Bruce Ponder
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Sir Bruce Anthony John Ponder FMedSci FAACR FRS (born 25 April 1944) is an English geneticist and cancer researcher. He is Emeritus Professor of
Oncology Oncology is a branch of medicine that deals with the study, treatment, diagnosis and prevention of cancer. A medical professional who practices oncology is an ''oncologist''. The name's etymological origin is the Greek word ὄγκος (''ó ...
at the
University of Cambridge , mottoeng = Literal: From here, light and sacred draughts. Non literal: From this place, we gain enlightenment and precious knowledge. , established = , other_name = The Chancellor, Masters and Schola ...
and former director of the Cancer Research UK Cambridge Institute and of the Cancer Research UK Cambridge Cancer Centre.


Education

Ponder was educated at
Charterhouse School (God having given, I gave) , established = , closed = , type = Public school Independent day and boarding school , religion = Church of England , president ...
and
Jesus College, Cambridge Jesus College is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge. The college's full name is The College of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Saint John the Evangelist and the glorious Virgin Saint Radegund, near Cambridge. Its common name comes ...
. He trained in medicine at St Thomas' Hospital, London, and carried out his PhD studies as an
Imperial Cancer Research Fund Cancer Research UK (CRUK) is the world's largest independent cancer research organization. It is registered as a charity in the United Kingdom and Isle of Man, and was formed on 4 February 2002 by the merger of The Cancer Research Campaign and t ...
Clinical Fellow with Lionel Crawford in London working on chromatin organisation and DNA sequence specificity using
polyoma virus ''Polyomaviridae'' is a family of viruses whose natural hosts are primarily mammals and birds. As of 2020, there are six recognized genera and 117 species, five of which are unassigned to a genus. 14 species are known to infect humans, while othe ...
.


Research

After completing training in medical oncology, Ponder obtained a 5 year Career Development award from the UK Cancer Research Campaign at the Royal Marsden Hospital and Institute for Cancer Research, London, in which he combined laboratory and clinical research.  He first studied cancer as a breakdown of the normal rules of tissue organisation. To do this he developed new methods to measure the competition between the progeny of normal dividing cells in the lining of mouse intestine, and showed that the descendants of one cell would always by chance ‘win’ over all the others and populate the structural unit known as the ‘crypt’. When transgenic technologies became available, others including Ponder’s former lab member Doug Winton built on this and showed that a cancer mutation could confer an advantage, so that a future cancer cell would outcompete surrounding normal cells, and moreover that this advantage was increased by concomitant inflammation.  In his clinical work, Ponder began to study familial cancers. ‘Cancer families’ had long been recognised and suspected to have an inherited basis, but the genes were unknown. In the late 1970s Ponder and many others saw the potential to use new methods of linkage analysis using restriction fragment polymorphisms to discover the underlying genes. In 1980 Ponder set up a Familial Cancer clinic, new in the UK, at the Royal Marsden Hospital, and from this base he founded and led a multidisciplinary ‘UK Familial Cancer Study Group’ to promote the study of the genetics, epidemiology and clinical management of familial cancers.  Focussing on Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2  he described (with Doug Easton) the genetic patterns of the component  cancers, and in 1993 identified ''ret'' as the causative gene. This allowed genetic testing to identify family members at risk, in whom cancer might be avoided by prophylactic surgery.  Turning to commoner cancers, during the late 1980s and the early 1990s, Ponder co-founded and was the first chair of the International Breast Cancer Linkage Consortium which made major contributions to the identification of the breast cancer susceptibility genes
BRCA1 Breast cancer type 1 susceptibility protein is a protein that in humans is encoded by the ''BRCA1'' () gene. Orthologs are common in other vertebrate species, whereas invertebrate genomes may encode a more distantly related gene. ''BRCA1'' is a ...
(by M-C King) and
BRCA2 ''BRCA2'' and BRCA2 () are a human gene and its protein product, respectively. The official symbol (BRCA2, italic for the gene, nonitalic for the protein) and the official name (originally breast cancer 2; currently BRCA2, DNA repair associated) ...
(by M Stratton and A Ashworth). Over the next decade the Consortium coordinated a large international effort which defined the genetic epidemiology of both the BRCA-related and other non-BRCA familial breast and ovarian cancers.   By the mid 1990s it was clear that there were many more small family clusters of breast cancer than would be expected by chance, and most were not due to mutations in BRCA-like genes.  Like other familial resemblance, these family clusters were likely to be the combined effect of normal small genetic variations in many hundreds of different genes: so-called ‘polygenic inheritance’. Ponder, with colleagues Pharoah and Easton, showed that these families account for a substantial component of breast cancer, with potential opportunities for prevention. To find the genes by ‘genome wide association studies’ was a challenge. Ponder and Easton, with David Cox at Perlegen Sciences, met this challenge by adapting a technology for high throughput typing of DNA variations which had been developed for a different purpose by Cox. In 2007 they published the first genome – wide association study for cancer, identifying 5 genes in which variants were linked to breast cancer risk, confirmed by replication of the result in 22 laboratories world-wide. The number of these genes is now close to 300. As more variants were found, Ponder’s group adapted the gene regulatory network approach pioneered by Califano to show how their effects combined to affect cellular processes and increase cancer risk.


Career

After junior hospital posts in internal medicine (1968-73) at St Thomas’ Hospital London, Ponder was awarded a PhD Clinical Fellowship at ICRF, where he worked on chromatin organisation using polyoma virus as a model. In 1977 he worked with John Cairns on his book ‘Cancer, Science, and Society’ before starting medical oncology training as a Fellow at the Sidney Farber Cancer Institute,
Harvard Medical School Harvard Medical School (HMS) is the graduate medical school of Harvard University and is located in the Longwood Medical Area of Boston, Massachusetts. Founded in 1782, HMS is one of the oldest medical schools in the United States and is cons ...
. Returning to the UK, he completed his oncology training and in 1980 started his research career with a 5-year Career Development Award from the UK Cancer Research Campaign (CRC) at the Institute for Cancer Research, and honorary Consultant Physician status at the
Royal Marsden Hospital The Royal Marsden Hospital (RM) is a specialist cancer treatment hospital in London based in Kensington and Chelsea, next to the Royal Brompton Hospital, in Fulham Road with a second site in Belmont, close to Sutton Hospital, High Down and D ...
, London.  Here, alongside his laboratory research, he opened his Familial Cancer clinic, followed by others at Guy’s and St Georges Hospitals, and in 1985 he became the first Head of a newly created Department of Cancer Genetics at the Institute for Cancer Research.  In 1989, supported by the CRC, he moved his group to a new laboratory in the University Department of Pathology, University of Cambridge. In 1990 he became a Gibb Life Fellow of the CRC;  in 1993 he was awarded a personal Chair in Cancer Genetics in Cambridge, and in 1995 he was appointed Professor and Head of the University Department of Oncology (in 2007 the chair was endowed as the
Li Ka Shing Sir Ka-shing Li (; born 13 June 1928) is a Hong Kong billionaire business magnate, investor, and philanthropist. As of June 2019, Li is the 31st richest person in the world, with an estimated net wealth of US$33.4 billion. He is the senior ad ...
Professor of Oncology). As Head of Oncology, he set out in 1995 with three aims: to strengthen the clinical service and integrate it with research; to build a strong nucleus of cancer related laboratory and epidemiological research within the Clinical School; and from this base, to engage widely with relevant research across the University and local biotech. In 1997, with the Professor of Epidemiology, Nicholas Day, Ponder founded and was co-director of the
Strangeways Research Laboratory Strangeways Research Laboratory is a research institution in Cambridge, United Kingdom. It was founded by Thomas Strangeways in 1905 as the Cambridge Research Hospital and acquired its current name in 1928. Organised as an independent charity, it ...
for Genetic Epidemiology, with a focus on cancer.  In 2001, he was founding co-director with Ron Laskey of the Hutchison/MRC Research Centre, containing a new MRC Cancer Cell Biology Unit.  From 2002 Ponder began with senior colleagues to develop the Cambridge Cancer Centre. This began to build collaborations between researchers in Oncology, the Clinical School,
Addenbrooke's Hospital Addenbrooke's Hospital is an internationally renowned large teaching hospital and research centre in Cambridge, England, with strong affiliations to the University of Cambridge. Addenbrooke's Hospital is based on the Cambridge Biomedical Camp ...
, a wide range of Departments across the University of Cambridge, and local biotechnology companies.  In 2004, he was appointed inaugural Director of a new Cancer Research UK Cambridge Research Institute (now called the Cancer Research UK Cambridge Institute), which opened in 2007. The Institute emphasised engagement across the research pathway, from
basic science Basic research, also called pure research or fundamental research, is a type of scientific research with the aim of improving scientific theories for better understanding and prediction of natural or other phenomena. In contrast, applied researc ...
through to
translational research Translational research (also called translation research, translational science, or, when the context is clear, simply translation) is research aimed at translating (converting) results in basic research into results that directly benefit humans. ...
, ensuring that research had clinical impact, and it further catalysed links across Cambridge and beyond.    In 2010, Ponder became the first Director of the Cambridge Cancer Centre, part of a new Cancer Research UK network of Cancer Centres across the UK.  Under his leadership, in 2013 after review, Cambridge became one of only two Centres awarded ‘Major Centre’ status. Also in 2013, Ponder, as Head of Oncology, led the application through which the Cambridge Centre, linked with Addenbrookes Hospital, were awarded Comprehensive Cancer Centre status by the Organisation of European Cancer Institutes. Addenbrooke's was the first general hospital in Europe to be recognised in this way. Ponder also led the application and early stages of formal review by the European Academy of Cancer Sciences,  through which, in 2017, the Cambridge Cancer Centre was one of only two Centres to be designated as a ‘European Centre of Excellence’.


Awards and honours

Ponder has received a number of national and international awards, including the first Hamilton Fairley Fellowship of the Cancer Research Campaign (1977), a  Gibb Life Fellowship of the Cancer Research Campaign (1990), the International Public Service Award of the US National Neurofibromatosis Association (1992), the Merck Prize of the European Thyroid Association (1997), the Croonian Lectureship of the Royal College of Physicians (1997), the Hamilton Fairley Award of the European Society for Medical Oncology (2004), the Bertner Award of the MD Anderson Cancer Center (2007), the Alfred Knudson Award for Cancer Genetics of the US National Cancer Institute (2008), the Ambuj Nath Bose Prize of the Royal College of Physicians (2008) and the Lifetime Achievement Award of Cancer Research UK (2013). He was President of the British Association for Cancer Research (2010-2014) and a member of the Board of Directors of the American Association for Cancer Research (2008-2011). He was a founding Fellow of the UK Academy of Medical Sciences (1998), of the European Academy of Cancer Sciences (2010), and of the Academy of the American Association for Cancer Research (2013). He was elected a
Fellow of the Royal Society Fellowship of the Royal Society (FRS, ForMemRS and HonFRS) is an award granted by the judges of the Royal Society of London to individuals who have made a "substantial contribution to the improvement of natural science, natural knowledge, incl ...
in 2001 and knighted for Services to Medicine in the
2008 New Year Honours The New Year Honours 2008 for the Commonwealth realms were announced on 29 December 2007, to celebrate the year passed and mark the beginning of 2008. The recipients of honours are displayed here as they were styled before their new honour, and a ...
list. His nomination for the Royal Society reads:


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Ponder, Bruce 1944 births Living people People educated at Charterhouse School Alumni of Jesus College, Cambridge Fellows of Jesus College, Cambridge Fellows of the Royal Society Knights Bachelor Cancer researchers Department of Oncology, University of Cambridge English geneticists