T
Timothy B. Stockwell
Researcher at J. Craig Venter Institute
Publications - 83
Citations - 22387
Timothy B. Stockwell is an academic researcher from J. Craig Venter Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Influenza A virus & Virus. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 83 publications receiving 21103 citations. Previous affiliations of Timothy B. Stockwell include Celera Corporation.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Genetic stability of foot-and-mouth disease virus during long-term infections in natural hosts.
Lisbeth Ramirez-Carvajal,Steven J. Pauszek,Zaheer Ahmed,Zaheer Ahmed,Umer Farooq,Khalid Naeem,Reed S. Shabman,Timothy B. Stockwell,Luis L. Rodriguez +8 more
TL;DR: Insight is provided into the evolutionary dynamics of FMDV populations within naturally occurring subclinical and persistent infections that may have implications to vaccination strategies in the region.
Book ChapterDOI
Degenerate primer design for highly variable genomes.
TL;DR: This chapter describes a set of computational methodologies that may be used to minimize the degeneracy of designed primers, while still maximizing the proportion of genotypes assayed in the targeted population.
Journal ArticleDOI
Initial genome sequencing of the sugarcane CP 96-1252 complex hybrid.
Jason R. Miller,Kari A. Dilley,Derek M. Harkins,Manolito Torralba,Kelvin J. Moncera,Karen Beeri,Karrie Goglin,Timothy B. Stockwell,Granger G. Sutton,Reed S. Shabman +9 more
TL;DR: The CP 96-1252 cultivar of sugarcane is a complex hybrid of commercial importance and DNA was extracted from lab-grown leaf tissue and sequenced.
Journal ArticleDOI
First Complete Genome Sequences of Two Keystone Viruses from Florida.
Timothy B. Stockwell,Lea Heberlein-Larson,Yi Tan,Rebecca A. Halpin,Nadia Fedorova,Daniel A. Katzel,Sandra Smole,Thomas R. Unnasch,Laura D. Kramer,Laura D. Kramer,Suman R. Das +10 more
TL;DR: The first complete sequences of two Keystone virus genomes isolated from Florida in 2005 are reported, which include the first two publicly available complete large (L) gene sequences.
Posted ContentDOI
Despite egg-adaptive mutations, the 2012-13 H3N2 influenza vaccine induced comparable antibody titers to the intended strain
Sarah Cobey,Kaela Parkhouse,Benjamin S. Chambers,Hildegund C. J. Ertl,Kenneth E. Schmader,Rebecca A. Halpin,Xudong Lin,Timothy B. Stockwell,Suman R. Das,Emily Landon,Vera Tesic,Ilan Youngster,Benjamin A. Pinsky,David E. Wentworth,Scott E. Hensley,Yonatan H. Grad +15 more
TL;DR: Low H3N2 VE in 2012-13 does not appear to be due to the failure of the egg-adapted strain to induce a response to the intended vaccine strain, and might have been caused by the emergence of anti-genically novel influenza strains and low vaccine immunogenicity in a subset of the population.