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101. Symbolic extensions applied to multiscale structure of genomes.

102. The dynamic architectural and epigenetic nuclear landscape: developing the genomic almanac of biology and disease.

103. PSD95 suppresses dendritic arbor development in mature hippocampal neurons by occluding the clustering of NR2B-NMDA receptors.

104. Bookmarking target genes in mitosis: a shared epigenetic trait of phenotypic transcription factors and oncogenes?

105. Ezh1 and Ezh2 differentially regulate PSD-95 gene transcription in developing hippocampal neurons.

106. Enhanced CRAd activity using enhancer motifs driven by a nucleosome positioning sequence.

107. Transcription of the pain-related TRPV1 gene requires Runx1 and C/EBPβ factors.

108. Genomic occupancy of HLH, AP1 and Runx2 motifs within a nuclease sensitive site of the Runx2 gene.

109. Epigenetic control of cell cycle-dependent histone gene expression is a principal component of the abbreviated pluripotent cell cycle.

110. Runx1 and C/EBPβ transcription factors directly up-regulate P2X3 gene transcription.

111. The architectural organization of human stem cell cycle regulatory machinery.

112. C/EBPβ binds the P1 promoter of the Runx2 gene and up-regulates Runx2 transcription in osteoblastic cells.

113. The Ric-8B gene is highly expressed in proliferating preosteoblastic cells and downregulated during osteoblast differentiation in a SWI/SNF- and C/EBPbeta-mediated manner.

114. Bookmarking the genome: maintenance of epigenetic information.

115. Wnt/β-catenin signaling enhances cyclooxygenase-2 (COX2) transcriptional activity in gastric cancer cells.

116. Epigenetic regulation of early osteogenesis and mineralized tissue formation by a HOXA10-PBX1-associated complex.

117. Architectural epigenetics: mitotic retention of mammalian transcriptional regulatory information.

118. Recruitment and subnuclear distribution of the regulatory machinery during 1alpha,25-dihydroxy vitamin D3-mediated transcriptional upregulation in osteoblasts.

119. Pbx1 represses osteoblastogenesis by blocking Hoxa10-mediated recruitment of chromatin remodeling factors.

120. Differential roles of NMDA Receptor Subtypes NR2A and NR2B in dendritic branch development and requirement of RasGRF1.

121. Evolution of the interaction between Runx2 and VDR, two transcription factors involved in osteoblastogenesis.

122. 1alpha,25-dihydroxy vitamin D(3) induces nuclear matrix association of the 1alpha,25-dihydroxy vitamin D(3) receptor in osteoblasts independently of its ability to bind DNA.

123. Architectural genetic and epigenetic control of regulatory networks: compartmentalizing machinery for transcription and chromatin remodeling in nuclear microenvironments.

124. Subnuclear localization and intranuclear trafficking of transcription factors.

125. Transcription factor-mediated epigenetic regulation of cell growth and phenotype for biological control and cancer.

126. Calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase type IV is a target gene of the Wnt/beta-catenin signaling pathway.

127. SWI/SNF-independent nuclease hypersensitivity and an increased level of histone acetylation at the P1 promoter accompany active transcription of the bone master gene Runx2.

128. Organization, integration, and assembly of genetic and epigenetic regulatory machinery in nuclear microenvironments: implications for biological control in cancer.

129. Transcription-factor-mediated epigenetic control of cell fate and lineage commitment.

130. Altered chromatin modifications in AML1/RUNX1 breakpoint regions involved in (8;21) translocation.

131. Co-stimulation of the bone-related Runx2 P1 promoter in mesenchymal cells by SP1 and ETS transcription factors at polymorphic purine-rich DNA sequences (Y-repeats).

132. Molecular switches involving homeodomain proteins, HOXA10 and RUNX2 regulate osteoblastogenesis.

133. The leukemogenic t(8;21) fusion protein AML1-ETO controls rRNA genes and associates with nucleolar-organizing regions at mitotic chromosomes.

134. Genetic and epigenetic regulation in nuclear microenvironments for biological control in cancer.

135. xRic-8 is a GEF for Gsalpha and participates in maintaining meiotic arrest in Xenopus laevis oocytes.

136. 1alpha,25-dihydroxy vitamin D3-enhanced expression of the osteocalcin gene involves increased promoter occupancy of basal transcription regulators and gradual recruitment of the 1alpha,25-dihydroxy vitamin D3 receptor-SRC-1 coactivator complex.

137. Galphaq negatively regulates the Wnt-beta-catenin pathway and dorsal embryonic Xenopus laevis development.

138. Vitamin D control of gene expression: temporal and spatial parameters for organization of the regulatory machinery.

139. Chromatin immunoprecipitation assays: application of ChIP-on-chip for defining dynamic transcriptional mechanisms in bone cells.

140. In situ nuclear organization of regulatory machinery.

141. Nucleosome organization and targeting of SWI/SNF chromatin-remodeling complexes: contributions of the DNA sequence.

142. Nuclear microenvironments in biological control and cancer.

143. Crystallization and preliminary X-ray analysis of a domain in the Runx2 transcription factor that interacts with the 1alpha,25 dihydroxy vitamin D3 receptor.

144. Classical Xenopus laevis progesterone receptor associates to the plasma membrane through its ligand-binding domain.

145. HOXA10 controls osteoblastogenesis by directly activating bone regulatory and phenotypic genes.

146. An architectural perspective of vitamin D responsiveness.

147. Chromatin remodeling by SWI/SNF results in nucleosome mobilization to preferential positions in the rat osteocalcin gene promoter.

148. The 1alpha,25-dihydroxy Vitamin D3 receptor preferentially recruits the coactivator SRC-1 during up-regulation of the osteocalcin gene.

149. Phosphorylation at serine 208 of the 1alpha,25-dihydroxy Vitamin D3 receptor modulates the interaction with transcriptional coactivators.

150. Mitotic retention of gene expression patterns by the cell fate-determining transcription factor Runx2.

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