“What moved us most was not only Jen’s groundbreaking work with CRISPR, but her passion — and success — in translating gene therapies to wider segments of the population,” the Fleischauers said. “Her lab’s work in creating ‘gene therapy in a box’ and, hopefully soon, ‘gene therapy in a syringe’ is exactly the kind of inspirational and creative work that philanthropy needs to support.”
Adair said she was humbled to receive such a generous gift.
“I am honored that they would find my research a good fit for their philanthropy, and it is not something I take lightly,” she said. “When researchers have a new idea or want to push into a new space, we always have to think creatively about how to fund that. I will always have these dedicated funds to pursue those next ideas, and that’s going to help in a thousand ways.”
Adair, who has children around the same age as the Fleischauers, said the two families have become close — close enough for friendly trash-talking that began the minute the Ohio-born Adair learned of the Fleischauers’ ties to the University of Michigan, where their son attends college. A tongue-in-cheek stipulation on the endowment is that Adair must take a picture of herself wearing a University of Michigan sweatshirt. (She hasn’t gotten around to it — yet.)
The Fleischauers’ gift of Adair’s endowed chair was inspired in part by the Hutch’s $20 million matching program for establishing endowed faculty chairs, which runs through June 30. This special initiative recognizes the strategic importance Fred Hutch leadership places on supporting faculty and partnering with generous donors to recognize and catalyze their lifesaving work. Through the initiative, a $2 million endowed faculty chair can be established with a donor’s first-time pledge of $1 million, complemented by an equal investment of $1 million from Fred Hutch. In five years, the number of endowed chairs at Fred Hutch has grown from 3 to 31.