Hugues Roest Crollius
Genome Organization and Dynamics
This team is part of the Computional Biology Center.
Background
Genome sequencing efforts worldwide have provided many vertebrate genome sequences including those from more than one hundred vertebrates, including mammals, birds, and fish. The rationale behind such projects is that comparative genomics remains the most powerful approach to identify and understand the signals that regulate gene transcription, the relationship between gene regulation and gene organization, the targets of Darwinian selection and the consequences of genome rearrangements during evolution. This in turn informs us on how extant genomes function, how genetic information is read by the cell, and why and how specific changes in DNA sequences modulate phenotypes, sometimes gradually as in evolution, sometimes dramatically as in genetic diseases. To achieve this, we require bioinformatic tools and original strategies to analyze billions of DNA bases, tens of thousands of annotated genes, regulatory elements and other functional regions in an integrated fashion, with an evolutionary perspective.
Research highlights
The group has developed several lines of research to address the problem of identifying signatures of past evolutionary events and functional sequences in vertebrate genomes. For instance, this group has developed methods to compare unlimited numbers of genomes to identify regions where genes are conserved in the same order and transcriptional orientation. These so-called syntenic blocks are inherited by modern species since their last common ancestor. The group has developed an online server called Genomicus, to provide access to these new resources. Reference ancestral genomes now enable new approaches to study genome evolution in a large phylogenetic perspective and to analyse changes that took place during evolution. For example, these results have been used to establish the likely causes of genomic rearrangements that modify the organisation of genes in genomes since the ancestor of mammals.
The group has also developed a new bioinformatics method to finely analyse conserved non-coding sequences in vertebrate genomes. Results reveal potential long-range interactions between these regions and their neighbouring genes. Extensive experimental work confirms that many such interactions are in fact due to the regulation of the expression of the genes by these non-coding regions. This analysis thus identified new functional interactions between sequences in the human genome, which help us understand the biology of the genome but also new causes of genetic diseases. The group is also tightly involved in the analysis of newly sequenced genomes, such as the genome of zebrafish or rainbow trout.
Selected Publications
- Bricout R, Weil D, Stroebel D, Genovesio A, Roest Crollius H. Evolution is not uniform along coding sequence. Molecular Biology and Evolution, March 2023
- Parey E, Louis A, Montfort J, et al. Genome structures resolve the early diversification of teleost fishes. Science, February 10, 2023
- Muffato, M., Louis, A., Nguyen, N.T.T. et al. Reconstruction of hundreds of reference ancestral genomes across the eukaryotic kingdom. Nat Ecol Evol, January 17, 2023
- Parey E, Louis A, Montfort J, Guiguen Y, Roest Crollius H, and Berthelot C.An atlas of fish genome evolution reveals delayed rediploidization following the teleost whole-genome duplication. Genome Research. August 12, 2022.
- Moyon L, Berthelot C, Louis A, Nguyen NTT, Roest Crollius H. Classification of non-coding variants with high pathogenic impact. PLoS Genetics. 2022 Apr 29
- Nguyen N.T.T, Vincens P., Dufayard J-F., Roest Crollius H., Louis A, Genomicus in 2022: comparative tools for thousands of genomes and reconstructed ancestors, Nucleic Acids Research, 2021 Nov 18.
- Thompson, A.W., Hawkins, M.B., Parey, E. et al. (2021) The bowfin genome illuminates the developmental evolution of ray-finned fishes. Nat Genet , 2021 august 30.
- Parey,E., Louis,A., Cabau,C., Guiguen,Y., Crollius,H.R. and Berthelot,C. (2020) Synteny-guided resolution of gene trees clarifies the functional impact of whole genome duplications. Mol Biol Evol.,2020 june 18
- Clément Y, Torbey P, Gilardi-Hebenstreit P, Roest Crollius H, Enhancer–gene maps in the human and zebrafish genomes using evolutionary linkage conservation, Nucleic Acids Research, 2020 jan 16
- Sacerdot,C., Louis,A., Bon,C., Berthelot,C., Roest Crollius, H. (2018) Chromosome evolution at the origin of the ancestral vertebrate genome. Genome Biology, 2018 Oct 17
- Naville M, Ishibashi M, Ferg M, Bengani H, Rinkwitz S, Krecsmarik M, Hawkins T, Wilson S, Manning E, Chilamakuri C, Wilson D, Louis A, Raymond F ,Rastegar S, Strähle U, Lenhard Boris ,Bally-Cuif L, Van Heyningen V, Fitzpatrick D, Becker T, and Roest Crollius H (2015) Long-range evolutionary constraints reveal cis-regulatory interactions on the human X chromosome. Nature Communications 6:6904
- Berthelot C, Muffato M, Abecassis J, Roest Crollius H. (2015) The 3D organisation of the chromatin explains evolutionary fragile genomic regions. Cell Reports. 10:1913–1924.
- Louis A, Nguyen NT, Muffato M, Roest Crollius H. (2014) Genomicus update 2015 : KaryoView and MatrixView provide a genome-wide perspective to multispecies comparative genomics (2014). Nucleic Acids Res. 43:D682-9.
- Lucas J, Muffato M, Roest Crollius H (2014) PhylDiag : identifying complex synteny blocks that include tandem duplications using phylogenetic gene trees. BMC Bioinformatics.15(1):268.
- Berthelot C, Brunet F, Chalopin C, Juanchich A, Bernard M, Noël B, Bento P, Dasilva C, Labadie K, Alberti A, Aury J-M, Louis A, Dehais P, Bardou P, Montfort J, Klopp C, Cabau C, Gaspin C, Thorgaard GH, Boussaha M, Quillet E, Guyomard R, Galiana D, Bobe J, Volff J-N, Genêt C, Wincker P, Jaillon O, Roest Crollius H, Guiguen Y (2014) The rainbow trout genome provides novel insights into evolution after whole-genome duplication in vertebrates. Nature Communications 5:3657;