{"title":"遇见未来的分析科学家- Sophie Ayciriex","authors":"Sophie Ayciriex","doi":"10.1002/ansa.202200043","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Analytical sciences are among the most dynamically developing fields and have been inherently integrated into many various scientific disciplines. At the same time, early career researchers (ECRs) are among those whose contribution to this dynamic growth cannot be simply overestimated. Hence, in this special issue “From one ECR to the next”, we are presenting a series of editorials with questions and answers from five emerging scientists of different analytical fields including omics, environmental and data sciences. Importantly, all our guests boast not only scientific excellence and high-quality research but also the substantial international experience gained during their PhD or postdoctoral training. For this editorial, we are presenting Dr Sophie Ayciriex.</p><p>Dr Sophie Ayciriex obtained a European PhD degree in Biochemistry in 2010 at the University of Bordeaux where she investigated the characterization of new acyltransferases in yeast by reverse genetics and lipidomics analyses by mass spectrometry (MS). During her two post-doc periods, she strengthened her expertise in lipidomics together with MS techniques. She investigated lipidome variations during neurodegenerative processes; lipid-protein interaction and the impact of diet on Drosophila photoreceptors. She is now an associate professor at Univ. Claude Bernard Lyon 1 since 2015, and joined the Institute of Analytical Sciences to develop analytical methods for multi-omics applied to ecotoxicology and clinical research.</p><p>I studied biochemistry and structural biology during my university studies in Toulouse. Then I moved towards the dark force of analytical chemistry, learning targeted and high-resolution MS in Bordeaux and Germany, respectively during my PhD. I am at the interface between these two disciplines which allows me to adapt quickly to different research projects. I strengthened my expertise during my two post-doctoral stints and I am doing still mass spec in my daily life in Lyon.</p><p>We are currently working on the analytical development of methods to characterize samples at different biological scales – omics, that is, proteomics, lipidomics and metabolomics with different MS pipelines. We focus on data reprocessing to perform the fusion of the different omics datasets. Indeed, we integrate proteomics, metabolomics and lipidomics data and mine the data to see how we can correlate biomolecules with each other and go deeper into the biological interpretation. We have currently exciting projects with clinicians and researchers in ecotoxicology to apply our methodology. We co-developed with a mass spec company a novel acquisition mode in a targeted MS instrument that enables it to perform multiplex analysis and monitor the signal of thousands of molecules (Scout-multiple reaction monitoring [MRM] also called scout-triggered MRM). Very cool!</p><p>It is incredible to see how fast the field (omics) is growing and how the technology is improving so rapidly to answer specific and complex biological questions. When I started my PhD, I was not aware that the MS field could be so rich in terms of technology, and in addition, you could perform MS imaging at a sub-micrometric resolution and imagine you can do single cell analysis. Besides the technical aspects, what I like is the diversity of the projects we work on. There is never a dull moment!</p><p>It is very difficult to choose because it is not only the research project itself but also the great researchers you met and were involved with. I chose the project where we applied Shotgun lipidomics and multimodal imaging to describe for the first time at the molecular level, the lipidome of an amphipod crustacean, <i>Gammarus fossarum</i>. <i>G. fossarum</i> is a sentinel species widely used and studied in the ecotoxicology field since this crustacean is sensitive but resistant to freshwater pollution. What I liked the most, is the team we constituted to play with this wild organism. I recruited a talented post-doctorate researcher expert in multi-modal imaging (Tingting Fu) and we stimulated scientific discussion with our ecotoxicologist partner (A. Chaumot team, INRAe RIVERLY) and colleagues from Paris (ICSN, MS lab headed by David Touboul) and Bordeaux (LBM, UMR 5280 CNRS, Eric Testet). It is on this same organism that we develop multi-omics.</p><p>If you want to get a tenure track position in France, you have to apply for a post-doc and especially in a foreign country. The road can be long and tedious but if you are enduring, persevering with a dose of madness, it can work. At least it worked for me! I did a post-doc in Paris for 18 months studying the lipid dysregulation in Alzheimer's disease (Univ. Paris Descartes, Olivier Laprévote lab) and 3 years at Max Planck Institute in Andrej Shevchenko lab, in Dresden (Germany) doing shotgun lipidomics on flies and looking at lipid-protein interaction. And right after my post-doc in Germany, I got a permanent position as an Associate Professor at the University of Lyon. A bit off-topic but the post-doctoral experiences allowed me to meet fantastic colleagues from all over the world who became my friends for life coming from India, Germany, France, Austria and Bulgaria.</p><p>Easy question! The year that I started my post-doc at MPI-CBG in 2012, it snowed from November to April. It was awful and I was literally crying and freezing. I had a winter jacket but not warm enough for this persistent snowing weather. A French winter jacket was in fact sufficient for only the beginning of spring or fall in this German weather. But afterwards, I adapted my wardrobe and I bought Uggs. German gastronomy is also special for the gourmet that I am, but that's another story.</p><p>As far as I remember, I never had good or bad advice. I always made the choice by myself. My former postdoc supervisor (PI) or colleagues and friends (poke to Sarita and Emilie) were always very supportive at the different steps of my scientific career. I am very grateful.</p><p>My advice will do not hesitate to contact your dream lab. Do not be shy, contact the PI, discuss the project and consider looking for your own funding. It will help you a lot in getting a tenure-track position.</p><p>As a good French citizen, I love to eat good food and drink wine (so cliché!). I have been educated by my husband who has really good taste and knowledge of wines. We discovered that a very good Grand Cru du Beaujolais can be as good as a Bordeaux. We are open for any occasion a good bottle of wine for apero, success in a grant, publication or just celebrating life events. All occasions are good to toast but with moderation of course.</p><p>My dream dinner ever will be to have around a round table Robert de Niro at the time of Goodfellas movie (one of my favourite movies), Elizabeth II because I like her retro style, and Thomas Pesquet for his awesome and informative pictures of the Earth taken from the International Space Station, leaving more than one dreamer.</p><p>The author declares no conflict of interest.</p>","PeriodicalId":93411,"journal":{"name":"Analytical science advances","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":3.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-12-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/ansa.202200043","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Meet up-and-coming analytical scientists – Sophie Ayciriex\",\"authors\":\"Sophie Ayciriex\",\"doi\":\"10.1002/ansa.202200043\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Analytical sciences are among the most dynamically developing fields and have been inherently integrated into many various scientific disciplines. At the same time, early career researchers (ECRs) are among those whose contribution to this dynamic growth cannot be simply overestimated. Hence, in this special issue “From one ECR to the next”, we are presenting a series of editorials with questions and answers from five emerging scientists of different analytical fields including omics, environmental and data sciences. Importantly, all our guests boast not only scientific excellence and high-quality research but also the substantial international experience gained during their PhD or postdoctoral training. For this editorial, we are presenting Dr Sophie Ayciriex.</p><p>Dr Sophie Ayciriex obtained a European PhD degree in Biochemistry in 2010 at the University of Bordeaux where she investigated the characterization of new acyltransferases in yeast by reverse genetics and lipidomics analyses by mass spectrometry (MS). During her two post-doc periods, she strengthened her expertise in lipidomics together with MS techniques. She investigated lipidome variations during neurodegenerative processes; lipid-protein interaction and the impact of diet on Drosophila photoreceptors. She is now an associate professor at Univ. Claude Bernard Lyon 1 since 2015, and joined the Institute of Analytical Sciences to develop analytical methods for multi-omics applied to ecotoxicology and clinical research.</p><p>I studied biochemistry and structural biology during my university studies in Toulouse. Then I moved towards the dark force of analytical chemistry, learning targeted and high-resolution MS in Bordeaux and Germany, respectively during my PhD. I am at the interface between these two disciplines which allows me to adapt quickly to different research projects. I strengthened my expertise during my two post-doctoral stints and I am doing still mass spec in my daily life in Lyon.</p><p>We are currently working on the analytical development of methods to characterize samples at different biological scales – omics, that is, proteomics, lipidomics and metabolomics with different MS pipelines. We focus on data reprocessing to perform the fusion of the different omics datasets. Indeed, we integrate proteomics, metabolomics and lipidomics data and mine the data to see how we can correlate biomolecules with each other and go deeper into the biological interpretation. We have currently exciting projects with clinicians and researchers in ecotoxicology to apply our methodology. We co-developed with a mass spec company a novel acquisition mode in a targeted MS instrument that enables it to perform multiplex analysis and monitor the signal of thousands of molecules (Scout-multiple reaction monitoring [MRM] also called scout-triggered MRM). Very cool!</p><p>It is incredible to see how fast the field (omics) is growing and how the technology is improving so rapidly to answer specific and complex biological questions. When I started my PhD, I was not aware that the MS field could be so rich in terms of technology, and in addition, you could perform MS imaging at a sub-micrometric resolution and imagine you can do single cell analysis. Besides the technical aspects, what I like is the diversity of the projects we work on. There is never a dull moment!</p><p>It is very difficult to choose because it is not only the research project itself but also the great researchers you met and were involved with. I chose the project where we applied Shotgun lipidomics and multimodal imaging to describe for the first time at the molecular level, the lipidome of an amphipod crustacean, <i>Gammarus fossarum</i>. <i>G. fossarum</i> is a sentinel species widely used and studied in the ecotoxicology field since this crustacean is sensitive but resistant to freshwater pollution. What I liked the most, is the team we constituted to play with this wild organism. I recruited a talented post-doctorate researcher expert in multi-modal imaging (Tingting Fu) and we stimulated scientific discussion with our ecotoxicologist partner (A. Chaumot team, INRAe RIVERLY) and colleagues from Paris (ICSN, MS lab headed by David Touboul) and Bordeaux (LBM, UMR 5280 CNRS, Eric Testet). It is on this same organism that we develop multi-omics.</p><p>If you want to get a tenure track position in France, you have to apply for a post-doc and especially in a foreign country. The road can be long and tedious but if you are enduring, persevering with a dose of madness, it can work. At least it worked for me! I did a post-doc in Paris for 18 months studying the lipid dysregulation in Alzheimer's disease (Univ. Paris Descartes, Olivier Laprévote lab) and 3 years at Max Planck Institute in Andrej Shevchenko lab, in Dresden (Germany) doing shotgun lipidomics on flies and looking at lipid-protein interaction. And right after my post-doc in Germany, I got a permanent position as an Associate Professor at the University of Lyon. A bit off-topic but the post-doctoral experiences allowed me to meet fantastic colleagues from all over the world who became my friends for life coming from India, Germany, France, Austria and Bulgaria.</p><p>Easy question! The year that I started my post-doc at MPI-CBG in 2012, it snowed from November to April. It was awful and I was literally crying and freezing. 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All occasions are good to toast but with moderation of course.</p><p>My dream dinner ever will be to have around a round table Robert de Niro at the time of Goodfellas movie (one of my favourite movies), Elizabeth II because I like her retro style, and Thomas Pesquet for his awesome and informative pictures of the Earth taken from the International Space Station, leaving more than one dreamer.</p><p>The author declares no conflict of interest.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":93411,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Analytical science advances\",\"volume\":null,\"pages\":null},\"PeriodicalIF\":3.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2022-12-02\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/ansa.202200043\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Analytical science advances\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ansa.202200043\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q2\",\"JCRName\":\"CHEMISTRY, ANALYTICAL\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Analytical science advances","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ansa.202200043","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"CHEMISTRY, ANALYTICAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
分析科学是最具活力的发展领域之一,并已内在地融入许多不同的科学学科。与此同时,早期职业研究人员(ecr)是对这种动态增长的贡献不能简单高估的人之一。因此,在本期“从一个ECR到下一个ECR”特刊中,我们将呈现一系列的社论,其中包括来自不同分析领域(包括组学,环境和数据科学)的五位新兴科学家的问题和答案。重要的是,我们所有的客人不仅拥有卓越的科学成就和高质量的研究,而且在博士或博士后培训期间获得了丰富的国际经验。在这篇社论中,我们请到了Sophie Ayciriex博士。Sophie Ayciriex博士于2010年在波尔多大学获得欧洲生物化学博士学位,在那里她通过反向遗传学和质谱(MS)脂质组学分析研究了酵母中新的酰基转移酶的特征。在她的两个博士后期间,她加强了她在脂质组学和MS技术方面的专业知识。她研究了神经退行性过程中的脂质组变化;脂蛋白相互作用及饮食对果蝇光感受器的影响。她自2015年起担任法国里昂第一大学副教授,并加入分析科学研究所,开发应用于生态毒理学和临床研究的多组学分析方法。我在图卢兹大学期间学习了生物化学和结构生物学。然后我转向了分析化学的黑暗力量,博士期间分别在波尔多和德国学习了靶向和高分辨率的MS。我处在这两个学科的交汇处,这使我能够迅速适应不同的研究项目。在我的两个博士后期间,我加强了我的专业知识,我在里昂的日常生活中仍然在做质谱仪。目前,我们正在研究不同生物尺度下样品的分析开发方法-组学,即蛋白质组学,脂质组学和代谢组学。我们专注于数据的再处理,以实现不同组学数据集的融合。事实上,我们整合了蛋白质组学、代谢组学和脂质组学数据,并对数据进行挖掘,以了解我们如何将生物分子相互关联,并更深入地进行生物学解释。我们目前有令人兴奋的项目与临床医生和研究人员在生态毒理学应用我们的方法。我们与一家质谱仪公司合作开发了一种新的靶向质谱仪器采集模式,使其能够执行多重分析并监测数千个分子的信号(Scout-multiple reaction monitoring [MRM],也称为scout-triggered MRM)。非常酷!令人难以置信的是,这个领域(组学)发展得如此之快,技术进步如此之快,以至于可以回答具体而复杂的生物学问题。当我开始攻读博士学位时,我没有意识到MS领域在技术方面可以如此丰富,此外,你可以在亚微米分辨率下进行MS成像,想象你可以做单细胞分析。除了技术方面,我喜欢的是我们所从事项目的多样性。永远不会有沉闷的时刻!很难选择,因为这不仅仅是研究项目本身,还有你遇到和参与的伟大研究人员。我选择的项目是我们第一次在分子水平上应用Shotgun脂质组学和多模态成像来描述一种片脚甲壳类动物Gammarus fossarum的脂质组。因其对淡水污染敏感而又具有抗性,是生态毒理学领域广泛应用和研究的前哨种。我最喜欢的是我们组成的团队,与这种野生生物一起玩耍。我招募了一位才华横溢的多模态成像博士后研究专家(傅婷婷),并与我们的生态毒理学合作伙伴(a . Chaumot团队,INRAe RIVERLY)以及来自巴黎(ICSN, MS实验室由David touboull领导)和波尔多(LBM, UMR 5280 CNRS, Eric Testet)的同事进行了科学讨论。正是在同一种生物体上,我们发展了多组学。如果你想在法国获得终身教职,你必须申请博士后,尤其是在国外。这条路可能漫长而乏味,但如果你坚持不懈,带着一点疯狂,它就会奏效。至少对我有用!我在巴黎做了18个月的博士后研究阿尔茨海默病的脂质失调(巴黎大学笛卡尔,奥利维尔·拉普拉西姆实验室)在德累斯顿(德国)的安德烈·舍普琴科实验室的马克斯·普朗克研究所做了3年的散弹枪脂质组学研究苍蝇脂质与蛋白质的相互作用。在德国读完博士后后,我在里昂大学获得了一个永久的副教授职位。
Meet up-and-coming analytical scientists – Sophie Ayciriex
Analytical sciences are among the most dynamically developing fields and have been inherently integrated into many various scientific disciplines. At the same time, early career researchers (ECRs) are among those whose contribution to this dynamic growth cannot be simply overestimated. Hence, in this special issue “From one ECR to the next”, we are presenting a series of editorials with questions and answers from five emerging scientists of different analytical fields including omics, environmental and data sciences. Importantly, all our guests boast not only scientific excellence and high-quality research but also the substantial international experience gained during their PhD or postdoctoral training. For this editorial, we are presenting Dr Sophie Ayciriex.
Dr Sophie Ayciriex obtained a European PhD degree in Biochemistry in 2010 at the University of Bordeaux where she investigated the characterization of new acyltransferases in yeast by reverse genetics and lipidomics analyses by mass spectrometry (MS). During her two post-doc periods, she strengthened her expertise in lipidomics together with MS techniques. She investigated lipidome variations during neurodegenerative processes; lipid-protein interaction and the impact of diet on Drosophila photoreceptors. She is now an associate professor at Univ. Claude Bernard Lyon 1 since 2015, and joined the Institute of Analytical Sciences to develop analytical methods for multi-omics applied to ecotoxicology and clinical research.
I studied biochemistry and structural biology during my university studies in Toulouse. Then I moved towards the dark force of analytical chemistry, learning targeted and high-resolution MS in Bordeaux and Germany, respectively during my PhD. I am at the interface between these two disciplines which allows me to adapt quickly to different research projects. I strengthened my expertise during my two post-doctoral stints and I am doing still mass spec in my daily life in Lyon.
We are currently working on the analytical development of methods to characterize samples at different biological scales – omics, that is, proteomics, lipidomics and metabolomics with different MS pipelines. We focus on data reprocessing to perform the fusion of the different omics datasets. Indeed, we integrate proteomics, metabolomics and lipidomics data and mine the data to see how we can correlate biomolecules with each other and go deeper into the biological interpretation. We have currently exciting projects with clinicians and researchers in ecotoxicology to apply our methodology. We co-developed with a mass spec company a novel acquisition mode in a targeted MS instrument that enables it to perform multiplex analysis and monitor the signal of thousands of molecules (Scout-multiple reaction monitoring [MRM] also called scout-triggered MRM). Very cool!
It is incredible to see how fast the field (omics) is growing and how the technology is improving so rapidly to answer specific and complex biological questions. When I started my PhD, I was not aware that the MS field could be so rich in terms of technology, and in addition, you could perform MS imaging at a sub-micrometric resolution and imagine you can do single cell analysis. Besides the technical aspects, what I like is the diversity of the projects we work on. There is never a dull moment!
It is very difficult to choose because it is not only the research project itself but also the great researchers you met and were involved with. I chose the project where we applied Shotgun lipidomics and multimodal imaging to describe for the first time at the molecular level, the lipidome of an amphipod crustacean, Gammarus fossarum. G. fossarum is a sentinel species widely used and studied in the ecotoxicology field since this crustacean is sensitive but resistant to freshwater pollution. What I liked the most, is the team we constituted to play with this wild organism. I recruited a talented post-doctorate researcher expert in multi-modal imaging (Tingting Fu) and we stimulated scientific discussion with our ecotoxicologist partner (A. Chaumot team, INRAe RIVERLY) and colleagues from Paris (ICSN, MS lab headed by David Touboul) and Bordeaux (LBM, UMR 5280 CNRS, Eric Testet). It is on this same organism that we develop multi-omics.
If you want to get a tenure track position in France, you have to apply for a post-doc and especially in a foreign country. The road can be long and tedious but if you are enduring, persevering with a dose of madness, it can work. At least it worked for me! I did a post-doc in Paris for 18 months studying the lipid dysregulation in Alzheimer's disease (Univ. Paris Descartes, Olivier Laprévote lab) and 3 years at Max Planck Institute in Andrej Shevchenko lab, in Dresden (Germany) doing shotgun lipidomics on flies and looking at lipid-protein interaction. And right after my post-doc in Germany, I got a permanent position as an Associate Professor at the University of Lyon. A bit off-topic but the post-doctoral experiences allowed me to meet fantastic colleagues from all over the world who became my friends for life coming from India, Germany, France, Austria and Bulgaria.
Easy question! The year that I started my post-doc at MPI-CBG in 2012, it snowed from November to April. It was awful and I was literally crying and freezing. I had a winter jacket but not warm enough for this persistent snowing weather. A French winter jacket was in fact sufficient for only the beginning of spring or fall in this German weather. But afterwards, I adapted my wardrobe and I bought Uggs. German gastronomy is also special for the gourmet that I am, but that's another story.
As far as I remember, I never had good or bad advice. I always made the choice by myself. My former postdoc supervisor (PI) or colleagues and friends (poke to Sarita and Emilie) were always very supportive at the different steps of my scientific career. I am very grateful.
My advice will do not hesitate to contact your dream lab. Do not be shy, contact the PI, discuss the project and consider looking for your own funding. It will help you a lot in getting a tenure-track position.
As a good French citizen, I love to eat good food and drink wine (so cliché!). I have been educated by my husband who has really good taste and knowledge of wines. We discovered that a very good Grand Cru du Beaujolais can be as good as a Bordeaux. We are open for any occasion a good bottle of wine for apero, success in a grant, publication or just celebrating life events. All occasions are good to toast but with moderation of course.
My dream dinner ever will be to have around a round table Robert de Niro at the time of Goodfellas movie (one of my favourite movies), Elizabeth II because I like her retro style, and Thomas Pesquet for his awesome and informative pictures of the Earth taken from the International Space Station, leaving more than one dreamer.