Bertrand Llorente
Associate Editor, Genome Integrity and Transmission 

Bertrand Llorente is a molecular geneticists interested in genome integrity. Bertrand did his PhD on functional and comparative genomics in Bernard Dujon’s lab at the Pasteur Institute. In 2001 he moved to Lorraine Symington’s lab at Columbia University to study homologous recombination. In 2005, he moved back to Bernard’s lab to lay the foundations of his current research on Break-Induced Replication and on meiotic recombination in budding yeasts. Since January 2008, he runs his lab at the Cancer Research Center of Marseille. Over the years, Bertrand notably showed the elevated dynamics associated to the recombination process, both during Break-Induced Replication and meiotic recombination and revisited the long standing Szostak et al DNA double strand break repair model. He also revealed the role of the chromatin remodeler Fun30 in promoting DNA end resection during recombination. Eventually, his work on non-Saccharomyces cerevisiae budding yeasts led to the discovery of a mechanism preventing recombination over the entire chromosome arm containing the sex locus in Lachancea kluyveri.