K
Karin D. E. Everett
Researcher at University of Washington
Publications - 5
Citations - 531
Karin D. E. Everett is an academic researcher from University of Washington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Genome & Phylogenetic tree. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications receiving 501 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Molecular evolution of the Chlamydiaceae.
TL;DR: Trees for all five coding genes supported the current organization of the family Chlamydiaceae, and the distribution of virulence traits could not be explained by lateral transfer of the genes the authors studied, since they found no evidence for lateral gene transfer above the species level.
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Novel chlamydiae in whiteflies and scale insects: endosymbionts 'Candidatus Fritschea bemisiae' strain Falk and 'Candidatus Fritschea eriococci' strain Elm.
TL;DR: The present study compared sequences for 11 endosymbiont genes to genomic data for chlamydial families Parachlamydiaceae, ChlamYDiaceae and Simkaniaceae and to 16S rRNA gene signature sequences from 330 chlamydiae to conclude that it was appropriate to propose 'Candidatus Fritschea bemisiae' strain Falk
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Complete plastome sequences of Equisetum arvense and Isoetes flaccida: implications for phylogeny and plastid genome evolution of early land plant lineages
Kenneth G. Karol,K. Arumuganathan,Jeffrey L. Boore,Aaron M. Duffy,Karin D. E. Everett,John D. Hall,S. K. Hansen,Jennifer V. Kuehl,Dina F. Mandoli,Brent D. Mishler,Richard G. Olmstead,Karen S. Renzaglia,Paul G. Wolf +12 more
TL;DR: Results from this study demonstrate resolution among the four monilophytes lineages, albeit with moderate support; and posit a clade consisting of Equisetaceae and Psilotaceae that is sister to the "true ferns," including Marattiaceae.
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Chloroplast genome sequence of the moss Tortula ruralis: gene content, polymorphism, and structural arrangement relative to other green plant chloroplast genomes
Melvin J. Oliver,Andrew G. Murdock,Brent D. Mishler,Jennifer V. Kuehl,Jeffrey L. Boore,Dina F. Mandoli,Karin D. E. Everett,Paul G. Wolf,Aaron M. Duffy,Kenneth G. Karol +9 more
TL;DR: The polymorphisms uncovered in the sequencing of the genome of Tortula ruralis offer a rare possibility (for mosses) of the generation of DNA markers for fine-level phylogenetic studies, or to investigate individual variation within populations.
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The Complete Plastid Genome Sequence of Angiopteris evecta (G. Forst.) Hoffm. (Marattiaceae)
J. M. Roper,S. Kellon Hansen,Paul G. Wolf,Kenneth G. Karol,Dina F. Mandoli,Karin D. E. Everett,Jennifer V. Kuehl,Jeffrey L. Boore +7 more
TL;DR: The overall structural similarity to Psilotum indicates either wholesale conservation of genome organization, or (less likely) repeated convergence to a stable structure in the Angiopteris evecta genome.