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Gail Celio

Researcher at University of Minnesota

Publications -  13
Citations -  2620

Gail Celio is an academic researcher from University of Minnesota. The author has contributed to research in topics: Freeze substitution & Spindle pole body. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 13 publications receiving 2459 citations.

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Reconstructing the early evolution of Fungi using a six-gene phylogeny

Timothy Y. James, +75 more
- 19 Oct 2006 - 
TL;DR: It is indicated that there may have been at least four independent losses of the flagellum in the kingdom Fungi, and the enigmatic microsporidia seem to be derived from an endoparasitic chytrid ancestor similar to Rozella allomycis, on the earliest diverging branch of the fungal phylogenetic tree.
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Assembling the fungal tree of life: progress, classification, and evolution of subcellular traits

TL;DR: This study provides a phylogenetic synthesis for the Fungi and a framework for future phylogenetic studies on fungi and the impact of this newly discovered phylogenetic structure on supraordinal classifications is discussed.
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Assembling the Fungal Tree of Life: constructing the Structural and Biochemical Database

TL;DR: The analysis illustrates the inherent phylogenetic signal of these characters, the paucity of comparable characters and character states in subcellular studies and the challenges in establishing a comprehensive structural and biochemical database of the Fungi.
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Multiple isolations of a culturable, motile Ichthyosporean (Mesomycetozoa, Opisthokonta), Creolimax fragrantissima n. gen., n. sp., from marine invertebrate digestive tracts.

TL;DR: A fragrant, spherical, osmotrophic eukaryote was isolated 27 times from the digestive tracts of marine invertebrates collected from the Northeast Pacific and led to the erection of a new genus and species, "Creolimax fragrantissima".
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New lipid-producing, cold-tolerant yellow-green alga isolated from the Rocky Mountains of Colorado.

TL;DR: A new strain of yellow‐green algae (Xanthophyceae, Heterokonta), tentatively named Heterococcus sp.