Harold E. Varmus
– AutobiographyI was born in the shadow of World War II, on December 18,
1939, on the south shore of Long Island, a product of the early twentieth century
emigration of Eastern European Jewry to New York City and its environs. My father's
father, Jacob Varmus, left a village of uncertain name near Warsaw just after
the turn of the century to become a farmer in Newburgh, New York, and later
a hatter in Newark, New Jersey. His wife, Eleanor, was a victim of the influenza
epidemic of 1918, when my father was eleven. My mother's parents, Harry and
Regina Barasch, came from farming villages around Linz, Austria, to found a
children's clothing store, still in existence, in Freeport, New York. As children
of immigrants, my parents both had notable educations, my father (Frank) at
Harvard College (until financial considerations required him to withdraw after
two years) and at Tufts Medical School, and my mother (Beatrice) at Wellesley
College and the New York School of Social Work.Three years before my birth,
my parents settled in Freeport, my mother's home town, where my father established
a general medical practice, while my mother commuted to a social services job
in New York City. With the entry of the United States into the War, however,
my father was assigned to an Air Force Hospital near Winter Park, Florida, and
my first memories were to be of long beaches, and bass fishing on a lake with
alligators. We remained in Florida, spared the pain of war, until early in 1946.
In the interim, my only sibling, Ellen Jane, was born; she is now a genetic
counselor and mother of three in Berkeley, California.My growing-up in Freeport
was undemanding and in many ways privileged. The public schools I attended were
dominated by athletics and rarely inspiring intellectually, but I enjoyed a
small circle of interesting friends, despite my ineptitude at team sports and
my preference for reading. Life was enriched by frequent outings to Jones Beach
State Park (where my father was the medical officer for many years), family
skiing vacations to New England, and many outdoor adventures with the Boy Scouts
and later the Putney Summer Work Camp.The most decisive turn in my intellectual
history came in the fall of 1957, when I entered Amherst College intending to
prepare for medical school. The evident intensity and pleasure of academic life
there challenged my presumptions about my future as a physician, and my course
of study drifted from science to philosophy and finally to English literature.
At the same time, I became active in politics and journalism, ultimately serving
as the editor of the college newspaper. Following graduation from Amherst, a
Woodrow Wilson Fellowship enabled me to test the depth of my interest in literary
scholarship by beginning graduate studies at Harvard University. Within the
year, I again felt the lure of medicine and entered Columbia College of Physicians
and Surgeons. Although I began medical school with strong interests in psychiatry
and international health, I was influenced towards basic medical sciences by
the lectures of (among others) Elvin Kabat, Harry Rose, Herbert Rosenkrantz,
Erwin Chargaff and Paul Marks. My desires to practice medicine abroad were also
tempered by an apprenticeship in a mission hospital in Bareilly, India.In preparation
for a career in academic medicine, I worked as a medical house officer at Columbia-Presbyterian
Hospital from 1966 to 1968, and then joined Ira Pastan's laboratory at the National
Institutes of Health as a Clinical Associate. This provided me with my first
serious exposure to laboratory science and to the excitement of experimental
success. Our studies of bacterial gene regulation by cyclic AMP (in collaboration
with Bob Perlman and Benoit de Crombrugge) and the evening courses offered to
incipient physician-scientists at NIH stimulated me to seek further postdoctoral
training in molecular biology, specifically in tumor virology. This decision,
combined with an interest in trying life in the San Francisco area, led me to
Mike Bishop's door in 1969. I joined him as a post-doctoral fellow at UC San
Francisco in 1970, was appointed Lecturer shortly thereafter, and in 1972 became
a regular member of the faculty in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology
(led initially by Ernest Jawetz, later by Leon Levintow), ascending to the rank
of Professor by 1979.
Throughout the nearly two decades I have been associated with UCSF, most of
my research interests have been focused upon the behavior of E. forums - Harold Varmus dog sex retroviruses: various
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genes, and their potential to cause genetic change. Much of this work has been
performed in collaboration with Mike Bishop, particularly in the years before
1984 when we shared facilities, personnel, and funds. Other faculty interactions
during the 1970's stimulated work on hemoglobinopathies (with Y.W. Kan) and
on glucocorticoid action (with Gordon Tomkins and Keith Yamamoto). During the
1980's, I also worked extensively on hepatitis B viruses in collaboration with
Don Ganem (who was initially a post-doctoral fellow and later a faculty colleague).
My career at UCSF has been greatly enhanced by the extraordinary collegiality
of the faculty, the excellence of our graduate and medical students, an unremitting
stream of first-rate post-doctoral fellows, and the loyalty of our staff research
associates, especially Suzanne Ortiz, Nancy Quintrell, and Jean Jackson.
In 1969 I married Constance Louise Casey, then a reporter for Congressional
Quarterly in Washington, D.C., her home town, and now the Book Critic for
the San Jose Mercury News. Shortly after we moved to California, my parents
died, my mother of breast cancer in 1971, my father of coronary artery disease
in 1972. Our lives have been made more interesting by the births of Jacob Carey
in 1973 and Christopher Isaac in 1978; the boys attend public schools in San
Francisco, root for the Giants, and are musically-inclined (Jacob, especially,
is a talented trumpeter). California weather has promoted my love of outdoor
sports, particularly bicycling, running, backpacking, skiing, and fishing, but
I also maintain strong interests in the arts - literature, theatre, music, and
film. We have lived almost continuously since 1971 in a Victorian house in the
Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco, with the exception of 1978-79, when
I was a sabbatic visitor in Mike Fried's laboratory at the Imperial Cancer Research
Fund in London, and 1988-89, when the award of a Nieman Fellowship to Connie
brought her to Harvard and me to the laboratories of Bob Weinberg and David
Baltimore at the Whitehead Institute.Most of the significant honors I have received
have been awarded jointly to Mike Bishop, with whom I also share the Nobel Prize.
The earlier awards include California Scientist of the Year (1982), the Albert
Lasker Basic Medical Research Award (1982), the Passano Foundation Award (1983),
the Armand Hammer Cancer Prize (1984), the Alfred P. Sloan Prize from the General
Motors Cancer Foundation (1984), the Gairdner Foundation International Award
(1984), and the American College of Physicians Award (1987). In addition, I
was elected to the National Academy of Science (1984) and the American Academy
of Arts and Sciences (1988). I received an honorary degree from Amherst College
(1985) and the Alumni Gold Medal from the College of Physicians and Surgeons
(1989), and I have been the American Cancer Society Professor of Molecular Virology
since 1984This autobiography/biography was written at
the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel
Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted
by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
 
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