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  1. Émile Duclaux (24 June 1840 – May 2, 1904) was a French microbiologist and chemist born in Aurillac, Cantal . He studied at the College of Aurillac, the Lycée Saint-Louis in Paris and at École Normale Supérieure. In 1862 he began work as an assistant in the laboratory of Louis Pasteur (1822–1895).

  2. Mar 29, 2019 · Émile Duclaux. Émile Duclaux is the first of the five musketeers to have joined Louis Pasteur (Fig. 2). After his aggregation of Sciences at École Nationale Supérieure, he joined his ...

    • Jean-Marc Cavaillon, Sandra Legout
    • 2019
  3. Émile Duclaux, né le 24 juin 1840 à Aurillac ( Cantal) et mort le 3 mai 1904 à Paris 1, est un physicien, biologiste et chimiste français. Il succéda à Pasteur en 1895 à la tête de l'institut du même nom .

  4. Nov 3, 2022 · In 1888, Émile Roux and Alexandre Yersin were the first to demonstrate that the bacteria causing diphtheria was releasing a deadly toxin. In 1923, Gaston Ramon treated that toxin with formalin and heat, resulting in the concept of “anatoxin” as a mean of vaccination.

    • Jean-Marc Cavaillon
    • Toxins (Basel). 2022 Nov; 14(11): 759.
    • 10.3390/toxins14110759
    • 2022/11
  5. IN the death of Émile Duclaux science has lost one of her most devoted and brilliant workers. His career has formed the principal link between the bacteriology of the present day, and what may...

  6. Duclaux, Émile (b Aurillac, Cantal, France, 24 June 1840; d. Paris, France, 2 May 1904) biochemistry. Duclaux belonged to that group of physicists and chemists, still limited in the second half of the nineteenth century, who through their work increased our knowledge of living matter.

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  8. In 1859, the pioneering French microbiologist Émile Duclaux began his academic career at the École Normale Supérieure in Paris. In 1862, he became an agrégé in physical sciences and took up a position as Pasteur 's laboratory assistant.