GabaldÓn Estevan, Toni
Research Professor
Life & Medical Sciences
Institucio Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avancats
Spain
Biography
He is a biochemist and molecular biologist by training (Universities of Valencia and Mainz). After several years working on a molecular biology lab, and attracted by the emerging fields of genomics and bioinformatics, in 2001 he moved to the comparative genomics group of Martijn Huynen in the NCMLS, The Netherlands. In 2005, he obtained a PhD in Medical Sciences (Radbout University Nijmegen), and then moved, thanks to an EMBO fellowship, to the bioinformatics department at CIPF (Valencia). In September 2008 he started his own group in the Bioinformatics and Genomics department at CRG. In 2013 I was awarded an ERC starting grant and an ICREA research professorship. He has always used an evolutionary perspective to address different biological questions. I am not only interested in understanding how complex biological systems work, but also how they have come to be as they are.
Research Interest
His main research interest is to understand the complex relationships between genome sequences and phenotypes and how these two features evolve within and across species. He generally use large-scale phylogenetics and molecular evolution approaches that allow looking at the evolution of genomes from the perspective of all of their genes, and apply these analyses to a variety of biological questions related to the evolution and function of biological communities, organisms, organelles, pathways, and families of protein-coding and non-coding genes. He has a special interest in understanding processes related to human pathogenesis. Through collaborations with experimental groups, he apply comparative genomics to discover new mechanisms and genes involved in interesting processes, especially those of clinical relevance. Given our exposure to new types and scales of data, my group has had the need to develop novel bioinformatics tools to fill in existing gaps.
Publications
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Pegueroles C, Gabaldón T& . (2016) Secondary structure impacts patterns of selection in human lncRNAs. BMC Biol. 14:60. * Presents first evidence of sequence constraints in lncRNA at the population level in humans. Moreover, we show that the strength of selection depends on the structural roles of the residues