S
Stephen R. Quake
Researcher at Stanford University
Publications - 626
Citations - 89247
Stephen R. Quake is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transcriptome & Biology. The author has an hindex of 132, co-authored 589 publications receiving 77778 citations. Previous affiliations of Stephen R. Quake include Agency for Science, Technology and Research & Allegheny Health Network.
Papers
More filters
Posted ContentDOI
Single cell RNAseq provides a molecular and cellular cartography of changes to the human endometrium through the menstrual cycle
TL;DR: The transcriptomic transformation of human endometrium is characterized at single cell resolution, dissecting multidimensional cellular heterogeneity of the tissue across the entire natural menstrual cycle and revealing signatures in the luminal and glandular epithelium during epithelial gland reconstruction, and suggesting a mechanism for adult gland formation.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
Fundamental approach for optoelectronic and microfluidic integration for miniaturizing spectroscopic devices
TL;DR: In this paper, an approach for miniaturizing spectroscopic devices by using the advantages presented by elastomeric based microfluidics and semiconductor detectors/emitters is described.
Posted ContentDOI
Mapping single-cell atlases throughout Metazoa unravels cell type evolution
Alexander J. Tarashansky,Jacob M. Musser,Margarita Khariton,Pengyang Li,Detlev Arendt,Stephen R. Quake,Bo Wang +6 more
TL;DR: This work develops a method to enable mapping cell atlases throughout Metazoa spanning sponge to mouse, and identifies homologous cell types, even between distant species, with some even emerging from distinct germ layers.
Posted ContentDOI
Discrete and Continuous Cell Identities of the Adult Murine Striatum
TL;DR: An organizational principal of neuron identity is suggested in which major neuron types can be separated into discrete classes with little overlap and no implied spatial relationship, however these discrete classes are then continuously subdivided by multiple spatial gradients of expression defining anatomical location via a combinatorial mechanism.
Journal ArticleDOI
Erratum: Dissecting genomic diversity, one cell at a time
Paul C. Blainey,Stephen R. Quake +1 more
TL;DR: In the version of this article initially published, references 16–24 were incorrectly cited as references 15–23 and the error has been corrected in the HTML and PDF versions of the article.