Common Intervals and Symmetric Difference in a Model-Free Phylogenomics, with an Application to Streptophyte Evolution
- 1 May 2007
- journal article
- Published by Mary Ann Liebert Inc in Journal of Computational Biology
- Vol. 14 (4) , 436-445
- https://doi.org/10.1089/cmb.2007.a005
Abstract
The common intervals of two permutations on n elements are the subsets of terms contiguous in both permutations. They constitute the most basic representation of conserved local order. We use d, the size of the symmetric difference (the complement of the common intervals) of the two subsets of 2({1,n}) thus determined by two permutations, as an evolutionary distance between the gene orders represented by the permutations. We consider the Steiner Tree problem in the space (2({1,n}), d) as the basis for constructing phylogenetic trees, including ancestral gene orders. We extend this to genomes with unequal gene content and to genomes containing gene families. Applied to streptophyte phylogeny, our method does not support the positioning of the complex algae Charales as a sister group to the land plants. Simulations show that the method, though unmotivated by any specific model of genome rearrangement, accurately reconstructs a tree from artificial genome data generated by random inversions deriving each genome from its ancestor on this tree.
Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Conservation of Combinatorial Structures in Evolution ScenariosPublished by Springer Nature ,2005
- Reconstructing Ancestral Gene Orders Using Conserved IntervalsPublished by Springer Nature ,2004
- Common intervals and sorting by reversals: a marriage of necessityBioinformatics, 2002
- On the Practical Solution of the Reversal Median ProblemPublished by Springer Nature ,2001
- Ancestral chloroplast genome in Mesostigma viride reveals an early branch of green plant evolutionNature, 2000
- Chloroplast gene organization deduced from complete sequence of liverwort Marchantia polymorpha chloroplast DNANature, 1986
- Lengths of chromosomal segments conserved since divergence of man and mouse.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1984
- Testing for the consecutive ones property, interval graphs, and graph planarity using PQ-tree algorithmsJournal of Computer and System Sciences, 1976
- Minimum Mutation Fits to a Given TreePublished by JSTOR ,1973
- Toward Defining the Course of Evolution: Minimum Change for a Specific Tree TopologySystematic Zoology, 1971