As a PhD student at Andhra, I was growing disappointed in my program, which was part of the old British system. In this system, you received your bachelor's and master's degrees, which were followed by two or three years of research and a thesis, after which you would be awarded a doctorate. I didn't feel that this provided me with the appropriate background in the field in which I was trying to specialize --genetics.
Corn Genetics at Harvard
As a result, I applied in 1959 for graduate school at three American universities. The first program was at Harvard University with Paul Mangelsdorf, who was a renowned corn geneticist. The second was at California Institute of Technology (Caltech) with George Wells Beadle, a Nobel Prize-winning corn and Neurospora geneticist. And the third was at the University of Illinois at Urbana. I was accepted at Harvard, conditionally accepted at Caltech, and rejected at Urbana. I joined Harvard where I spent five years studying corn genetics and where I received my PhD degree. Outside of my graduate school studies, I followed the advances in the emerging field of human genetics, especially cytogenetics and the study of the chromosomal basis of abnormal human development.
After receiving my PhD, I returned to India to teach at Andhra University, where I very quickly became terribly unhappy. It seemed to me like a good time to try to contact Dr. Ford to ask if I could get an opportunity to train and work with him at the Medical Research Council (MRC) labs at Harwell, outside of Oxford.
After being offered a position by the MRC, I went to the Ford lab intending to stay a year, but ended up staying for four. During that time, I was trained in human genetics and mouse transplantation genetics. At the time, human cytogenetics was mainly clinically oriented and had little research basis, so that's what I worked on, using my experience from experimental plant genetics.
Precursors of Human Bone Marrow Transplantation
Back then, there was an argument about which factors, cellular or humoral, provided protection from sub-lethal irradiation of mice. A series of experiments were devised by Ford and his colleagues at the MRC using chromosomally marked donor bone marrow cells, which showed unequivocally that this protection was due to repopulation of donor cells (or hematopoietic stem cells, as we say now). These discoveries were the precursors for human bone marrow transplantation.
When I finished my postdoctoral research with Dr. Ford, I did not want to return to India. I traveled to New York City in 1971 to take up a position with James German, a renowned pioneer in human genetics. I spent five years with Dr. German, working on what were then called the chromosome breakage syndromes, such as Bloom syndrome, which predisposed individuals to cancer, and on sex-chromosome disorders in humans.
At the end of my five years in the German lab, I learned that Memorial Sloan-Kettering was looking for someone to start a diagnostic cytogenetics laboratory in their Department of Pathology. There were two reasons why this lab needed to be created. The first was that the field of human cancer cytogenetics was evolving and the hospital needed someone to provide patients with a diagnosis on the cytogenetic level of their cancers. The second reason was that a team of doctors -- Robert Good, Richard O'Reilly, John Hansen, and others -- was just then setting up a bone marrow transplantation program to treat patients with certain cancers and immunodeficiencies. They needed someone to track the cells that were engrafted into these patients, and at the time chromosomal tracking, along with HLA typing, was thought to be the best way to do that. My exposure to mouse transplantation work in the Ford lab was familiar to Dr. Good, so I was brought into the team in 1976. It was an exciting project to be a part of, and a pleasure to be a member of such a close-knit team led by Dr. Good.
Building a Lab from Scratch at Memorial Sloan-Kettering -- Discovering Chromosomal Markers
I developed the lab, starting with one technician. At the time, there was only one chromosomal marker in cancer to track, the Philadelphia chromosome, which was a diagnostic marker of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). Barney Clarkson was using this marker to evaluate his new CML treatement protocols, and he and I worked extensively on this for a number of years.
I wanted to start a research program to discover more chromosome markers, which I was fortunately able to do. I, along with several other researchers from around the world, published a great deal of groundbreaking work on the chromosomal basis of cancer development. We were helping to define the newly emerging field of cancer genetics. During this time, there wasn't a single day that wasn't scientifically exciting for me.