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Thomas Crouzier

Profile picture of Thomas Crouzier

About me

Biopolymers have a surprising number of responsibilities in our body; they hold cells together to form tissues, they provide subtle chemical signals to cells to guide their behavior, they contribute to the skin’s hydration and elasticity, they lubricate our joints and gastrointestinal tracts, and protect us against toxins and pathogens by assembling into the mucus gel that covers our eyes and respiratory tract.

We seek to understand how these natural materials provide the wide range of functionalities they exhibit in our body.We then engineer new materials that mimic or enhance these functionalities.

We are particularly fascinated by theMUCIN biopolymers. Mucins are glycoproteins (~40% protein, ~60% sugars) that form the mucus gels. A better understanding of how mucins work is key to address the many mucus-related diseases, including cystic fibrosis and inflammatory bowel diseases.

The mucins covering our epithelium hydrate, lubricate, protect, and modulate cell behaviors (see our outreach page to learn more about mucins). As such, mucins may also become reference biopolymers for new generations of functional biomaterials.

We can harvest mucins from animal secretions or tissues including humans saliva, snails slime, pig stomachs, jellyfish, and many others.

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Summer job, hourly employment, 4 weeks

The Division of Glycoscience is looking for a summer worker who will work with the extrusion of various material compositions. This is an hourly employment of a total of 120 hours during 4 v, starting immediately in July.

Welcome to e-mail your CV plus copy of passport or ID document to no later than July 1. Please put ref no C-2022-1546 in the subject box.


Courses

Drug Development (CB2090), assistant | Course web

Glycobiotechnology (BB2425), teacher | Course web

The Cell Factory (BB2450), teacher | Course web