The MIT-Harvard joint institute garners the world's largest financial commitment for university biomedical research.
Thursday, September 04, 2008
By Emily Singer
Scientists
at the Broad Institute, in Cambridge, MA,
must have done a dance of joy this morning, having won some respite from the
serious dearth of funding for biomedical research. Eli and Edythe L. Broad,
philanthropists who launched the institute in 2003 with $100 million in
funding, announced a $400 million endowment this morning, bringing their total
contribution to $600 million. (They contributed another $100 million in 2005.)
In the past few years, the Broad has spearheaded major
genetic studies, identifying genes involved in diseases like diabetes, Crohn's,
and irritable bowel syndrome. Broad scientists have successfully isolated
genetic links to diseases that have been resistant to genetic analysis,
including schizophrenia, bipolar disease, and autism.
"Of all of our philanthropy, the Broad Institute has been
the investment that has yielded the greatest returns," said Eli Broad, founder
of The Eli and Edythe Broad
Foundation, in a press release
from the Broad Institute. "This truly is a new way of doing science, and the
Institute's unique collaborative model for scientific research has resulted in
remarkable accomplishments in a very short period of time. Although this is a
large gift--the largest that we have ever made--it is only a fraction of what
will be needed to unlock the enormous promise of biomedical research at MIT and
Harvard. We are counting on others to step forward as partners in the next
phase of this grand experiment. We are convinced that the genomics and
biomedical work being conducted here by the world's best and brightest
scientists will ultimately lead to the cure and even the prevention of
diseases."
An article in the New
York Times reflects on the unique joint nature of the institute:
The Broad Institute is a rare joint
effort between two fiercely competitive institutions, Harvard and the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. While Broad has its own scientists, most
of the researchers working there are linked to other institutions around the
world.
Broad offers them a place to
collaborate while maintaining their positions elsewhere and draws together
teams of mathematicians, engineers, physicists and scientists from other
disciplines to work toward common goals.
"This idea of breaking down the
barriers so that scientists view Broad as a sort of free-trade zone for
research has been fantastic,' said Eric S. Lander, the founding director of the
institute and a leader of the Human Genome Project, which sequenced the human
genome.
A selection of Technology
Review articles on research from the Broad Institute:
A
New Genetic Globe
DNA
Deletion Linked to Autism
Wired
to Eat
Comments