In 19th-century France, the young chemist challenged the theory of spontaneous generation and discovered an invisible world of airborne microbes. Credit...Antoine Maillard Supported by By Carl ...
France is hoping to become a safe haven for scientists abandoning the United States, after threats from the Trump ...
Early in the afternoon Mme Meister met a young physician in a hospital. “You mean Pasteur,” he said. “I’ll take you there.” Bacteriologist Louis Pasteur, who kept kennels of mad dogs in ...
Yasmine Belkaid, President of the Institut Pasteur, and Nicolas Dufourcq, CEO of Bpifrance, signed a cooperation agreement aimed at using their resources and skills to improve the transfer to industry ...
Turning groundbreaking research from the Institut Pasteur with the support of Argobio’s start-up studio, into novel treatments for cancer, inflammatory diseases and viral infections. The platform ...
Louis Pasteur was one of the first scientists to discover the role of microorganisms in disease and how sickness could be prevented by vaccines. At the time, it was widely believed that ...
While working with the French wine industry in 1848, Dr. Louis Pasteur studied tartaric acid, a blackish purple substance that grows on the back of wine barrels. By studying this byproduct of wine ...
But the virus’s incubation period also made rabies of interest to Pasteur—already a famous scientist in France—as a candidate for a new type of vaccine. “The time from the bite to the sickness was ...
At Sanofi Pasteur, we believe in a world in which no one suffers or dies from a vaccine-preventable disease. As the world’s leading manufacturer of influenza vaccines, we know influenza is still ...
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