Breadcrumb

Yves  Pommier, M.D., Ph.D.

Yves Pommier, M.D., Ph.D.

  • Center for Cancer Research
  • National Cancer Institute
  • Building 37, Room 5068
  • Bethesda, MD 20892-4255
  • 240-760-6142
  • pommier@nih.gov
NIH Scientist Emeritus
Developmental Therapeutics Branch

RESEARCH SUMMARY

Dr. Pommier was a leader in DNA topoisomerase biology and biochemistry, and their cancer relevance. He revealed the interfacial inhibition paradigm based on molecular mechanisms of topoisomerase inhibitors, and championed its broad relevance for molecular pharmacology and drug discovery. He discovered the indenoisoquinolines as novel Top1 inhibitors, which were in clinical development, and the mitochondrial topoisomerase gene, TOP1mt. To understand the determinants of response to topoisomerase inhibitors, he studied the repair pathway centered on tyrosyl-DNA-phosphodiesterases (TDP1 and TDP2) and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerases (PARP).

As Chief, Dr. Pommier oversaw the Branch’s clinical/translational research program, which emphasized new approaches to cancer treatments targeting DNA, epigenetic and chromatin, and connected biomarkers.

Publications

Selected Recent Publications

Exonuclease VII repairs quinolone-induced damage by resolving DNA gyrase cleavage complexes.

Huang, S.-y.N., Michaels, S.A., Mitchell, B.B., Majdalani, N., Vanden Broeck, A., Canela, A., Tse-Dinh, Y.-C., Lamour, V., and Pommier Y.
Science Advances . 7(10): eabe0384, 2021. [ Journal Article ]

SLFN11 promotes CDT1 degradation by CUL4 in response to replicative DNA damage, while its absence leads to synthetic lethality with ATR/CHK1 inhibitors.

Jo, U., Murai, Y., Chakka, S., Chen, L., Cheng, K., Murai, J., Saha, L.K., Miller Jenkins, L.M., and Pommier
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 118: e2015654118, 2021. [ Journal Article ]

CellMiner Cross-Database (CellMinerCDB) version 1.2: Exploration of patient-derived cancer cell line pharmacogenomics.

Luna, A., Elloumi, F., Varma, S., Wang, Y., Rajapakse, V.N., Aladjem, M.I., Robert, J., Sander, C., Pommier, Y., and Reinhold,W.C.
Nucleic Acids Res. 49(D1): D1083-D1093, 2021. [ Journal Article ]

Replication-dependent cytotoxicity and Spartan-mediated repair of trapped PARP1–DNA complexes.

Saha, L.K., Murai, Y., Saha, S., Jo, U., Tsuda, M., Takeda, S., and Pommier, Y.
Nucleic Acids Research.. 10: 1093/nar/gkab777, 2021. [ Journal Article ]

PARylation prevents the proteasomal degradation of topoisomerase I DNA-protein crosslinks and induces their deubiquitylation.

Sun, Y., Chen, J., Huang, S.N., Su, Y.P., Wang, W., Agama, K., Saha, S., Jenkins, L.M., Pascal, J.M., and Pommier, Y.
Nat Commun. 12(1): 5010., 2021. [ Journal Article ]

Biography

Yves Pommier, M.D., Ph.D.
NIH Scientist Emeritus

Yves Pommier, M.D., Ph.D.

Dr. Pommier joined the NIH in 1981. He is the Chief of the Developmental Therapeutics Branch and Laboratory of Molecular Pharmacology, member of the NCI Center for Cancer Research Drug Development Collaborative (DDC), and Honorary Professor of the Shanghai Institute Materia Medica, Chinese Academy of Sciences. Dr. Pommier received an NIH Merit Award for his role in elucidating the function of topoisomerases as targets for anticancer drugs and NCI Director Award of Merit for "Pioneering work on the mechanism of topoisomerase and PARP inhibition and the discovery of novel biomarkers of the anticancer drug response". He has also received multiple Federal Technology Transfer Awards for discovering the mitochondrial topoisomerase TOP1MT and the importance of the ribonuclease activity of topoisomerases I, as wells as novel DNA topoisomerase, HIV-1 integrase and cell cycle checkpoint inhibitors. Three of his drugs are in clinical trial and his molecular pharmacology studies led to the clinical development of Yondelis and the PARP inhibitors. He serves as Senior Editor for Cancer Research for the Translational Science section and was elected Chair for 2004-2005 Gordon conferences on the Molecular Therapeutics of Cancer and for the 2016 and 2018 Gordon conferences on DNA Topoisomerases in Biology & Medicine. He is founding organizer of the "International Conferences on Retroviral Integrase: Molecular Biology and Pharmacology" (1995, 2001, 2008, 2014 and 2017). Dr. Pommier received the "Paul Ehrlich lecture award" from the French Society of Therapeutic Chemistry in 2005 based on his discovery of the Interfacial inhibition concept.  He has authored over 700 publications and holds over 30 patents for inhibitors of DNA topoisomerases, tyrosyl-DNA phosphodiesterase, checkpoint inhibitors and HIV-1 integrase. He leads and developed the pharmacogenomic patient-derived cancer cell line CellMiner database for precision medicine. He discovered Schlafen 11 (SLFN11) as a dominant determinant of response to widely used anticancer agents. He has mentored over 60 M.D. and Ph.D. post-doctoral fellows, Howard Hughes Medical Institute trainees, Ph.D. graduate students, and students who went into medical and scientific academic positions, pharmaceutical and editorial careers. Dr. Pommier was elected fellow of the AAAS in 2017 and received the National Cancer Institute Director’s Award of Merit for “Pioneering work on the mechanism of topoisomerase and PARP inhibition and the discovery of novel biomarkers of the anticancer drug response”.

Dr. Pommier retired as Chief of the Developmental Therapeutics Branch in July 2025.