The Department of Pharmacology is part of the University of Oxford’s Medical Sciences Division focused on basic life sciences research, undergraduate teaching for medical and biomedical sciences students and training and development of graduate students.[1] The building is located on Mansfield Road.
The Department of Pharmacology was founded in 1898 with the appointment of Dr William John Smith Jerome as a ‘Lecturer on Medical Pharmacology and Materia Medica’.[5] Smith Jerome delivered an introductory lecture for a public audience in the museum on ‘Pharmacology: its Aims and Methods’ published in The Lancet.[6]
William John Smith Jerome (1839-1929) taught pharmacology for a decade while carrying out research into the formation of uric acid and the development of gout[7][8][9][10] He had previously established the Royal Children’s Hospital, Melbourne,[11] and had been a curator of a pathology museum in Melbourne,[12] a lecturer in Botany in Charing Cross Hospital[13] and carried out research in Germany with papers published in the Plügers Archiv between 1883-1895.[14][15][16][17][18] A report on teaching medicine in Oxford in the British Medical Journal in 1906 described Smith Jerome as an excellent teacher but that he was teaching in the Oxford University Museum of Natural History in an “out-house in the Museum ground” with inadequate facilities.[19] In 1908 Smith Jerome resigned and moved to Italy. He published a paper on the physiological action for an Italian method for treating respiratory infections through salt inhalation.[20]
James Andrew Gunn (1882-1958) was appointed Reader in Pharmacology in 1912 to a newly refurbished space for teaching and research in the Oxford University Museum of Natural History.[21] He had gained five degrees in the University of Edinburgh, and in 1917 he was made the first Professor of Pharmacology in Oxford.[22] During WWI he served in the R.A.M.C. Following an endowment from the Sir William Dunn Trustees for a new building for pathology in 1927, Gunn proposed using the vacated pathology building in South Parks Road for pharmacology.[23] Gunn’s proposal was supported with funding to refurbish the building with teaching and research facilities, and to expand the departmental library.
In 1931 Gunn initiated the creation of the British Pharmacological Society with a letter signed with Sir Henry Dale and Dr. Walter E. Dixon.[24] The first meeting took place in Oxford on Friday 3rd July 1931 with papers being given the following day in the Department of Pharmacology. Gunn’s research included investigating the actions of compounds related to adrenaline,[25] and on alkaloids of Peganum harmala.[26]
Photograph of the department in 1945: Burn front row in centre, on his right Bulbring, Heaton and Ling.
Prior to Oxford, Joshua Harold Burn FRS (1892-1981) worked with Sir Henry Hallett Dale and then became director of the Pharmacological Laboratories at the Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain.[27][28] On his appointment in Oxford,[29] Burn invited Edith Bülbring to join him as his assistant along with technician H.W. Ling. Burn designed a course for teaching medical students that took an experimental approach to pharmacology based on physiology. He expanded research in the department and encouraged community with daily lunches in the library often accompanied with music by departmental members. The Vice-Chancellor described the Department of Pharmacology as the “happiest family in Oxford”. Over the years Burn had 162 co-workers in Oxford including Edith Bülbring, Hugh Blaschko [de] and Sir John Vane.
Paton (right) and Ling (left) in the laboratory in 1962.
Sir William Paton FRS (1917-1993) was appointed in 1959.[32][33] He was awarded a CBE in 1968 and a knighthood in 1979. Prior to Oxford he had worked in the National Institute of Medical Research, had been a Reader in Pharmacology in UCL and then Professor of Pharmacology in the Royal College of Surgeons. In NIMR he discovered with Eleanor Zaimis two different actions of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine; causing muscles to contract, and to increase blood pressure.[34] They found these actions can be separated with two antagonist drugs: decamethonium to relax muscles which can be used in surgery, while hexamethonium became the first drug to safely lower blood pressure.
As well as Head of Department, Smith was appointed Founding Director of the MRC Anatomical Neuropharmacology Unit in 1985 which was associated with the Department of Pharmacology with Associate Director, Peter SomogyiFRS.[39] In 1987 Smith negotiated an agreement with E.R. Squibb & Sons Inc., with a donation of £20 million to create a new larger purpose built building for the department and funding for research into brain diseases.[40] Smith included a common room with a café as a communal space.
Antony Galione FRS is the current holder of this position. Following a BA in Natural Science at Trinity College, University of Cambridge from 1989 he worked on the role of calcium oscillations in cell activation in Sir Michael Berridge's laboratory.[41] After working in UCL on mammalian fertilisation with Michael Whitaker, he went to Johns Hopkins University as a Harkness Fellow studying the role of calcium signals in early development. In 1991 Galione joined the Department of Pharmacology. He was appointed Professor of Pharmacology in 2002, and elected to the Professorship of Pharmacology in 2006. He served as Head of the Department of Pharmacology from 2006-2015. Galione was elected a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences in 2010 and a Fellow of The Royal Society in 2016 for his work which focuses on calcium signalling.[42][43]
Kenneth James Franklin FRS (1897–1966) – Following service in the Royal Artillery from 1915 he changed from classics to medicine from 1919-1922 at Hertford College in Oxford; Demonstrator 1924– 1938[54] with research into valves and veins in different species,[55][56][57] and used techniques of cinematography and radiography to study circulation following visits to Dr Robert Ranker in Bonn in 1926 and 1934, and to M. Pierre Rijlant in Brussels.;[58][59][60] study of medical history on circulation with physicians Richard Lower[61][62][63] and translated the work of William Harvey[64]
Harry Raymond Ing FRS (1899–1974) – 1st chemist to hold a senior appointment in pharmacology as ‘Lecturer in Pharmacological Chemistry’ in UCL 1929-1938 under E.B Verney[65] with appointment as1st Reader in this subject in 1937; Fellowship in Rockefeller Institute 1938-9; Newly created position of ‘Reader in Pharmacological Chemistry’ (later ‘Reader in Chemical Pharmacology’) in Oxford from 1939-1966 with research focusing on structure-action relationships of drugs including effects of quaternary ammonium salts on nerves,[66] substitutes for atropine during wartime[67][68] and on the neurotransmitter acetylcholine;[69] he developed and ran a ‘Chemical Pharmacology’ course from 1945 which was the 1st of its kind in the UK; 1946 - founding of ‘British Journal of Pharmacology and Chemotherapy’ (renamed ‘British Journal of Pharmacology’) and first editor for 7 years.[70]
Gustav Victor Rudolf BornFRS (1921 2018) – Jewish exile from Germany in 1933;[90] 1945 – worked in Mumbai which included visiting Hiroshima as a pathologist and observed radiation-induced damage to bone marrow resulting in bleeding through an inability to produce platelets;1953-1960 - Demonstrator in Oxford and contributed to practical classes and collaborate with Edith Bülbring on the physiology and pharmacology of smooth muscle,[91] with Geoffrey S. Dawes on foetal circulation[92] and with Blaschko into the relationship of serotonin and platelets.[93] He became lifelong friends with Sir John Robert Vane; 1960–1973 – appointed Professor of Pharmacology, Royal College of Surgeons. Born made fundamental contributions to the study of platelets which paved the way for modern antiplatelet therapy.[94] Born was awarded the 16th Wellcome Gold Medal.[31]
Oleh Hornykiewicz (1926-2020) - 1956-1958 – British Council scholarship to work with Blaschko on the cardiovascular effects of dopamine.[72] He credited Blaschko for his advice to study dopamine; 1967-1992 - Emeritus Professor of Pharmacology, University of Toronto; first suggested a link between a lack of dopamine and onset of Parkinson’s disease and played a key role in the development of L-dopa in managing the disorder.[98][99][100]
Ranjit Roy Chaudhury (1930-2015) – 1955-1958 (Rhodes scholar) doctorate in Pharmacology with John M. Walker;[110][111] led the National Committee for formulating the policy and guidelines on drugs and clinical trials in India and chairman of the joint programme of World Health Organization.
Alison Brading (1939-2011) – after recovering from polio, gained a degree in zoology and PhD. in the University of Bristol;[112] 1965-1968 - joined Edith Bülbring’s research group focusing on smooth muscle; 1972-2005 - Fellow of Lady Margaret Hall;1972-1995 - Lecturer in Pharmacology; 1996 – Professor in Pharmacology. Her research focussed on smooth muscle which controls contraction of the bladder and urethra and the importance of K+ ion channels. This led to the study of drugs to help with incontinence. Brading led the Oxford Continence Group in collaboration with urology surgeons.[113]
Peter SomogyiFRS (born 1950) – 1977-1978 – Demonstrator in pharmacology in Oxford supervised by A. David Smith; 1978-1979 – Wellcome Trust Research Fellow; 1985–2015 - Associate, then Director of MRC Anatomical Neuropharmacology Unit,[39] Department of Pharmacology, Oxford; research into how brain centres are organised structurally including cell types and locating signalling molecules in synapses which together he calls the ‘chronocircuit’ allowing rapid response to changes in the environment.[114][115]
Arnold D. Welch (1908–2003) – 1952–1953 – worked with Blaschko on storage of adrenaline in the adrenal gland,[122] which led to an understanding of how several important drugs produce actions including reserpine used for treating high blood pressure and schizophrenia;[123][71] 1953–1967 – established Department of Pharmacology, Yale University; president of the Squibb Institute for Medical Research, which resulted in the development of Captropril, the first of many ACE inhibitors; at the age of 75 years coordinator of the National Cooperative Discovery Groups of the National Cancer Institute.
Dorothy Crowfoot HodgkinFRS (1910–1994) – pioneered the use of crystallography to map the structures of penicillin, insulin, and vitamin B12;[124] 1947 – elected 5th woman Fellow to the Royal Society; 1962 - Hodgkin was offered space by Burn and later Paton in the basement of Pharmacology for a crystallography room which was adapted with funding from the Royal Society;[125][126] 1964 – Hodgkin received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry and she remains Britain’s only female Nobel Prize winner in science.[127]
Alan William CuthbertFRS (1932-2016) – Edith Bülbring who invited him to undertake some sucrose gap experiments in her laboratory in Oxford. Whilst there Cuthbert met Arnold Burgen, a pharmacologist visiting from Canada, who became the second Sheild Professor at Cambridge in 1962. This contact with Burgen led Alan to apply for, and secure, a Demonstratorship in the Department of Pharmacology at the University of Cambridge in 1963;[128] 1979 –1999 - Head of Department of Pharmacology, University of Cambridge. He carried out ground-breaking work on epithelial ion transport, and later on ion transport deficits that underlie cystic fibrosis.[109][129][130] Cuthbert was awarded the 14th Wellcome Gold Medal.[31]
Leslie IversenFRS (1937-2020) – Visiting Professor of Neuropharmacology 1995-2020;[131] 1970–1983 - Director of MRC Neurochemical Pharmacology Unit, Cambridge; 1983–1995 – Founding Director of Merck, Sharp & Dohme Neuroscience Research Centre, Harlow. He made seminal discoveries including characterization of neurotransmitter uptake mechanisms, which paved the way for the development of a new class of drug in widespread use, the antidepressants. He pioneered the neuropeptide transmitter field, helping develop understanding of the mechanisms of neurotransmitter action.[109] His work for the Science and Technology Committee of the House of Lords as a scientific advisor on a report on cannabis in 1998 led him to write about medicinal and drugs of abuse[132][133][134][135] and later chaired the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs at the Home Office. Iversen was awarded the 13th Wellcome Gold Medal.[31]
^Oxford University Museum of Natural History – p6 Third Annual Report of the delegates of the University Museum (for 1890) – Report of the Waynflete Professor of Physiology, J.S. Burdon-Sanderson
^45. Heaton, HB (1926). "The nutritive requirements of growing cells". Journal of Pathology and Bacteriology.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^J.A. Gunn and R. St. A. Heathcote (November 1920). "The alleged hypersusceptibilty of the rat to squill". Proc. Physiol. Soc.: 1xxxv.
^J.A. Gunn and R. St. A. Heathcote (1921). "Cellular immunity; observations on natural and acquired immunity to cobra venom". Proc. Roy. Soc. 92 (B): 81. Bibcode:1921RSPSB..92...81G.
^St. A. Heathcote, R (December 1920). "The action of caffeine, theobromine &c, on the heart'". Journal of Pharmacology: 327.
^Bindman, Lynn; Brading, Alison; Tansey, Tilli; Physiological Society, eds. (1993). Women physiologists: an anniversary celebration of their contributions to British physiology. London: Portland Press on behalf of the Physiological Society. ISBN978-1-85578-049-1.
^Chaudhury, Ranjit Roy (2024). A Tale to Tell: An Extraordinary Journey in Medicine (1st ed.). London: Bloomsbury Publishing India Pvt. Ltd. ISBN978-93-5640-762-6.