Literature DB >> 21044634

When two trees go to war.

Leo van Iersel1, Steven Kelk.   

Abstract

Rooted phylogenetic networks are used to model non-treelike evolutionary histories. Such networks are often constructed by combining trees, clusters, triplets or characters into a single network that in some well-defined sense simultaneously represents them all. We review these four models and investigate how they are related. Motivated by the parsimony principle, one often aims to construct a network that contains as few reticulations (non-treelike evolutionary events) as possible. In general, the model chosen influences the minimum number of reticulation events required. However, when one obtains the input data from two binary (i.e. fully resolved) trees, we show that the minimum number of reticulations is independent of the model. The number of reticulations necessary to represent the trees, triplets, clusters (in the softwired sense) and characters (with unrestricted multiple crossover recombination) are all equal. Furthermore, we show that these results also hold when not the number of reticulations but the level of the constructed network is minimised. We use these unification results to settle several computational complexity questions that have been open in the field for some time. We also give explicit examples to show that already for data obtained from three binary trees the models begin to diverge.
Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 21044634     DOI: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2010.10.032

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Theor Biol        ISSN: 0022-5193            Impact factor:   2.691


  4 in total

1.  Trinets encode tree-child and level-2 phylogenetic networks.

Authors:  Leo van Iersel; Vincent Moulton
Journal:  J Math Biol       Date:  2013-05-17       Impact factor: 2.259

2.  On the fixed parameter tractability of agreement-based phylogenetic distances.

Authors:  Magnus Bordewich; Celine Scornavacca; Nihan Tokac; Mathias Weller
Journal:  J Math Biol       Date:  2016-05-25       Impact factor: 2.259

3.  On the challenge of reconstructing level-1 phylogenetic networks from triplets and clusters.

Authors:  Philippe Gambette; K T Huber; S Kelk
Journal:  J Math Biol       Date:  2016-10-31       Impact factor: 2.259

4.  In the light of deep coalescence: revisiting trees within networks.

Authors:  Jiafan Zhu; Yun Yu; Luay Nakhleh
Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2016-11-11       Impact factor: 3.169

  4 in total

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