| Literature DB >> 31120331 |
Andre Rodrigues Oliveira1, Klairton Lima Brito1, Ulisses Dias2, Zanoni Dias1.
Abstract
In comparative genomics, rearrangements are mutations that affect a stretch of DNA sequences. Reversals and transpositions are well-known rearrangements, and each has a vast literature. The reversal and transposition distance, that is, the minimum number of reversals and transpositions needed to transform one genome into another is a relevant evolutionary distance. The problem of computing this distance when genomes are represented by permutations was proposed >20 years ago and received the name of sorting by reversals and transpositions problem. It has been the focus of a number of studies, but the computational complexity has remained open until now. We hereby solve this question and prove that it is NP-hard no matter whether genomes are represented by signed or unsigned permutations. In addition, we prove that a usual generalization of this problem, which assigns weights wρ for reversals and wτ for transpositions, is also NP-hard as long as wτ/wρ ≤ 1.5 for both signed and unsigned permutations.Keywords: genome rearrangements; reversals and transpositions; sorting problems; weighted operations
Year: 2019 PMID: 31120331 DOI: 10.1089/cmb.2019.0078
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Comput Biol ISSN: 1066-5277 Impact factor: 1.479