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  • Dr Andrei POPOV, dirigeant d’Ecrins Therapeutics<br />
<br />
Trained initially as a doctor, Andrei Popov graduated from the Sechenov Moscow Medical Academy in 1988. He then worked as doctoral and postdoctoral fellow at the Babraham Insitute in Cambridge, UK, and at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL), Heidelberg, Germany. He received his PhD in biology in 1997 for his work on the creation of transgenic mice carrying and expressing functional germ-line shaped human immunoglobulin loci. A European Molecular Biology Organization (EMBO) and Human Frontier Science Program (HFSP) fellow during his spell at EMBL, in 2003 Andrei Popov became a laureate of the Inserm program “Avenir”. This grant allowed him to establish an independent research group at Inserm in Grenoble, France, with a focus on the mechanisms of cell division and bioactive small molecules, both fields relevant to oncology. Andrei authored 25 publications in peer-reviewed scientific journals, obtained 10 research grants and is the named inventor on 2 patents. <br />
In 2010 Andrei left academia in order to create (with Dr Aurelie JUHEM and Pr François Berger) the startup Ecrins Therapeutics.
    ET-D5_033.jpg
  • Dr Andrei POPOV, dirigeant d’Ecrins Therapeutics<br />
<br />
Trained initially as a doctor, Andrei Popov graduated from the Sechenov Moscow Medical Academy in 1988. He then worked as doctoral and postdoctoral fellow at the Babraham Insitute in Cambridge, UK, and at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL), Heidelberg, Germany. He received his PhD in biology in 1997 for his work on the creation of transgenic mice carrying and expressing functional germ-line shaped human immunoglobulin loci. A European Molecular Biology Organization (EMBO) and Human Frontier Science Program (HFSP) fellow during his spell at EMBL, in 2003 Andrei Popov became a laureate of the Inserm program “Avenir”. This grant allowed him to establish an independent research group at Inserm in Grenoble, France, with a focus on the mechanisms of cell division and bioactive small molecules, both fields relevant to oncology. Andrei authored 25 publications in peer-reviewed scientific journals, obtained 10 research grants and is the named inventor on 2 patents. <br />
In 2010 Andrei left academia in order to create (with Dr Aurelie JUHEM and Pr François Berger) the startup Ecrins Therapeutics.
    ET-D5_034.jpg
  • Dr Delphine Lecerclé is preparing ET-D5<br />
<br />
Dr Delphine LECERCLE graduated from Paris-Sud University in 2007, with a PhD degree in organic chemistry. After a postdoctoral training at Paris Descartes University, she joined Ecrins Therapeutics in 2011 as responsible of the medicinal chemistry
    ET-D5_024.jpg
  • Dr Delphine Lecerclé is preparing ET-D5<br />
<br />
Dr Delphine LECERCLE graduated from Paris-Sud University in 2007, with a PhD degree in organic chemistry. After a postdoctoral training at Paris Descartes University, she joined Ecrins Therapeutics in 2011 as responsible of the medicinal chemistry
    ET-D5_025.jpg
  • Preparation of ET-D5.<br />
<br />
ET-D5 is an anti-cancer molecule that can kill cancer tumors without damaging nearby organs.<br />
ET-D5 is developed by the start-up Ecrins -Therapeutics, founded in 2010.<br />
Oral chemotherapy.<br />
Aurélie Juhem, scientist and research director at Ecrins Therapeutics, is working on this molecule cancer for seven long years in partnership with the Institut Curie.<br />
Many promising tests have already been carried out on mouses.<br />
To move to the next stage, clinical trials in humans, the young start-up must raise € 500,000.<br />
The Financement of this research  will be done through a platform of "crowdfunding".<br />
When this amount will be found, the first human trials could begin on patients of cancer center Léon Bérard in Lyon.
    ET-D5_027.jpg
  • ET-D5 is an anti-cancer molecule that can kill cancer tumors without damaging nearby organs.<br />
ET-D5 is developed by the start-up Ecrins -Therapeutics, founded in 2010.<br />
Oral chemotherapy.<br />
Aurélie Juhem, scientist and research director at Ecrins Therapeutics, is working on this molecule cancer for seven long years in partnership with the Institut Curie.<br />
Many promising tests have already been carried out on mouses.<br />
To move to the next stage, clinical trials in humans, the young start-up must raise € 500,000.<br />
The Financement of this research  will be done through a platform of "crowdfunding".<br />
When this amount will be found, the first human trials could begin on patients of cancer center Léon Bérard in Lyon.
    ET-D5_015.jpg
  • Dr Aurélie Juhem is observing cancer cells incubated with ET-D5 using fluorescence microscopy<br />
<br />
Dr Aurélie JUHEM met Dr Andrei Popov in 2005 to start her PhD training in his research team. They develop an innovative screening strategy to identify new anti-proliferative drugs targeting cell divison from a chemical library provided by the Institut Curie. They identified further new bioactive chemical entities including an ET-D5 structural analogue. Graduated in 2008 from Joseph Fourier University (Grenoble), she continued ET-D5 research program as a postdoctoral researcher with Dr Popov. This work was patented in 2010 and Ecrins therapeutics was founded to develop ET-D5 under preclinical studies.<br />
Since 2010, Dr Aurelie Juhem is the R&D Director of Ecrins Therapeutics.
    ET-D5_008.jpg
  • Protein sample prepared in Laemmli buffer.
    ET-D5_004.jpg
  • Dr Aurélie Juhem is working under laminar hood which provides a sterile environment for the cell culture experiments.<br />
<br />
Dr Aurélie JUHEM met Dr Andrei Popov in 2005 to start her PhD training in his research team. They develop an innovative screening strategy to identify new anti-proliferative drugs targeting cell divison from a chemical library provided by the Institut Curie. They identified further new bioactive chemical entities including an ET-D5 structural analogue. Graduated in 2008 from Joseph Fourier University (Grenoble), she continued ET-D5 research program as a postdoctoral researcher with Dr Popov. This work was patented in 2010 and Ecrins therapeutics was founded to develop ET-D5 under preclinical studies.<br />
Since 2010, Dr Aurelie Juhem is the R&D Director of Ecrins Therapeutics.
    ET-D5_001.jpg
  • Ecrins Therapeutics team.
    ET-D5_036.jpg
  • The sales manager of Ecrins Therapeutics, Dr Axel Defays.<br />
<br />
Dr Axel Defays: Axel Defays graduated from Aix-Marseille University in 2010, with a PhD degree in Immunology. After a few years of work outside the academic research field, he made a career change to sales management by entering a Master program in 2014. Looking for an opportunity to help a young biotechnology company in its development, he joined Ecrins Therapeutics as a sales manager in early 2015. He is now dedicated to bring Ecrins Therapeutics’ reputation of scientific excellence to the international stage.
    ET-D5_030.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile34.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile12.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile41.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile40.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile29.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile05.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile26.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile24.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile44.jpg
  • ET-D5 is an anti-cancer molecule that can kill cancer tumors without damaging nearby organs.<br />
ET-D5 is developed by the start-up Ecrins -Therapeutics, founded in 2010.<br />
Oral chemotherapy.<br />
Aurélie Juhem, scientist and research director at Ecrins Therapeutics, is working on this molecule cancer for seven long years in partnership with the Institut Curie.<br />
Many promising tests have already been carried out on mouses.<br />
To move to the next stage, clinical trials in humans, the young start-up must raise € 500,000.<br />
The Financement of this research  will be done through a platform of "crowdfunding".<br />
When this amount will be found, the first human trials could begin on patients of cancer center Léon Bérard in Lyon.
    ET-D5_007.jpg
  • Dr Aurélie Juhem and Dr Andrei Popov are analyzing fluorescence microscopy images.<br />
<br />
Dr Aurélie JUHEM met Dr Andrei Popov in 2005 to start her PhD training in his research team. They develop an innovative screening strategy to identify new anti-proliferative drugs targeting cell divison from a chemical library provided by the Institut Curie. They identified further new bioactive chemical entities including an ET-D5 structural analogue. Graduated in 2008 from Joseph Fourier University (Grenoble), she continued ET-D5 research program as a postdoctoral researcher with Dr Popov. This work was patented in 2010 and Ecrins therapeutics was founded to develop ET-D5 under preclinical studies.<br />
Since 2010, Dr Aurelie Juhem is the R&D Director of Ecrins Therapeutics.
    ET-D5_014.jpg
  • Dr Aurélie Juhem and Dr Andrei Popov are analyzing fluorescence microscopy images.<br />
<br />
Dr Aurélie JUHEM met Dr Andrei Popov in 2005 to start her PhD training in his research team. They develop an innovative screening strategy to identify new anti-proliferative drugs targeting cell divison from a chemical library provided by the Institut Curie. They identified further new bioactive chemical entities including an ET-D5 structural analogue. Graduated in 2008 from Joseph Fourier University (Grenoble), she continued ET-D5 research program as a postdoctoral researcher with Dr Popov. This work was patented in 2010 and Ecrins therapeutics was founded to develop ET-D5 under preclinical studies.<br />
Since 2010, Dr Aurelie Juhem is the R&D Director of Ecrins Therapeutics.
    ET-D5_013.jpg
  • Dr Aurélie Juhem and Dr Andrei Popov are analyzing fluorescence microscopy images.<br />
<br />
Dr Aurélie JUHEM met Dr Andrei Popov in 2005 to start her PhD training in his research team. They develop an innovative screening strategy to identify new anti-proliferative drugs targeting cell divison from a chemical library provided by the Institut Curie. They identified further new bioactive chemical entities including an ET-D5 structural analogue. Graduated in 2008 from Joseph Fourier University (Grenoble), she continued ET-D5 research program as a postdoctoral researcher with Dr Popov. This work was patented in 2010 and Ecrins therapeutics was founded to develop ET-D5 under preclinical studies.<br />
Since 2010, Dr Aurelie Juhem is the R&D Director of Ecrins Therapeutics.
    ET-D5_012.jpg
  • Dr Aurélie Juhem and Dr Andrei Popov are analyzing fluorescence microscopy images.<br />
<br />
Dr Aurélie JUHEM met Dr Andrei Popov in 2005 to start her PhD training in his research team. They develop an innovative screening strategy to identify new anti-proliferative drugs targeting cell divison from a chemical library provided by the Institut Curie. They identified further new bioactive chemical entities including an ET-D5 structural analogue. Graduated in 2008 from Joseph Fourier University (Grenoble), she continued ET-D5 research program as a postdoctoral researcher with Dr Popov. This work was patented in 2010 and Ecrins therapeutics was founded to develop ET-D5 under preclinical studies.<br />
Since 2010, Dr Aurelie Juhem is the R&D Director of Ecrins Therapeutics.
    ET-D5_011.jpg
  • Dr Aurélie Juhem and Dr Andrei Popov are analyzing fluorescence microscopy images.<br />
<br />
Dr Aurélie JUHEM met Dr Andrei Popov in 2005 to start her PhD training in his research team. They develop an innovative screening strategy to identify new anti-proliferative drugs targeting cell divison from a chemical library provided by the Institut Curie. They identified further new bioactive chemical entities including an ET-D5 structural analogue. Graduated in 2008 from Joseph Fourier University (Grenoble), she continued ET-D5 research program as a postdoctoral researcher with Dr Popov. This work was patented in 2010 and Ecrins therapeutics was founded to develop ET-D5 under preclinical studies.<br />
Since 2010, Dr Aurelie Juhem is the R&D Director of Ecrins Therapeutics.
    ET-D5_010.jpg
  • Dr Aurélie Juhem is observing cancer cells incubated with ET-D5 using fluorescence microscopy<br />
<br />
Dr Aurélie JUHEM met Dr Andrei Popov in 2005 to start her PhD training in his research team. They develop an innovative screening strategy to identify new anti-proliferative drugs targeting cell divison from a chemical library provided by the Institut Curie. They identified further new bioactive chemical entities including an ET-D5 structural analogue. Graduated in 2008 from Joseph Fourier University (Grenoble), she continued ET-D5 research program as a postdoctoral researcher with Dr Popov. This work was patented in 2010 and Ecrins therapeutics was founded to develop ET-D5 under preclinical studies.<br />
Since 2010, Dr Aurelie Juhem is the R&D Director of Ecrins Therapeutics.
    ET-D5_009.jpg
  • Dr Aurélie Juhem is preparing protein samples for bioassays.<br />
<br />
Dr Aurélie JUHEM met Dr Andrei Popov in 2005 to start her PhD training in his research team. They develop an innovative screening strategy to identify new anti-proliferative drugs targeting cell divison from a chemical library provided by the Institut Curie. They identified further new bioactive chemical entities including an ET-D5 structural analogue. Graduated in 2008 from Joseph Fourier University (Grenoble), she continued ET-D5 research program as a postdoctoral researcher with Dr Popov. This work was patented in 2010 and Ecrins therapeutics was founded to develop ET-D5 under preclinical studies.<br />
Since 2010, Dr Aurelie Juhem is the R&D Director of Ecrins Therapeutics.
    ET-D5_005.jpg
  • Dr Aurélie Juhem is puting human cancer cells in a CO2 incubator used to maintain optimal conditions for cell growth.<br />
<br />
Dr Aurélie JUHEM met Dr Andrei Popov in 2005 to start her PhD training in his research team. They develop an innovative screening strategy to identify new anti-proliferative drugs targeting cell divison from a chemical library provided by the Institut Curie. They identified further new bioactive chemical entities including an ET-D5 structural analogue. Graduated in 2008 from Joseph Fourier University (Grenoble), she continued ET-D5 research program as a postdoctoral researcher with Dr Popov. This work was patented in 2010 and Ecrins therapeutics was founded to develop ET-D5 under preclinical studies.<br />
Since 2010, Dr Aurelie Juhem is the R&D Director of Ecrins Therapeutics.
    ET-D5_003.jpg
  • Dr Aurélie Juhem is working under laminar hood which provides a sterile environment for the cell culture experiments.<br />
<br />
Dr Aurélie JUHEM met Dr Andrei Popov in 2005 to start her PhD training in his research team. They develop an innovative screening strategy to identify new anti-proliferative drugs targeting cell divison from a chemical library provided by the Institut Curie. They identified further new bioactive chemical entities including an ET-D5 structural analogue. Graduated in 2008 from Joseph Fourier University (Grenoble), she continued ET-D5 research program as a postdoctoral researcher with Dr Popov. This work was patented in 2010 and Ecrins therapeutics was founded to develop ET-D5 under preclinical studies.<br />
Since 2010, Dr Aurelie Juhem is the R&D Director of Ecrins Therapeutics.
    ET-D5_002.jpg
  • Ecrins Therapeutics team.
    ET-D5_035.jpg
  • The sales manager of Ecrins Therapeutics, Dr Axel Defays.<br />
<br />
Dr Axel Defays: Axel Defays graduated from Aix-Marseille University in 2010, with a PhD degree in Immunology. After a few years of work outside the academic research field, he made a career change to sales management by entering a Master program in 2014. Looking for an opportunity to help a young biotechnology company in its development, he joined Ecrins Therapeutics as a sales manager in early 2015. He is now dedicated to bring Ecrins Therapeutics’ reputation of scientific excellence to the international stage.
    ET-D5_032.jpg
  • The sales manager of Ecrins Therapeutics, Dr Axel Defays.<br />
<br />
Dr Axel Defays: Axel Defays graduated from Aix-Marseille University in 2010, with a PhD degree in Immunology. After a few years of work outside the academic research field, he made a career change to sales management by entering a Master program in 2014. Looking for an opportunity to help a young biotechnology company in its development, he joined Ecrins Therapeutics as a sales manager in early 2015. He is now dedicated to bring Ecrins Therapeutics’ reputation of scientific excellence to the international stage.
    ET-D5_031.jpg
  • Dr Delphine Lecerclé is observing ET-D5.<br />
Dr Delphine LECERCLE graduated from Paris-Sud University in 2007, with a PhD degree in organic chemistry. After a postdoctoral training at Paris Descartes University, she joined Ecrins Therapeutics in 2011 as responsible of the medicinal chemistry
    ET-D5_019.jpg
  • Dr Delphine Lecerclé is observing ET-D5.<br />
Dr Delphine LECERCLE graduated from Paris-Sud University in 2007, with a PhD degree in organic chemistry. After a postdoctoral training at Paris Descartes University, she joined Ecrins Therapeutics in 2011 as responsible of the medicinal chemistry
    ET-D5_020.jpg
  • Dr Delphine Lecerclé is observing ET-D5.<br />
Dr Delphine LECERCLE graduated from Paris-Sud University in 2007, with a PhD degree in organic chemistry. After a postdoctoral training at Paris Descartes University, she joined Ecrins Therapeutics in 2011 as responsible of the medicinal chemistry
    ET-D5_018.jpg
  • The compound ET-D5<br />
<br />
ET-D5 is an anti-cancer molecule that can kill cancer tumors without damaging nearby organs.<br />
ET-D5 is developed by the start-up Ecrins -Therapeutics, founded in 2010.<br />
Oral chemotherapy.<br />
Aurélie Juhem, scientist and research director at Ecrins Therapeutics, is working on this molecule cancer for seven long years in partnership with the Institut Curie.<br />
Many promising tests have already been carried out on mouses.<br />
To move to the next stage, clinical trials in humans, the young start-up must raise € 500,000.<br />
The Financement of this research  will be done through a platform of "crowdfunding".<br />
When this amount will be found, the first human trials could begin on patients of cancer center Léon Bérard in Lyon.
    ET-D5_029.jpg
  • Preparation of ET-D5.<br />
<br />
ET-D5 is an anti-cancer molecule that can kill cancer tumors without damaging nearby organs.<br />
ET-D5 is developed by the start-up Ecrins -Therapeutics, founded in 2010.<br />
Oral chemotherapy.<br />
Aurélie Juhem, scientist and research director at Ecrins Therapeutics, is working on this molecule cancer for seven long years in partnership with the Institut Curie.<br />
Many promising tests have already been carried out on mouses.<br />
To move to the next stage, clinical trials in humans, the young start-up must raise € 500,000.<br />
The Financement of this research  will be done through a platform of "crowdfunding".<br />
When this amount will be found, the first human trials could begin on patients of cancer center Léon Bérard in Lyon.
    ET-D5_026.jpg
  • The compound ET-D5.
    ET-D5_017.jpg
  • Dr Delphine Lecerclé is preparing ET-D5<br />
<br />
Dr Delphine LECERCLE graduated from Paris-Sud University in 2007, with a PhD degree in organic chemistry. After a postdoctoral training at Paris Descartes University, she joined Ecrins Therapeutics in 2011 as responsible of the medicinal chemistry
    ET-D5_023.jpg
  • Dr Delphine Lecerclé is preparing ET-D5<br />
<br />
Dr Delphine LECERCLE graduated from Paris-Sud University in 2007, with a PhD degree in organic chemistry. After a postdoctoral training at Paris Descartes University, she joined Ecrins Therapeutics in 2011 as responsible of the medicinal chemistry
    ET-D5_022.jpg
  • Dr Delphine Lecerclé is observing ET-D5.<br />
Dr Delphine LECERCLE graduated from Paris-Sud University in 2007, with a PhD degree in organic chemistry. After a postdoctoral training at Paris Descartes University, she joined Ecrins Therapeutics in 2011 as responsible of the medicinal chemistry
    ET-D5_021.jpg
  • Preparation of ET-D5.<br />
<br />
ET-D5 is an anti-cancer molecule that can kill cancer tumors without damaging nearby organs.<br />
ET-D5 is developed by the start-up Ecrins -Therapeutics, founded in 2010.<br />
Oral chemotherapy.<br />
Aurélie Juhem, scientist and research director at Ecrins Therapeutics, is working on this molecule cancer for seven long years in partnership with the Institut Curie.<br />
Many promising tests have already been carried out on mouses.<br />
To move to the next stage, clinical trials in humans, the young start-up must raise € 500,000.<br />
The Financement of this research  will be done through a platform of "crowdfunding".<br />
When this amount will be found, the first human trials could begin on patients of cancer center Léon Bérard in Lyon.
    ET-D5_028.jpg
  • ET-D5 is an anti-cancer molecule that can kill cancer tumors without damaging nearby organs.<br />
ET-D5 is developed by the start-up Ecrins -Therapeutics, founded in 2010.<br />
Oral chemotherapy.<br />
Aurélie Juhem, scientist and research director at Ecrins Therapeutics, is working on this molecule cancer for seven long years in partnership with the Institut Curie.<br />
Many promising tests have already been carried out on mouses.<br />
To move to the next stage, clinical trials in humans, the young start-up must raise € 500,000.<br />
The Financement of this research  will be done through a platform of "crowdfunding".<br />
When this amount will be found, the first human trials could begin on patients of cancer center Léon Bérard in Lyon.
    ET-D5_016.jpg
  • Dr Aurélie Juhem is preparing protein samples for bioassays.<br />
<br />
Dr Aurélie JUHEM met Dr Andrei Popov in 2005 to start her PhD training in his research team. They develop an innovative screening strategy to identify new anti-proliferative drugs targeting cell divison from a chemical library provided by the Institut Curie. They identified further new bioactive chemical entities including an ET-D5 structural analogue. Graduated in 2008 from Joseph Fourier University (Grenoble), she continued ET-D5 research program as a postdoctoral researcher with Dr Popov. This work was patented in 2010 and Ecrins therapeutics was founded to develop ET-D5 under preclinical studies.<br />
Since 2010, Dr Aurelie Juhem is the R&D Director of Ecrins Therapeutics.
    ET-D5_006.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile01.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile06.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile43.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile00.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile16.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile35.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile14.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile13.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile11.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile10.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile33.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile31.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile09.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile30.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile39.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile38.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile28.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile27.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile25.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile23.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile22.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile20.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile19.jpg
  • To help in the research on reptiles and participate in the protection of these animals in the wild, this farm is equipped with a laboratory and incubator room.<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile18.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile04.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile03.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile08.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile07.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile37.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile36.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile42.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile02.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile17.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile32.jpg
  • Created by Luc Fougeiroles in 1994, this farm, heated by heat recovery plant  "Eurodif" receive more than 350 crocodiles (9 different species).<br />
Since 1998, a research laboratory has been added to the Crocodile Farm, and ten giant tortoises from the Seychelles, a protected species, joined the crocodiles. They are 30 years old and weight from 80 to 150 kilos each.<br />
Even if in the wild, turtles are a delightful meal for the crocs, here that's not a problem at all....<br />
More info in the blog
    Atomic crocodile21.jpg
  • 20 years ago," the Crocodile Farm of Pierrelatte" was opened by Eric and Luc Fougeirol. This site has seen several million visitors, making it the most visited tourist site in the Drôme and the second in Rhône-Alpes.
In a landscaped greenhouse of 8000 m ² more than 450 animals evolve freely: crocodiles, giant tortoises of Seychelles and Galápagos (weighing from 80 to 150 kg) and tropical birds. 

The goal of Samuel Martin, the director, is to reach, in five years, the 4000 000 visitors by proposing more animals on a wider range
With the 29 permanent employees, the farm registered last year 285 000 entrances and a four million euro turnover.
A new greenhouse of 1500 m ² has just been built to be able to welcome, next spring, snakes, lizards, fishes, birds and other aquatic tortoises.

But the Crocodile Farm is more than a zoo: it is also a scientific research center on the reptiles, that collaborates with researchers of the whole world.
To meet the demands of biological studies of French and foreign researchers, and many prestigious scientific institutions such as le College de France, the CNRS, and the National Museum of Natural History, the Crocodile Farm has established in 1998  a laboratory and a hatchery, allowing the establishment of numerous partnerships leading to the publication of articles in international scientific journals.
Among them, Béatrice Thivichon-Prince, odontolgue of the University of Lyon examined the faculties of regeneration of the teeth of crocodiles. Indeed their teeth fall and grow again more of fifty times during their life. His department looks for applications has the human scale.

    Crocsfarm_196.jpg
  • 20 years ago," the Crocodile Farm of Pierrelatte" was opened by Eric and Luc Fougeirol. This site has seen several million visitors, making it the most visited tourist site in the Drôme and the second in Rhône-Alpes.
In a landscaped greenhouse of 8000 m ² more than 450 animals evolve freely: crocodiles, giant tortoises of Seychelles and Galápagos (weighing from 80 to 150 kg) and tropical birds. 

The goal of Samuel Martin, the director, is to reach, in five years, the 4000 000 visitors by proposing more animals on a wider range
With the 29 permanent employees, the farm registered last year 285 000 entrances and a four million euro turnover.
A new greenhouse of 1500 m ² has just been built to be able to welcome, next spring, snakes, lizards, fishes, birds and other aquatic tortoises.

But the Crocodile Farm is more than a zoo: it is also a scientific research center on the reptiles, that collaborates with researchers of the whole world.
To meet the demands of biological studies of French and foreign researchers, and many prestigious scientific institutions such as le College de France, the CNRS, and the National Museum of Natural History, the Crocodile Farm has established in 1998  a laboratory and a hatchery, allowing the establishment of numerous partnerships leading to the publication of articles in international scientific journals.
Among them, Béatrice Thivichon-Prince, odontolgue of the University of Lyon examined the faculties of regeneration of the teeth of crocodiles. Indeed their teeth fall and grow again more of fifty times during their life. His department looks for applications has the human scale.

    Crocsfarm_194.jpg
  • 20 years ago," the Crocodile Farm of Pierrelatte" was opened by Eric and Luc Fougeirol. This site has seen several million visitors, making it the most visited tourist site in the Drôme and the second in Rhône-Alpes.
In a landscaped greenhouse of 8000 m ² more than 450 animals evolve freely: crocodiles, giant tortoises of Seychelles and Galápagos (weighing from 80 to 150 kg) and tropical birds. 

The goal of Samuel Martin, the director, is to reach, in five years, the 4000 000 visitors by proposing more animals on a wider range
With the 29 permanent employees, the farm registered last year 285 000 entrances and a four million euro turnover.
A new greenhouse of 1500 m ² has just been built to be able to welcome, next spring, snakes, lizards, fishes, birds and other aquatic tortoises.

But the Crocodile Farm is more than a zoo: it is also a scientific research center on the reptiles, that collaborates with researchers of the whole world.
To meet the demands of biological studies of French and foreign researchers, and many prestigious scientific institutions such as le College de France, the CNRS, and the National Museum of Natural History, the Crocodile Farm has established in 1998  a laboratory and a hatchery, allowing the establishment of numerous partnerships leading to the publication of articles in international scientific journals.
Among them, Béatrice Thivichon-Prince, odontolgue of the University of Lyon examined the faculties of regeneration of the teeth of crocodiles. Indeed their teeth fall and grow again more of fifty times during their life. His department looks for applications has the human scale.

    Crocsfarm_192.jpg
  • 20 years ago," the Crocodile Farm of Pierrelatte" was opened by Eric and Luc Fougeirol. This site has seen several million visitors, making it the most visited tourist site in the Drôme and the second in Rhône-Alpes.
In a landscaped greenhouse of 8000 m ² more than 450 animals evolve freely: crocodiles, giant tortoises of Seychelles and Galápagos (weighing from 80 to 150 kg) and tropical birds. 

The goal of Samuel Martin, the director, is to reach, in five years, the 4000 000 visitors by proposing more animals on a wider range
With the 29 permanent employees, the farm registered last year 285 000 entrances and a four million euro turnover.
A new greenhouse of 1500 m ² has just been built to be able to welcome, next spring, snakes, lizards, fishes, birds and other aquatic tortoises.

But the Crocodile Farm is more than a zoo: it is also a scientific research center on the reptiles, that collaborates with researchers of the whole world.
To meet the demands of biological studies of French and foreign researchers, and many prestigious scientific institutions such as le College de France, the CNRS, and the National Museum of Natural History, the Crocodile Farm has established in 1998  a laboratory and a hatchery, allowing the establishment of numerous partnerships leading to the publication of articles in international scientific journals.
Among them, Béatrice Thivichon-Prince, odontolgue of the University of Lyon examined the faculties of regeneration of the teeth of crocodiles. Indeed their teeth fall and grow again more of fifty times during their life. His department looks for applications has the human scale.

    Crocsfarm_191.jpg
  • 20 years ago," the Crocodile Farm of Pierrelatte" was opened by Eric and Luc Fougeirol. This site has seen several million visitors, making it the most visited tourist site in the Drôme and the second in Rhône-Alpes.
In a landscaped greenhouse of 8000 m ² more than 450 animals evolve freely: crocodiles, giant tortoises of Seychelles and Galápagos (weighing from 80 to 150 kg) and tropical birds. 

The goal of Samuel Martin, the director, is to reach, in five years, the 4000 000 visitors by proposing more animals on a wider range
With the 29 permanent employees, the farm registered last year 285 000 entrances and a four million euro turnover.
A new greenhouse of 1500 m ² has just been built to be able to welcome, next spring, snakes, lizards, fishes, birds and other aquatic tortoises.

But the Crocodile Farm is more than a zoo: it is also a scientific research center on the reptiles, that collaborates with researchers of the whole world.
To meet the demands of biological studies of French and foreign researchers, and many prestigious scientific institutions such as le College de France, the CNRS, and the National Museum of Natural History, the Crocodile Farm has established in 1998  a laboratory and a hatchery, allowing the establishment of numerous partnerships leading to the publication of articles in international scientific journals.
Among them, Béatrice Thivichon-Prince, odontolgue of the University of Lyon examined the faculties of regeneration of the teeth of crocodiles. Indeed their teeth fall and grow again more of fifty times during their life. His department looks for applications has the human scale.

    Crocsfarm_187.jpg
  • 20 years ago," the Crocodile Farm of Pierrelatte" was opened by Eric and Luc Fougeirol. This site has seen several million visitors, making it the most visited tourist site in the Drôme and the second in Rhône-Alpes.
In a landscaped greenhouse of 8000 m ² more than 450 animals evolve freely: crocodiles, giant tortoises of Seychelles and Galápagos (weighing from 80 to 150 kg) and tropical birds. 

The goal of Samuel Martin, the director, is to reach, in five years, the 4000 000 visitors by proposing more animals on a wider range
With the 29 permanent employees, the farm registered last year 285 000 entrances and a four million euro turnover.
A new greenhouse of 1500 m ² has just been built to be able to welcome, next spring, snakes, lizards, fishes, birds and other aquatic tortoises.

But the Crocodile Farm is more than a zoo: it is also a scientific research center on the reptiles, that collaborates with researchers of the whole world.
To meet the demands of biological studies of French and foreign researchers, and many prestigious scientific institutions such as le College de France, the CNRS, and the National Museum of Natural History, the Crocodile Farm has established in 1998  a laboratory and a hatchery, allowing the establishment of numerous partnerships leading to the publication of articles in international scientific journals.
Among them, Béatrice Thivichon-Prince, odontolgue of the University of Lyon examined the faculties of regeneration of the teeth of crocodiles. Indeed their teeth fall and grow again more of fifty times during their life. His department looks for applications has the human scale.

    Crocsfarm_186.jpg
  • 20 years ago," the Crocodile Farm of Pierrelatte" was opened by Eric and Luc Fougeirol. This site has seen several million visitors, making it the most visited tourist site in the Drôme and the second in Rhône-Alpes.
In a landscaped greenhouse of 8000 m ² more than 450 animals evolve freely: crocodiles, giant tortoises of Seychelles and Galápagos (weighing from 80 to 150 kg) and tropical birds. 

The goal of Samuel Martin, the director, is to reach, in five years, the 4000 000 visitors by proposing more animals on a wider range
With the 29 permanent employees, the farm registered last year 285 000 entrances and a four million euro turnover.
A new greenhouse of 1500 m ² has just been built to be able to welcome, next spring, snakes, lizards, fishes, birds and other aquatic tortoises.

But the Crocodile Farm is more than a zoo: it is also a scientific research center on the reptiles, that collaborates with researchers of the whole world.
To meet the demands of biological studies of French and foreign researchers, and many prestigious scientific institutions such as le College de France, the CNRS, and the National Museum of Natural History, the Crocodile Farm has established in 1998  a laboratory and a hatchery, allowing the establishment of numerous partnerships leading to the publication of articles in international scientific journals.
Among them, Béatrice Thivichon-Prince, odontolgue of the University of Lyon examined the faculties of regeneration of the teeth of crocodiles. Indeed their teeth fall and grow again more of fifty times during their life. His department looks for applications has the human scale.

    Crocsfarm_185.jpg
  • 20 years ago," the Crocodile Farm of Pierrelatte" was opened by Eric and Luc Fougeirol. This site has seen several million visitors, making it the most visited tourist site in the Drôme and the second in Rhône-Alpes.
In a landscaped greenhouse of 8000 m ² more than 450 animals evolve freely: crocodiles, giant tortoises of Seychelles and Galápagos (weighing from 80 to 150 kg) and tropical birds. 

The goal of Samuel Martin, the director, is to reach, in five years, the 4000 000 visitors by proposing more animals on a wider range
With the 29 permanent employees, the farm registered last year 285 000 entrances and a four million euro turnover.
A new greenhouse of 1500 m ² has just been built to be able to welcome, next spring, snakes, lizards, fishes, birds and other aquatic tortoises.

But the Crocodile Farm is more than a zoo: it is also a scientific research center on the reptiles, that collaborates with researchers of the whole world.
To meet the demands of biological studies of French and foreign researchers, and many prestigious scientific institutions such as le College de France, the CNRS, and the National Museum of Natural History, the Crocodile Farm has established in 1998  a laboratory and a hatchery, allowing the establishment of numerous partnerships leading to the publication of articles in international scientific journals.
Among them, Béatrice Thivichon-Prince, odontolgue of the University of Lyon examined the faculties of regeneration of the teeth of crocodiles. Indeed their teeth fall and grow again more of fifty times during their life. His department looks for applications has the human scale.

    Crocsfarm_180.jpg
  • 20 years ago," the Crocodile Farm of Pierrelatte" was opened by Eric and Luc Fougeirol. This site has seen several million visitors, making it the most visited tourist site in the Drôme and the second in Rhône-Alpes.
In a landscaped greenhouse of 8000 m ² more than 450 animals evolve freely: crocodiles, giant tortoises of Seychelles and Galápagos (weighing from 80 to 150 kg) and tropical birds. 

The goal of Samuel Martin, the director, is to reach, in five years, the 4000 000 visitors by proposing more animals on a wider range
With the 29 permanent employees, the farm registered last year 285 000 entrances and a four million euro turnover.
A new greenhouse of 1500 m ² has just been built to be able to welcome, next spring, snakes, lizards, fishes, birds and other aquatic tortoises.

But the Crocodile Farm is more than a zoo: it is also a scientific research center on the reptiles, that collaborates with researchers of the whole world.
To meet the demands of biological studies of French and foreign researchers, and many prestigious scientific institutions such as le College de France, the CNRS, and the National Museum of Natural History, the Crocodile Farm has established in 1998  a laboratory and a hatchery, allowing the establishment of numerous partnerships leading to the publication of articles in international scientific journals.
Among them, Béatrice Thivichon-Prince, odontolgue of the University of Lyon examined the faculties of regeneration of the teeth of crocodiles. Indeed their teeth fall and grow again more of fifty times during their life. His department looks for applications has the human scale.

    Crocsfarm_179.jpg
  • 20 years ago," the Crocodile Farm of Pierrelatte" was opened by Eric and Luc Fougeirol. This site has seen several million visitors, making it the most visited tourist site in the Drôme and the second in Rhône-Alpes.
In a landscaped greenhouse of 8000 m ² more than 450 animals evolve freely: crocodiles, giant tortoises of Seychelles and Galápagos (weighing from 80 to 150 kg) and tropical birds. 

The goal of Samuel Martin, the director, is to reach, in five years, the 4000 000 visitors by proposing more animals on a wider range
With the 29 permanent employees, the farm registered last year 285 000 entrances and a four million euro turnover.
A new greenhouse of 1500 m ² has just been built to be able to welcome, next spring, snakes, lizards, fishes, birds and other aquatic tortoises.

But the Crocodile Farm is more than a zoo: it is also a scientific research center on the reptiles, that collaborates with researchers of the whole world.
To meet the demands of biological studies of French and foreign researchers, and many prestigious scientific institutions such as le College de France, the CNRS, and the National Museum of Natural History, the Crocodile Farm has established in 1998  a laboratory and a hatchery, allowing the establishment of numerous partnerships leading to the publication of articles in international scientific journals.
Among them, Béatrice Thivichon-Prince, odontolgue of the University of Lyon examined the faculties of regeneration of the teeth of crocodiles. Indeed their teeth fall and grow again more of fifty times during their life. His department looks for applications has the human scale.

    Crocsfarm_178.jpg
  • 20 years ago," the Crocodile Farm of Pierrelatte" was opened by Eric and Luc Fougeirol. This site has seen several million visitors, making it the most visited tourist site in the Drôme and the second in Rhône-Alpes.
In a landscaped greenhouse of 8000 m ² more than 450 animals evolve freely: crocodiles, giant tortoises of Seychelles and Galápagos (weighing from 80 to 150 kg) and tropical birds. 

The goal of Samuel Martin, the director, is to reach, in five years, the 4000 000 visitors by proposing more animals on a wider range
With the 29 permanent employees, the farm registered last year 285 000 entrances and a four million euro turnover.
A new greenhouse of 1500 m ² has just been built to be able to welcome, next spring, snakes, lizards, fishes, birds and other aquatic tortoises.

But the Crocodile Farm is more than a zoo: it is also a scientific research center on the reptiles, that collaborates with researchers of the whole world.
To meet the demands of biological studies of French and foreign researchers, and many prestigious scientific institutions such as le College de France, the CNRS, and the National Museum of Natural History, the Crocodile Farm has established in 1998  a laboratory and a hatchery, allowing the establishment of numerous partnerships leading to the publication of articles in international scientific journals.
Among them, Béatrice Thivichon-Prince, odontolgue of the University of Lyon examined the faculties of regeneration of the teeth of crocodiles. Indeed their teeth fall and grow again more of fifty times during their life. His department looks for applications has the human scale.

    Crocs_Birth_024.jpg
  • 20 years ago," the Crocodile Farm of Pierrelatte" was opened by Eric and Luc Fougeirol. This site has seen several million visitors, making it the most visited tourist site in the Drôme and the second in Rhône-Alpes.
In a landscaped greenhouse of 8000 m ² more than 450 animals evolve freely: crocodiles, giant tortoises of Seychelles and Galápagos (weighing from 80 to 150 kg) and tropical birds. 

The goal of Samuel Martin, the director, is to reach, in five years, the 4000 000 visitors by proposing more animals on a wider range
With the 29 permanent employees, the farm registered last year 285 000 entrances and a four million euro turnover.
A new greenhouse of 1500 m ² has just been built to be able to welcome, next spring, snakes, lizards, fishes, birds and other aquatic tortoises.

But the Crocodile Farm is more than a zoo: it is also a scientific research center on the reptiles, that collaborates with researchers of the whole world.
To meet the demands of biological studies of French and foreign researchers, and many prestigious scientific institutions such as le College de France, the CNRS, and the National Museum of Natural History, the Crocodile Farm has established in 1998  a laboratory and a hatchery, allowing the establishment of numerous partnerships leading to the publication of articles in international scientific journals.
Among them, Béatrice Thivichon-Prince, odontolgue of the University of Lyon examined the faculties of regeneration of the teeth of crocodiles. Indeed their teeth fall and grow again more of fifty times during their life. His department looks for applications has the human scale.

    Crocs_Birth_023b.jpg
  • 20 years ago," the Crocodile Farm of Pierrelatte" was opened by Eric and Luc Fougeirol. This site has seen several million visitors, making it the most visited tourist site in the Drôme and the second in Rhône-Alpes.
In a landscaped greenhouse of 8000 m ² more than 450 animals evolve freely: crocodiles, giant tortoises of Seychelles and Galápagos (weighing from 80 to 150 kg) and tropical birds. 

The goal of Samuel Martin, the director, is to reach, in five years, the 4000 000 visitors by proposing more animals on a wider range
With the 29 permanent employees, the farm registered last year 285 000 entrances and a four million euro turnover.
A new greenhouse of 1500 m ² has just been built to be able to welcome, next spring, snakes, lizards, fishes, birds and other aquatic tortoises.

But the Crocodile Farm is more than a zoo: it is also a scientific research center on the reptiles, that collaborates with researchers of the whole world.
To meet the demands of biological studies of French and foreign researchers, and many prestigious scientific institutions such as le College de France, the CNRS, and the National Museum of Natural History, the Crocodile Farm has established in 1998  a laboratory and a hatchery, allowing the establishment of numerous partnerships leading to the publication of articles in international scientific journals.
Among them, Béatrice Thivichon-Prince, odontolgue of the University of Lyon examined the faculties of regeneration of the teeth of crocodiles. Indeed their teeth fall and grow again more of fifty times during their life. His department looks for applications has the human scale.

    Crocs_Birth_023.jpg
  • 20 years ago," the Crocodile Farm of Pierrelatte" was opened by Eric and Luc Fougeirol. This site has seen several million visitors, making it the most visited tourist site in the Drôme and the second in Rhône-Alpes.
In a landscaped greenhouse of 8000 m ² more than 450 animals evolve freely: crocodiles, giant tortoises of Seychelles and Galápagos (weighing from 80 to 150 kg) and tropical birds. 

The goal of Samuel Martin, the director, is to reach, in five years, the 4000 000 visitors by proposing more animals on a wider range
With the 29 permanent employees, the farm registered last year 285 000 entrances and a four million euro turnover.
A new greenhouse of 1500 m ² has just been built to be able to welcome, next spring, snakes, lizards, fishes, birds and other aquatic tortoises.

But the Crocodile Farm is more than a zoo: it is also a scientific research center on the reptiles, that collaborates with researchers of the whole world.
To meet the demands of biological studies of French and foreign researchers, and many prestigious scientific institutions such as le College de France, the CNRS, and the National Museum of Natural History, the Crocodile Farm has established in 1998  a laboratory and a hatchery, allowing the establishment of numerous partnerships leading to the publication of articles in international scientific journals.
Among them, Béatrice Thivichon-Prince, odontolgue of the University of Lyon examined the faculties of regeneration of the teeth of crocodiles. Indeed their teeth fall and grow again more of fifty times during their life. His department looks for applications has the human scale.

    Crocs_Birth_021.jpg
  • 20 years ago," the Crocodile Farm of Pierrelatte" was opened by Eric and Luc Fougeirol. This site has seen several million visitors, making it the most visited tourist site in the Drôme and the second in Rhône-Alpes.
In a landscaped greenhouse of 8000 m ² more than 450 animals evolve freely: crocodiles, giant tortoises of Seychelles and Galápagos (weighing from 80 to 150 kg) and tropical birds. 

The goal of Samuel Martin, the director, is to reach, in five years, the 4000 000 visitors by proposing more animals on a wider range
With the 29 permanent employees, the farm registered last year 285 000 entrances and a four million euro turnover.
A new greenhouse of 1500 m ² has just been built to be able to welcome, next spring, snakes, lizards, fishes, birds and other aquatic tortoises.

But the Crocodile Farm is more than a zoo: it is also a scientific research center on the reptiles, that collaborates with researchers of the whole world.
To meet the demands of biological studies of French and foreign researchers, and many prestigious scientific institutions such as le College de France, the CNRS, and the National Museum of Natural History, the Crocodile Farm has established in 1998  a laboratory and a hatchery, allowing the establishment of numerous partnerships leading to the publication of articles in international scientific journals.
Among them, Béatrice Thivichon-Prince, odontolgue of the University of Lyon examined the faculties of regeneration of the teeth of crocodiles. Indeed their teeth fall and grow again more of fifty times during their life. His department looks for applications has the human scale.

    Crocs_Birth_018.jpg
  • 20 years ago," the Crocodile Farm of Pierrelatte" was opened by Eric and Luc Fougeirol. This site has seen several million visitors, making it the most visited tourist site in the Drôme and the second in Rhône-Alpes.
In a landscaped greenhouse of 8000 m ² more than 450 animals evolve freely: crocodiles, giant tortoises of Seychelles and Galápagos (weighing from 80 to 150 kg) and tropical birds. 

The goal of Samuel Martin, the director, is to reach, in five years, the 4000 000 visitors by proposing more animals on a wider range
With the 29 permanent employees, the farm registered last year 285 000 entrances and a four million euro turnover.
A new greenhouse of 1500 m ² has just been built to be able to welcome, next spring, snakes, lizards, fishes, birds and other aquatic tortoises.

But the Crocodile Farm is more than a zoo: it is also a scientific research center on the reptiles, that collaborates with researchers of the whole world.
To meet the demands of biological studies of French and foreign researchers, and many prestigious scientific institutions such as le College de France, the CNRS, and the National Museum of Natural History, the Crocodile Farm has established in 1998  a laboratory and a hatchery, allowing the establishment of numerous partnerships leading to the publication of articles in international scientific journals.
Among them, Béatrice Thivichon-Prince, odontolgue of the University of Lyon examined the faculties of regeneration of the teeth of crocodiles. Indeed their teeth fall and grow again more of fifty times during their life. His department looks for applications has the human scale.

    Crocs_Birth_016.jpg
  • 20 years ago," the Crocodile Farm of Pierrelatte" was opened by Eric and Luc Fougeirol. This site has seen several million visitors, making it the most visited tourist site in the Drôme and the second in Rhône-Alpes.
In a landscaped greenhouse of 8000 m ² more than 450 animals evolve freely: crocodiles, giant tortoises of Seychelles and Galápagos (weighing from 80 to 150 kg) and tropical birds. 

The goal of Samuel Martin, the director, is to reach, in five years, the 4000 000 visitors by proposing more animals on a wider range
With the 29 permanent employees, the farm registered last year 285 000 entrances and a four million euro turnover.
A new greenhouse of 1500 m ² has just been built to be able to welcome, next spring, snakes, lizards, fishes, birds and other aquatic tortoises.

But the Crocodile Farm is more than a zoo: it is also a scientific research center on the reptiles, that collaborates with researchers of the whole world.
To meet the demands of biological studies of French and foreign researchers, and many prestigious scientific institutions such as le College de France, the CNRS, and the National Museum of Natural History, the Crocodile Farm has established in 1998  a laboratory and a hatchery, allowing the establishment of numerous partnerships leading to the publication of articles in international scientific journals.
Among them, Béatrice Thivichon-Prince, odontolgue of the University of Lyon examined the faculties of regeneration of the teeth of crocodiles. Indeed their teeth fall and grow again more of fifty times during their life. His department looks for applications has the human scale.

    Crocs_Birth_015.jpg
  • 20 years ago," the Crocodile Farm of Pierrelatte" was opened by Eric and Luc Fougeirol. This site has seen several million visitors, making it the most visited tourist site in the Drôme and the second in Rhône-Alpes.
In a landscaped greenhouse of 8000 m ² more than 450 animals evolve freely: crocodiles, giant tortoises of Seychelles and Galápagos (weighing from 80 to 150 kg) and tropical birds. 

The goal of Samuel Martin, the director, is to reach, in five years, the 4000 000 visitors by proposing more animals on a wider range
With the 29 permanent employees, the farm registered last year 285 000 entrances and a four million euro turnover.
A new greenhouse of 1500 m ² has just been built to be able to welcome, next spring, snakes, lizards, fishes, birds and other aquatic tortoises.

But the Crocodile Farm is more than a zoo: it is also a scientific research center on the reptiles, that collaborates with researchers of the whole world.
To meet the demands of biological studies of French and foreign researchers, and many prestigious scientific institutions such as le College de France, the CNRS, and the National Museum of Natural History, the Crocodile Farm has established in 1998  a laboratory and a hatchery, allowing the establishment of numerous partnerships leading to the publication of articles in international scientific journals.
Among them, Béatrice Thivichon-Prince, odontolgue of the University of Lyon examined the faculties of regeneration of the teeth of crocodiles. Indeed their teeth fall and grow again more of fifty times during their life. His department looks for applications has the human scale.

    Crocs_Birth_014.jpg
  • 20 years ago," the Crocodile Farm of Pierrelatte" was opened by Eric and Luc Fougeirol. This site has seen several million visitors, making it the most visited tourist site in the Drôme and the second in Rhône-Alpes.
In a landscaped greenhouse of 8000 m ² more than 450 animals evolve freely: crocodiles, giant tortoises of Seychelles and Galápagos (weighing from 80 to 150 kg) and tropical birds. 

The goal of Samuel Martin, the director, is to reach, in five years, the 4000 000 visitors by proposing more animals on a wider range
With the 29 permanent employees, the farm registered last year 285 000 entrances and a four million euro turnover.
A new greenhouse of 1500 m ² has just been built to be able to welcome, next spring, snakes, lizards, fishes, birds and other aquatic tortoises.

But the Crocodile Farm is more than a zoo: it is also a scientific research center on the reptiles, that collaborates with researchers of the whole world.
To meet the demands of biological studies of French and foreign researchers, and many prestigious scientific institutions such as le College de France, the CNRS, and the National Museum of Natural History, the Crocodile Farm has established in 1998  a laboratory and a hatchery, allowing the establishment of numerous partnerships leading to the publication of articles in international scientific journals.
Among them, Béatrice Thivichon-Prince, odontolgue of the University of Lyon examined the faculties of regeneration of the teeth of crocodiles. Indeed their teeth fall and grow again more of fifty times during their life. His department looks for applications has the human scale.

    Crocs_Birth_013.jpg
  • 20 years ago," the Crocodile Farm of Pierrelatte" was opened by Eric and Luc Fougeirol. This site has seen several million visitors, making it the most visited tourist site in the Drôme and the second in Rhône-Alpes.
In a landscaped greenhouse of 8000 m ² more than 450 animals evolve freely: crocodiles, giant tortoises of Seychelles and Galápagos (weighing from 80 to 150 kg) and tropical birds. 

The goal of Samuel Martin, the director, is to reach, in five years, the 4000 000 visitors by proposing more animals on a wider range
With the 29 permanent employees, the farm registered last year 285 000 entrances and a four million euro turnover.
A new greenhouse of 1500 m ² has just been built to be able to welcome, next spring, snakes, lizards, fishes, birds and other aquatic tortoises.

But the Crocodile Farm is more than a zoo: it is also a scientific research center on the reptiles, that collaborates with researchers of the whole world.
To meet the demands of biological studies of French and foreign researchers, and many prestigious scientific institutions such as le College de France, the CNRS, and the National Museum of Natural History, the Crocodile Farm has established in 1998  a laboratory and a hatchery, allowing the establishment of numerous partnerships leading to the publication of articles in international scientific journals.
Among them, Béatrice Thivichon-Prince, odontolgue of the University of Lyon examined the faculties of regeneration of the teeth of crocodiles. Indeed their teeth fall and grow again more of fifty times during their life. His department looks for applications has the human scale.

    Crocs_Birth_012.jpg
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