Laurent Boitard
PSL Research University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Laurent Boitard.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Laurent Boitard; Denis Cottinet; C. Kleinschmitt; Nicolas Bremond; Jean Baudry; G. Yvert; Jérôme Bibette
Microorganisms are widely used to generate valuable products, and their efficiency is a major industrial focus. Bioreactors are typically composed of billions of cells, and available measurements only reflect the overall performance of the population. However, cells do not equally contribute, and process optimization would therefore benefit from monitoring this intrapopulation diversity. Such monitoring has so far remained difficult because of the inability to probe concentration changes at the single-cell level. Here, we unlock this limitation by taking advantage of the osmotically driven water flux between a droplet containing a living cell toward surrounding empty droplets, within a concentrated inverse emulsion. With proper formulation, excreted products are far more soluble within the continuous hydrophobic phase compared to initial nutrients (carbohydrates and salts). Fast diffusion of products induces an osmotic mismatch, which further relaxes due to slower diffusion of water through hydrophobic interfaces. By measuring droplet volume variations, we can deduce the metabolic activity down to isolated single cells. As a proof of concept, we present the first direct measurement of the maintenance energy of individual yeast cells. This method does not require any added probes and can in principle apply to any osmotically sensitive bioactivity, opening new routes for screening, and sorting large libraries of microorganisms and biomolecules.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Shima P. Damodaran; Stephan Eberhard; Laurent Boitard; Jairo Garnica Rodriguez; Yuxing Wang; Nicolas Bremond; Jean Baudry; Jérôme Bibette; Francis-André Wollman
To address possible cell-to-cell heterogeneity in growth dynamics of isogenic cell populations of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, we developed a millifluidic drop-based device that not only allows the analysis of populations grown from single cells over periods of a week, but is also able to sort and collect drops of interest, containing viable and healthy cells, which can be used for further experimentation. In this study, we used isogenic algal cells that were first synchronized in mixotrophic growth conditions. We show that these synchronized cells, when placed in droplets and kept in mixotrophic growth conditions, exhibit mostly homogeneous growth statistics, but with two distinct subpopulations: a major population with a short doubling-time (fast-growers) and a significant subpopulation of slowly dividing cells (slow-growers). These observations suggest that algal cells from an isogenic population may be present in either of two states, a state of restricted division and a state of active division. When isogenic cells were allowed to propagate for about 1000 generations on solid agar plates, they displayed an increased heterogeneity in their growth dynamics. Although we could still identify the original populations of slow- and fast-growers, drops inoculated with a single progenitor cell now displayed a wider diversity of doubling-times. Moreover, populations dividing with the same growth-rate often reached different cell numbers in stationary phase, suggesting that the progenitor cells differed in the number of cell divisions they could undertake. We discuss possible explanations for these cell-to-cell heterogeneities in growth dynamics, such as mutations, differential aging or stochastic variations in metabolites and macromolecules yielding molecular switches, in the light of single-cell heterogeneities that have been reported among isogenic populations of other eu- and prokaryotes.
Engineering in Life Sciences | 2015
Laurent Boitard; Denis Cottinet; Nicolas Bremond; Jean Baudry; Jérôme Bibette
Microbiology has continuously pushed efforts towards understanding microbial diversity. Technologies and methods have also evolved, from plating, and use of microscopes and cytometers, towards micro‐well handling robots and, finally, fluidic‐based devices. The aim of this review was to bring microbiologists attention to the outstanding analytical and handling power of millifluidic droplet technologies for analysing and sorting phenotypic diversity in the microbial world. This new format overcomes many limitations of previous approaches. It provides outstanding reproducible growth conditions over droplet reservoirs allowing unprecedented sensitive read‐out over thousands of colonies over time. The confinement of the millifluidic train within tubes and the implementation of a three phases format excludes any contamination issues. The automation and handling of reservoir droplets is inherently facilitated. We show as a proof of principle the efficiency of capturing phenotypic diversity within a bacterial sample submitted to a sub‐minimum inhibitory concentration of antibiotic. The precision offered by the millifluidic format allows the detection of a variety of resistance strategies that compete and coexist. The review finally explores the potential of this approach to address new challenges such as community‐based growth of multiple‐strain systems.
European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases | 2016
Lianmei Jiang; Laurent Boitard; P. Broyer; A.-C. Chareire; P. Bourne-Branchu; P. Mahé; M. Tournoud; C. Franceschi; G. Zambardi; Jean Baudry; Jérôme Bibette
We present the MilliDrop Analyzer (MDA), a droplet-based millifluidic system for digital antimicrobial susceptibility testing (D-AST), which enables us to determine minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) precisely and accurately. The MilliDrop technology was validated by using resazurin for fluorescence readout, for comparison with standard methodology, and for conducting reproducibility studies. In this first assessment, the susceptibility of a reference Gram-negative strain Escherichia coli ATCC 25922 to gentamicin, chloramphenicol, and nalidixic acid were tested by the MDA, VITEK®2, and broth microdilution as a reference standard. We measured the susceptibility of clinically relevant Gram-positive strains of Staphylococcus aureus to vancomycin, including vancomycin-intermediate S. aureus (VISA), heterogeneous vancomycin-intermediate S. aureus (hVISA), and vancomycin-susceptible S. aureus (VSSA) strains. The MDA provided results which were much more accurate than those of VITEK®2 and standard broth microdilution. The enhanced accuracy enabled us to reliably discriminate between VSSA and hVISA strains.
Biomicrofluidics | 2018
Krzysztof Langer; Nicolas Bremond; Laurent Boitard; Jean Baudry; Jérôme Bibette
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1063/1.5037795.].
Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2018
Adilya Dagkesamanskaya; Krzysztof Langer; Alexandra S. Tauzin; Catherine Rouzeau; Delphine Lestrade; Gabrielle Potocki-Véronèse; Laurent Boitard; Jérôme Bibette; Jean Baudry; Denis Pompon; Véronique Anton-Leberre
Biomicrofluidics | 2018
Krzysztof Langer; Nicolas Bremond; Laurent Boitard; Jean Baudry; Jérôme Bibette
PLOS ONE | 2015
Shima P. Damodaran; Stephan Eberhard; Laurent Boitard; Jairo Garnica Rodriguez; Yuxing Wang; Nicolas Bremond; Jean Baudry; Jérôme Bibette; Francis-André Wollman
PLOS ONE | 2015
Shima P. Damodaran; Stephan Eberhard; Laurent Boitard; Jairo Garnica Rodriguez; Yuxing Wang; Nicolas Bremond; Jean Baudry; Jérôme Bibette; Francis-André Wollman
PLOS ONE | 2015
Shima P. Damodaran; Stephan Eberhard; Laurent Boitard; Jairo Garnica Rodriguez; Yuxing Wang; Nicolas Bremond; Jean Baudry; Jérôme Bibette; Francis-André Wollman