René Dujarric de la Rivière


René Dujarric de la Rivière was a French microbiologist and hygienist.
He studied medicine in Bordeaux and Lyon, then for several years worked as a medical extern at the Hospitals Necker and Ténon in Paris. In 1913 he received his medical doctorate, and in 1929, obtained his doctorate in natural sciences. From 1945 to 1958 he was an assistant director of the Pasteur Institute.
In 1918 he demonstrated that influenza was caused by a filterable agent that was in all probability a virus. In the 1920s he performed research of Amanita phalloides in Louis Lapicque's laboratory at the Sorbonne, producing an antitoxic serum as a result. In 1927, at the Pasteur Institute, he established a center for the study of blood groups.
In 1930, with Jules Bordet, he founded the Société Internationale de Microbiologie. He was a member of the Société de biologie, the Académie Nationale de Médecine and in 1951, was appointed president of the Société mycologique de France.

Selected works