 interferes with the B-lymphoid phenotype of neoplastic B cells in classical Hodgkin lymphoma.

135. IkappaBalpha is required for marginal zone B cell lineage development.

136. Notch signaling in leukemias and lymphomas.

137. Loss of bHLH transcription factor E2A activity in primary effusion lymphoma confers resistance to apoptosis.

138. Intrinsic inhibition of transcription factor E2A by HLH proteins ABF-1 and Id2 mediates reprogramming of neoplastic B cells in Hodgkin lymphoma.

139. Elevated NF-kappaB p50 complex formation and Bcl-3 expression in classical Hodgkin, anaplastic large-cell, and other peripheral T-cell lymphomas.

140. A rapamycin derivative (everolimus) controls proliferation through down-regulation of truncated CCAAT enhancer binding protein {beta} and NF-{kappa}B activity in Hodgkin and anaplastic large cell lymphomas.

141. Charged meson rapidity distributions in central Au+Au collisions at square root(sNN) = 200 GeV.

142. Stroma-mediated dysregulation of myelopoiesis in mice lacking I kappa B alpha.

143. Centrality dependence of charged-particle pseudorapidity distributions from d + Au collisions at sqrt[sNN] = 200 GeV.

144. Evolution of the nuclear modification factors with rapidity and centrality in d + Au collisions at (sqrt)[N(S)N]=200 GeV.

145. Nuclear stopping in Au+Au collisions at square root of S(NN)=200 GeV.

146. Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole exacerbates posthypoxic action myoclonus in a patient with suspicion of Pneumocystis jiroveci infection.

147. Jagged1-induced Notch signaling drives proliferation of multiple myeloma cells.

148. c-FLIP mediates resistance of Hodgkin/Reed-Sternberg cells to death receptor-induced apoptosis.

149. Differential Emu enhancer activity and expression of BOB.1/OBF.1, Oct2, PU.1, and immunoglobulin in reactive B-cell populations, B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas, and Hodgkin lymphomas.

150. Transverse-momentum spectra in Au+Au and d+Au collisions at sqrt[s(NN)]=200 GeV and the pseudorapidity dependence of high-p(T) suppression.

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