Skip to main content
Search
Main content
Soyon Hong

Dr Soyon Hong

Group Leader

Dissecting pathways by which microglia contribute to region-specific synapse dysfunction in neurodegeneration

Biography

Dr Soyon Hong received her PhD in Neuroscience in 2012 from Harvard University and completed her post-doctoral fellowship at Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School in 2018. While in this latter role, she conducted a study that was among the first to propose microglia as critical players in synaptic pathology in disease. She now brings these expertise and knowledge to establish a new UK DRI lab group at UCL.

Statement on teaching and mentorship

"I have mentored and taught many students and technicians through lectures and laboratory settings (26 mentees in laboratory settings to date). I highly value the opportunities to mentor. It is one aspect of my career that I find truly rewarding. I believe that having a positive, stimulating environment where trainees are valued is key to having a productive and creative lab. Trainees who join my laboratory will be trained in cellular and molecular biology including neuroscience and neuroimmunology. Moreover, they will be mentored to be independent critical thinkers, a core of my teaching philosophy."

News

Key publications

Nature neuroscience
Published
Author Correction: Dissection of artifactual and confounding glial signatures by single-cell sequencing of mouse and human brain
Authors
Samuel E Marsh, Alec J Walker, Tushar Kamath, Lasse Dissing-Olesen, Timothy R Hammond, T Yvanka de Soysa, Adam M H Young, Sarah Murphy, Abdulraouf Abdulraouf, Naeem Nadaf, Connor Dufort, Alicia C Walker, Liliana E Lucca, Velina Kozareva, Charles Vanderburg, Soyon Hong, Harry Bulstrode, Peter J Hutchinson, Daniel J Gaffney, David A Hafler, Robin J M Franklin, Evan Z Macosko, Beth Stevens
Author Correction: Dissection of artifactual and confounding glial signatures by single-cell sequencing of mouse and human brain
Nature reviews. Immunology
Published
Neuroinflammation in Alzheimer disease
Authors
Michael T Heneka, Wiesje M van der Flier, Frank Jessen, Jeroen Hoozemanns, Dietmar Rudolf Thal, Delphine Boche, Frederic Brosseron, Charlotte Teunissen, Henrik Zetterberg, Andreas H Jacobs, Paul Edison, Alfredo Ramirez, Carlos Cruchaga, Jean-Charles Lambert, Agustin Ruiz Laza, Jose Vicente Sanchez-Mut, Andre Fischer, Sergio Castro-Gomez, Thor D Stein, Luca Kleineidam, Michael Wagner, Jonas J Neher, Colm Cunningham, Sim K Singhrao, Marco Prinz, Christopher K Glass, Johannes C M Schlachetzki, Oleg Butovsky, Kilian Kleemann, Philip L De Jaeger, Hannah Scheiblich, Guy C Brown, Gary Landreth, Miguel Moutinho, Jaime Grutzendler, Diego Gomez-Nicola, Róisín M McManus, Katrin Andreasson, Christina Ising, Deniz Karabag, Darren J Baker, Shane A Liddelow, Alexei Verkhratsky, Malu Tansey, Alon Monsonego, Ludwig Aigner, Guillaume Dorothée, Klaus-Armin Nave, Mikael Simons, Gabriela Constantin, Neta Rosenzweig, Alberto Pascual, Gabor C Petzold, Jonathan Kipnis, Carmen Venegas, Marco Colonna, Jochen Walter, Andrea J Tenner, M Kerry O'Banion, Joern R Steinert, Douglas L Feinstein, Magdalena Sastre, Kiran Bhaskar, Soyon Hong, Dorothy P Schafer, Todd Golde, Richard M Ransohoff, David Morgan, John Breitner, Renzo Mancuso, Sean-Patrick Riechers
Neuroinflammation in Alzheimer disease
Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in biology
Published
Glia in Neurodegenerative Disease
Authors
Gerard Crowley, David Attwell, Hemali Phatnani, Harald Sontheimer, Soyon Hong
Glia in Neurodegenerative Disease
bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology
Published
Astrocyte-derived MFG-E8 facilitates microglial synapse elimination in Alzheimer's disease mouse models
Authors
Dimitra Sokolova, Shari Addington Ghansah, Francesca Puletti, Tatiana Georgiades, Sebastiaan De Schepper, Yongjing Zheng, Gerard Crowley, Ling Wu, Javier Rueda-Carrasco, Angeliki Koutsiouroumpa, Philip Muckett, Oliver J Freeman, Baljit S Khakh, Soyon Hong
Astrocyte-derived MFG-E8 facilitates microglial synapse elimination in Alzheimer's disease mouse models

Hong Lab

Explore the work of the Hong Lab, working to understand immune mechanisms of neural circuitry and function

Three-dimensional reconstruction of perivascular macrophages