Oct 21, 2015

A Decade of Breakthrough Discoveries

Education, Faculty & Staff, Research
Panel discussion on Personalized Medicine featuring Professors Gary Bader, Molly Shoichet, Dev Sidhu, Andy Fraser and Brenda Andrews
By

Jovana Drinjakovic

Panel discussion on Personalized Medicine featuring Professors Gary Bader, Molly Shoichet, Dev Sidhu, Andy Fraser and Brenda Andrews

The Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto celebrated the 10th anniversary of the Donnelly Centre for Cellular and Biomolecular Research on October 15. Led by Professor Brenda Andrews, the Centre is a major international hub for biomedical research, focused on interdisciplinary collaboration.

“Essentially, the Donnelly Centre is a model for what I see as the future of medicine. We need to break out of traditional disciplines and other boundaries. We need to discover new scientific insights and then apply them,” said Dean Trevor Young, U of T’s Faculty of Medicine.

The Donnelly Centre’s interdisciplinary approach was revolutionary in the mid-1990s, when U of T professors and visionaries James Friesen and Cecil Yip first began to plan the Centre.

Professors Friesen and Yip recognized that the advances in genomic technologies would enable data collection on an unprecedented scale, calling for a paradigm shift in biomedical research. This posed a challenge of how best to analyze the vast amounts of data that could not be met by one field alone – collaboration would become necessary.

“I find it remarkable that Jim and Cecil recognized that in order for the University to be ahead of the game now in 2015, we really had to start thinking then how to build this type of research environment,” said Professor Andrews.

The Centre was made possible through Government of Canada investment, private sector contributions and a generous donation by philanthropist Dr. Terrence Donnelly, whose gift helped complete the state-of-the-art building in the heart of Toronto.

“The Centre wonderfully embodies the values and aspirations that animate the University’s research enterprise, including a fervent desire to extend the boundaries of knowledge and an unceasing quest to provide answers to some of the world’s most important questions,” said Professor Vivek Goel, Vice-President of Research and Innovation at U of T.

Over the past decade, Donnelly Centre researchers have made a number of breakthroughs in our understanding of genes and how they influence health and disease. These insights are already paving the way for personalized medicine, where treatment will be tailored to an individual’s genetic make-up.

The 10th anniversary celebration event included a discussion on the promise and pitfalls of personalized medicine by a panel of Donnelly Centre researchers, including University Professor Molly Shoichet and Professors Gary Bader, Sachdev Sidhu and Andrew Fraser.

The panel’s interdisciplinary nature reflects that of the Centre, where experts from different fields of science work side by side in an open concept space that fosters creativity and open exchange of ideas.

The Donnelly Centre houses 35 principal investigators along with 500 trainees and staff. The Centre provides a unique teaching environment to students who have come from 20 different departments across U of T, helping prepare a new generation of scientists to think outside the confines of single research fields.