Bruce Ponder


Sir Bruce Anthony John Ponder FMedSci FRS is an English geneticist and cancer researcher. He is Emeritus Professor of Oncology at the University of Cambridge and former director of the Cancer Research UK Cambridge Institute.

Education

Ponder was educated at Charterhouse School and Jesus College, Cambridge. He carried out his PhD studies with Lionel Crawford in London working on chromatin organisation and DNA sequence specificity using polyoma virus.

Research

Ponder became interested in cancer genetics in the 1970s, when he saw the potential to use new methods of linkage analysis to identify genes that predispose to cancer. His team pinpointed the RET gene as the cause of Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2. During the 1990s, Ponder co-founded and chaired the International Breast Cancer Linkage Consortium, which led to the identification of breast cancer susceptibility genes BRCA1 and BRCA2. BRCA2 specifically was identified by a team including Ponder and led by Mike Stratton.

Career

In 1996, Ponder became Cancer Research Campaign Professor of Oncology in Cambridge. He served as co-director of the Strangeways Research Laboratory for Genetic Epidemiology and co-director of the Hutchison/MRC Research Centre.
Ponder was the inaugural Director of the CRUK Cambridge Research Institute when it opened in 2007. In this role he put an emphasis on building infrastructure across the research pathway, from basic science through translational research, ensuring that research has clinical impact. He was director of the Cambridge Cancer Centre, a collaboration between the Institute, the University of Cambridge and Addenbrooke's Hospital, guiding the centre to OECI Comprehensive Cancer Centre status in 2013.

Awards and honours

In 1997 Ponder delivered the Croonian Lecture to the Royal College of Physicians on the subject of the RET gene. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2001, he was knighted for Services to Medicine in the 2008 New Year Honours list, and was awarded the 2013 Cancer Research UK Lifetime Achievement Prize. His nomination for the Royal Society reads: