Cryptobiotix Announces Its Next Evolutionary Step with Its Biobank Initiative to Accelerate Microbiome Innovation
06/10/2025, Ghent, Belgium // PRODIGY: Feature Story //
Cryptobiotix, a next-generation preclinical research organization pioneering microbiome modeling through its proprietary SIFR platform, announces the launch of its biobank, marking the next phase in its continuous evolution. Co-founders Aurélien Baudot and Dr. Pieter Van den Abbeele founded Cryptobiotix to solve a critical gap in the field: the dreaded Valley of Death. Traditional preclinical testing is still slow or inaccurate, this could lead not only to delays but ultimately threaten the overall product development and launch.
Now, with the launch of its biobank, the company is not just optimizing that core mission. It's redefining what's possible in microbiome research. 'We've always focused on delivering actionable insights, with the highest standards of scientific integrity, all while keeping to the tight deadlines our clients require,' says Baudot. 'We already had a streamlined process, but the biobank takes it to the next level. It's a small internal improvement, but one that has an exponential impact on our clients' workflows.'
The Cryptobiotix biobank is more than just a freezer. It is a storage solution where cryo-stabilized gut microbiome samples are sourced, characterized, and stored under proprietary conditions that preserve both structure and function. This allows clients to build or tap into pre-qualified, pre-characterized microbiome samples instantly, bypassing weeks (sometimes months) of sourcing delays.
In typical studies, donor sourcing can extend project timelines by two to eight weeks. But now, with tailored microbiome 'vaults' built to client specifications, those timelines shrink dramatically.
Beyond speed, the biobank dramatically improves data granularity. Instead of working with random microbiomes, Cryptobiotix clients can now access specific metadata, such as diet, delivery method, age, country of origin, and more, to correlate clinical results to individual microbiome traits.
'It gives us immediate access to not just a 'baby microbiome,'' explains Dr. Van den Abbeele. 'It provides us access to a C-section baby, breastfed, and born in a specific country. This kind of clarity allows our partners to refine their experiment to the specific needs of their own business.' This opens the door for better responder/non-responder analysis and more refined product design, all essential for consumer health companies, nutrition innovators, and pharma organizations.
The biobank fits seamlessly into Cryptobiotix's ex vivo modular SIFR platform, which simulates the entire gastrointestinal tract to understand the interplay between test products and the gut microbiome across individuals. By combining high throughput with validated predictivity, the company reduces development time and risk for clients worldwide.
Cryptobiotix's research and development have also expanded into disease-rate simulation, including antibiotic-induced dysbiosis, acute infections, and Clostridium difficile modeling, helping therapeutic developers understand how interventions behave in both healthy and disrupted microbiomes. The company's precision is unmatched, wherein clients get a clearer view of how interventions truly behave in humans.
While the launch of the biobank is an exciting milestone for the Cryptobiotix team, it is a natural, incremental evolution in its long-term strategy. 'For us, this is a stepping stone,' the founders say. 'We're already leveraging the data generated to train smarter analytics because the real future lies in making sense of complex microbiome datasets in ways the industry hasn't seen before.'
Cryptobiotix is already exploring how its biobank can support longitudinal sample tracking, enabling comparisons of the same microbiome over time, even as donors' diets or health statuses change. This could offer clients unprecedented insights into microbiome stability, intervention reproducibility, and formulation refinements.
With its cryo-stabilization method, perfected through hundreds of iterations, Cryptobiotix ensures the microbiome samples stored in its biobank retain their identity, empowering clients to revisit, reuse, and retest on demand.
Media Contact
Name: Cryptobiotix Team
Email: [email protected]
There is no offer to sell, no solicitation of an offer to buy, and no recommendation of any security or any other product or service in this article. Moreover, nothing contained in this should be construed as a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any investment or security, or to engage in any investment strategy or transaction. It is your responsibility to determine whether any investment, investment strategy, security, or related transaction is appropriate for you based on your investment objectives, financial circumstances, and risk tolerance. Consult your business advisor, attorney, or tax advisor regarding your specific business, legal, or tax situation.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
29 minutes ago
- Yahoo
France Moves to Curb ‘Ultra-fast' Fashion With Bill Targeting Shein and Temu
PARIS — As major brands scale back their sustainability initiatives, France is pressing ahead with legislation aimed at reining in 'ultra-fast fashion' platforms such as Shein and Temu, known for their extremely low-cost clothing. The bill, introduced by Anne-Cécile Violland, a member of parliament from the Horizons party, passed the Senate one year after clearing the lower house of the French Assembly. More from WWD Inditex Sales Slow as Economic Headwinds Hit the High Street Rebag Expands Access to Pre-loved Luxury Goods With New Amazon Collaboration Designer Vincent Van Duysen Opens Antwerp Home for Zara Home+ 4th Collection The unusually long gap between votes led to some watering down of the original provisions, exempting traditional fast-fashion players such as H&M, Primark, and Inditex-owned Zara. 'It's a relief that it moved forward, but there has been a shift in the goal of the legislation that it is now specifically targeting what is called 'ultra-fast fashion,'' said Pierre Condamine, spokesperson for the Anti Fast Fashion Coalition, an umbrella group of 11 environmental organizations in France. Earlier drafts had adopted a broader definition of fast fashion that included Europe-based brands. 'There is sort of a shift in what was supposed to be an environmental legislation, with the objective to shift the whole sector towards sustainable practices, while now it's sort of becoming a protectionist text,' he told WWD. The revised bill targets ultra-fast fashion directly, proposing a tax on small parcels shipped from outside the EU ranging from 2 to 4 euros per package. The fee is intended to slow the influx of packages from Chinese platforms to France, in a move reminiscent of the U.S. ending its de minimis exemption. Shein and Temu together shipped 800 million packages to France in 2024 — more than half of all parcels sent to the country. The French government will first notify the European Commission, as several measures, including a total advertising ban on ultra-fast-fashion platforms, require approval at the EU level. This process could take up to three months before the bill goes to the Assembly and Senate joint committee for resolution, likely in the fall in late September or October. Several key provisions may face scrutiny in Brussels, including the parcel fee, which could conflict with the European Commission's plan for a bloc-wide fee by 2028, and the proposed national advertising ban. Although Shein is registered in Singapore, its European headquarters in Ireland could present a legal loophole. As it stands, the bill mandates eco-contributions from fashion companies based on a 'bonus-malus' system — rewarding sustainable practices and penalizing environmental harm. Penalties could rise to 10 euros per item by 2030, though the methodology for valuing items has yet to be defined. The bill would also eliminate tax advantages for 'donating' unsold stock by ultra-fast-fashion brands, which are not permitted to destroy unsold items under an anti-waste law passed in 2020. A critical element of the bill is its specific definition of 'ultra-fast' or 'ultra-express' fashion. This distinction leaves out more traditional fast-fashion companies that have a retail presence like H&M, Primark and Zara. By differentiating between ultra-fast platforms and fast-fashion brands with physical retail locations, the legislation potentially creates a loophole for companies headquartered in Europe — Sweden, Ireland and Spain respectively — even though their production relies heavily on low-wage countries like China, India and Bangladesh via subcontractors and diffuse supply chains. The original bill passed by the Assembly featured the broader definition, but companies lobbied intensively over the past year for the narrower language, arguing that they contribute to local employment. Senator Sylvie Valente Le Hir of Les Républicains, who ushered the bill through the Senate, highlighted its targeted approach: 'We have drawn a clear line between those we want to regulate — ultra-express fashion — and those we want to preserve, accessible but rooted fashion, which employs in France, which structures our territories, which creates links and supports a local economic fabric,' she said. The industry group La Fédération Française du Prêt à Porter Féminin praised the bill as a 'step forward' in tackling ultra-fast fashion. 'It formalizes the long-standing collective commitment of many stakeholders to defend a fashion industry that respects workers, consumers, citizens, French businesses, and the planet,' the organization said in a statement. However, Condamine noted that while large global fast-fashion retailers remain profitable – Zara's parent company Inditex reported sales were up 4.2 percent in constant-currency in the first quarter on Wednesday — French high street brands like Camaieu and NafNaf have entered administration, and independent stores continue to shutter. 'The economic crisis in the clothing industry in France, it started way before Shein,' Condamine said. 'It started when fast fashion — Zara, H&M, Primark — arrived. Now they are saying if they're targeted, it will be a catastrophe [for jobs]. But they're doing great economically, and they're part of the problem.' Some lawmakers described the bill as a 'strong first signal' and indicated that fast fashion as a whole — including the European players with physical presence — could face future regulation due to unsustainable business practices. On the other hand, critics — chiefly Shein — have said the legislation punishes cost-conscious consumers and lower-income households. The company, which markets itself under the slogan 'Fashion is a right, not a privilege,' has staged events in French cities like Béziers. On Sunday, its director of government relations, Fabrice Layer, held a presentation in front of the southeastern town's city hall to rally public support for the company. 'We ultimately find ourselves with a law that is not only anti-Shein, but anti-Shein customer,' Quentin Ruffat, Shein's spokesperson in France, told AFP. 'This law, if passed, will directly penalize our customers' wallets and drastically reduce their purchasing power.' The company has also accused France's fashion establishment of protecting legacy brands and says it will continue lobbying to amend the bill further. Shein representatives did not respond to requests for comment. New research from l'Institut Français de la Mode (IFM) shows that in the first quarter of 2025, Amazon, Shein and Temu together accounted for 24 percent of online apparel sales by value, representing 7 percent of total apparel consumption across all channels. Online sales made up 29.4 percent of apparel purchases by value, including the online stores of traditional retailers. Best of WWD Walmart Calls California Waste Dumping Lawsuit 'Unjustified' Year in Review: Sustainability's Biggest Controversies of 2021 Year in Review: Sustainability's New Strides


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
Mitsubishi Buys Stake in Private Equity Real Estate Firm Patron
Mitsubishi Estate Co. has bought a majority stake in European private equity property fund manager Patron Capital, the latest sign of Japanese investment washing into the UK. The Tokyo-based group's investment management business, Mitsubishi Estate Global Partners, is acquiring the stake from Patron's management led by founder Keith Breslauer, according to a statement Thursday. The deal will see Mitsubishi commit about €600 million ($686 million) of equity to Patron's funds to help it build out new strategies including its nascent credit business, it said.


Motor 1
an hour ago
- Motor 1
Maserati May Already Be Planning the MC20's Successor
It's wild to think that the Maserati MC20 is already five years old. The car made its official debut in September 2020, and the automaker might already be readying the supercar's successor. Maserati has recently filed a new trademark that sounds like a natural progression of the company's current naming scheme for its supercars. The Italian-based automaker filed a trademark application for " MC25 " to be used on cars and scale model vehicles with the United States Patent and Trademark Office. That seems like the perfect moniker for a new car that would debut this year. However, there's no public indication Maserati is preparing an MC20 successor as the company faces a chaotic industry. Maserati's Difficult Future Sales for the brand were down 57 percent last year , declining from 26,600 cars in 2023 to just 11,300 units in 2024. The brand has also culled its lineup in recent years, discontinuing best-sellers like the Levante and Ghibli, with replacements still a few years away. The company also had to fend off rumors last year that alleged Stellantis was preparing to sell the struggling brand. Stellantis then reiterated its commitment to Maserati in April, confirming that the brand was not for sale . It might not have the resources for a completely new car, but Maserati could easily make some significant upgrades to the MC20 for a new iteration. The automaker previewed what could be possible with the powertrain back in 2023 with the MCXtrema , a track-only super making 730 horsepower from the Nettuno twin-turbocharged 3.0-liter V-6 engine. A new iteration of the car featuring revamped styling, a new name, and other performance upgrades might be in the works. However, we'll have to wait for something official from the company. It has a lot to sort out as it navigates the ever-changing auto industry. Read More Maserati News: You Can Get a Stupid Cheap Maserati From Hertz Maserati Sales Aren't Doing Great Get the best news, reviews, columns, and more delivered straight to your inbox, daily. back Sign up For more information, read our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use . Source: US Patent and Trademark Office via CarBuzz Share this Story Facebook X LinkedIn Flipboard Reddit WhatsApp E-Mail Got a tip for us? Email: tips@ Join the conversation ( )