In 2020, the schools of Medicine and Public Health at Yale launched an initiative to engage entrepreneurs in health care and the life sciences as supporters of research, education, and innovation at Yale. Founders Pledge, as the effort became known, provided a framework for the founders of startup companies to think about philanthropy at an early stage, before their business ventures have matured. Now, the first major gift resulting from that effort will establish a professorship in neuroscience at Yale.
Michael Singer, YC ’95, PhD ’00, MD ’02, the cofounder of Maryland-based Cartesian Therapeutics, gifted shares of the company to Yale in 2023. The gift provided a tax benefit for Singer and, upon sale of the shares by Yale, the cash to create an endowed fund that will support the salary and scientific work of a faculty member at Yale School of Medicine (YSM).
Recognizing a mentor
Singer made the $3 million gift in memory of his mentor, Gordon M. Shepherd, MD, DPhil, a pioneer in the field of brain circuitry whose long career established the basis for understanding how the brain manages our sense of smell. Shepherd, who died in 2022, was the author of more than 300 articles and eight books, including the influential 1974 text The Synaptic Organization of the Brain, now in its fifth edition, and two popular volumes on the neuroscience underlying our experience of food and wine. He served as editor in chief of both the Journal of Neuroscience and the Journal of Neurophysiology and, at Yale, as deputy provost for biomedical sciences among other leadership positions.
“We are so grateful to Dr. Michael Singer for his gift toward establishing an endowed professorship in neuroscience at Yale School of Medicine,” said Nancy J. Brown, MD, the Jean and David W. Wallace Dean of Yale School of Medicine. “This inaugural gift from a Founders Pledge member is a testament to Dr. Singer’s dedication to fostering research and education. His support will cultivate future leaders in neuroscience, embodying our shared commitment to scientific excellence and innovation.”
Singer met Shepherd in 1992, when he applied for a work-study job building computer models demonstrating the interactions of odor molecules with receptor proteins in the nervous system.