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Yutong Song

University of Connecticut

ORCID: 0000-0002-2206-9549

Publishes on Viral Infections and Immunology Research, SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research, RNA and protein synthesis mechanisms. 79 papers and 4k citations.

79Publications
4kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Extracellular RNA constitutes a natural procoagulant cofactor in blood coagulation
Christian Kannemeier, Aya Shibamiya, Fumie Nakazawa et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2007
Cited by 532Open Access

Upon vascular injury, locally controlled haemostasis prevents life-threatening blood loss and ensures wound healing. Intracellular material derived from damaged cells at these sites will become exposed to blood components and could contribute to blood coagulation and pathological thrombus formation. So far, the functional and mechanistic consequences of this concept are not understood. Here, we present in vivo and in vitro evidence that different forms of eukaryotic and prokaryotic RNA serve as promoters of blood coagulation. Extracellular RNA was found to augment (auto-)activation of proteases of the contact phase pathway of blood coagulation such as factors XII and XI, both exhibiting strong RNA binding. Moreover, administration of exogenous RNA provoked a significant procoagulant response in rabbits. In mice that underwent an arterial thrombosis model, extracellular RNA was found associated with fibrin-rich thrombi, and pretreatment with RNase (but not DNase) significantly delayed occlusive thrombus formation. Thus, extracellular RNA derived from damaged or necrotic cells particularly under pathological conditions or severe tissue damage represents the long sought natural "foreign surface" and provides a procoagulant cofactor template for the factors XII/XI-induced contact activation/amplification of blood coagulation. Extracellular RNA thereby reveals a yet unrecognized target for antithrombotic intervention, using RNase or related therapeutic strategies.

Scalable live-attenuated SARS-CoV-2 vaccine candidate demonstrates preclinical safety and efficacy
Ying Wang, Chen Yang, Yutong Song et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2021
Cited by 144Open Access

) vaccinated intranasally with COVI-VAC compared to those inoculated with wild-type (WT) virus. COVI-VAC inoculation generated spike IgG antibody levels and plaque reduction neutralization titers similar to those in hamsters inoculated with WT virus. Upon challenge with WT virus, COVI-VAC vaccination reduced lung challenge viral titers, resulted in undetectable virus in the brain, and protected hamsters from almost all SARS-CoV-2-associated weight loss. Highly attenuated COVI-VAC is protective at a single intranasal dose in a relevant in vivo model. This, coupled with its large-scale manufacturing potential, supports its potential use in mass vaccination programs.