T

Timothy R. Blosser

Broad Institute

ORCID: 0000-0002-7739-922X

Publishes on Single-cell and spatial transcriptomics, Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques, Immune cells in cancer. 32 papers and 2.2k citations.

32Publications
2.2kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Molecular and spatial signatures of mouse brain aging at single-cell resolution
Cited by 404Open Access

The diversity and complex organization of cells in the brain have hindered systematic characterization of age-related changes in its cellular and molecular architecture, limiting our ability to understand the mechanisms underlying its functional decline during aging. Here, we generated a high-resolution cell atlas of brain aging within the frontal cortex and striatum using spatially resolved single-cell transcriptomics and quantified changes in gene expression and spatial organization of major cell types in these regions over the mouse lifespan. We observed substantially more pronounced changes in cell state, gene expression, and spatial organization of non-neuronal cells over neurons. Our data revealed molecular and spatial signatures of glial and immune cell activation during aging, particularly enriched in the subcortical white matter, and identified both similarities and notable differences in cell-activation patterns induced by aging and systemic inflammatory challenge. These results provide critical insights into age-related decline and inflammation in the brain.

Short-Range Spectroscopic Ruler Based on a Single-Molecule Optical Switch
Mark Bates, Timothy R. Blosser, Xiaowei Zhuang|Physical Review Letters|2005
Cited by 366Open Access

We demonstrate a novel all-optical switch consisting of two molecules: a primary fluorophore (Cy5) that can be switched between a fluorescent and a dark state by light of different wavelengths, and a secondary chromophore (Cy3) that facilitates switching. The interaction between the two molecules exhibits a distance dependence much steeper than that of conventional Fo rster resonance energy transfer. This enables the switch to act as a ruler with the capability to probe distances difficult to access by other spectroscopic methods, thus presenting a new tool for the study of biomolecules at the single-molecule level.