EducationMarch 23, 2026

How J. Michael Bishop Changed Cancer Research and UCSF

Key Vocabulary

oncogene/ˈɒn.kəˌdʒiːn/
a gene that can cause a cell to become cancerous
"An oncogene can change how a cell grows."
proto-oncogene/ˈproʊ.toʊ ˈɒn.kəˌdʒiːn/
a normal gene that can become an oncogene after changes
"A proto-oncogene helps normal cell growth."
translational/trænsˈleɪ.ʃənəl/
linking basic research to clinical applications
"Translational research aims to move lab results to patient care."
fundraising/ˈfʌndˌreɪ.zɪŋ/
collecting money for a project or organization
"The university increased fundraising for new labs."

Listening

How J. Michael Bishop Changed Cancer Research and UCSF

J. Michael Bishop is an American biomedical researcher who has been long associated with the University of California, San Francisco. His collaborative work with Harold Varmus showed that oncogenes can come from normal cellular genes called proto-oncogenes. This discovery was central to viewing cancer as a genetic disease and earned them the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1989. Although early experiments used viruses to trace the genes, later work showed that mutations, radiation, or chemical exposure can also activate proto-oncogenes. The finding has opened new lines of research and has supported the development of targeted therapies.

Bishop served as chancellor of UCSF from 1998 to 2009 and he oversaw a major expansion at the Mission Bay campus. While chancellor, he promoted new facilities for basic science and translational research, and fundraising grew to support construction and programs. Therefore, UCSF added laboratories and clinical buildings that now host many research teams. Furthermore, Bishop has written about scientific life and education, and his discoveries continue to influence cancer biology and university leadership.

172 words

Quiz

1. What prize did Bishop and Varmus earn in 1989?
2. When did Bishop serve as chancellor of UCSF?
3. What campus expansion did he oversee?

Reading Practice

Read the article from the Listening section aloud. Your AI teacher will give you pronunciation feedback.

Discussion

1

Do you think scientific discoveries change daily life? How?

2

Have you ever supported a local science or health project? What happened?

3

What do you think about universities building new research centers near cities?

4

Would you like to work in medical research? Why or why not?

This content is for English learning purposes and does not guarantee factual accuracy.