James Till on how 'serendipity' and public funding made possible the discovery of stem cells
James Till and his colleague Ernest McCulloch were researching the effects of radiation on bone marrow tissue in lab mice when they made an astonishing discovery.
One Sunday when McCulloch went to the lab to take a routine sample, he noticed bumps on the spleen of a mouse, clumps of cells that emerged after it had been injected with marrow. He counted the bumps and found that the number was directly related to the number of marrow cells that had been transplanted.
鈥淲hen I came in Monday morning,鈥 Till recalls in an interview with U of T News, 鈥渉e came down the hall to my office waving this piece of graph paper saying, 鈥榊ou鈥檝e got to see this!鈥欌
Till and McCulloch, scientists at the Ontario Cancer Institute, were wary of jumping to conclusions, so they described their findings in 1961 as 鈥渟pleen colony-forming units.鈥 In later years, they and their collaborators were able to establish that what they had observed were stem cells, and to explain their properties. Their work opened the door to new research with the potential to reshape health care and cure ailments ranging from blindness to cancer.
鈥淔or a long time, Till and McCulloch鈥檚 discovery didn鈥檛 get the attention it deserved,鈥 James Price, president and CEO of the Canadian Stem Cell Foundation, this year. 鈥淏ut they set the stage for all the current stem-cell research, and helped make Canada a magnet for talent and investment in biotech.鈥
Their research has already paved the way for life-saving treatments, such as bone-marrow transplants to treat cancer.
And their discovery has helped build up regenerative medicine into a global multibillion-dollar industry. By 2021, the market is .
, the research duo said their pioneering work on stem cells shows the value of basic science. 鈥淲e weren鈥檛 deliberately seeking such cells, but, thanks to a felicitous observation originally made by McCulloch, we did stumble upon them,鈥 they write. 鈥淥ur experience provides yet another case study of both the value of fundamental research and the importance of serendipity in scientific research.鈥
Without public funding from the likes of the Defence Research Board and Medical Research Council, Till says his research with McCulloch 鈥 who died in 2011 鈥 would have been impossible. 鈥淲e needed a lot of mice, and they were expensive,鈥 he recalls.
His comments come as the government weighs the recommendations of Canada鈥檚 panel, which was led by U of T President Emeritus David Naylor. The panel of experts called for a $1.3-billion boost in federal research funding over four years and changes to how it is administered.
In the interview, Till says the federal government and the public should support basic science because 鈥渋t鈥檚 the beginning of everything else."
鈥淲hat you do with a discovery is create potential for further development,鈥 Till says. 鈥淏ut you have to do the steps in between.鈥
In 2005, their work was honoured with the Lasker Award, sometimes called the American Nobel. They were both named Officers of the Order of Canada and inducted into the Canadian Medical Hall of Fame.
But if it wasn鈥檛 for the support of the federal government, things might have turned out differently, Till says. 鈥淲ithout the support of that first bursary from the National Research Council, I probably wouldn鈥檛 have gone on to have a career in research at all.鈥
Till was born on a farm in Saskatchewan, near the Alberta border. He studied physics at the University of Saskatchewan before obtaining a PhD from Yale. As memories of the atomic bombs dropping on Hiroshima and Nagasaki were still fresh, Till says he gravitated toward biophysics. 鈥淚t鈥檚 challenging from an intellectual point of view, but it also has the potential to be helpful, which was the kind of motivation I wanted,鈥 he says.
He came to 狐狸视频 as a post-doctoral researcher. He was reunited with his former master鈥檚 supervisor Harold Johns, who recruited him to the research staff at the Ontario Cancer Institute at Princess Margaret Hospital. McCulloch was part of the biology group.
Till and McCulloch are sometimes described as a scientific odd couple because of the differences in their expertise and temperament 鈥 Till, the physicist from the Prairies, and McCulloch, a hematologist from Toronto.
鈥淲e became friends quite quickly,鈥 Till says.
From their lab benches in the 1960s, they could not have anticipated the vast implications of their discovery. And the full impact of their work may not be known for some time still.
鈥淚 believe stem cell research will continue to achieve unexpected things, and that鈥檚 the only prediction I鈥檓 willing to make,鈥 . 鈥淚t will be unexpected because that鈥檚 how science functions.鈥