| Literature DB >> 34218334 |
David Schaller1,2,3, Manuel Lafond4, Peter F Stadler2,3,5,6,7,8,9,10,11, Nicolas Wieseke12, Marc Hellmuth13.
Abstract
Several implicit methods to infer horizontal gene transfer (HGT) focus on pairs of genes that have diverged only after the divergence of the two species in which the genes reside. This situation defines the edge set of a graph, the later-divergence-time (LDT) graph, whose vertices correspond to genes colored by their species. We investigate these graphs in the setting of relaxed scenarios, i.e., evolutionary scenarios that encompass all commonly used variants of duplication-transfer-loss scenarios in the literature. We characterize LDT graphs as a subclass of properly vertex-colored cographs, and provide a polynomial-time recognition algorithm as well as an algorithm to construct a relaxed scenario that explains a given LDT. An edge in an LDT graph implies that the two corresponding genes are separated by at least one HGT event. The converse is not true, however. We show that the complete xenology relation is described by an rs-Fitch graph, i.e., a complete multipartite graph satisfying constraints on the vertex coloring. This class of vertex-colored graphs is also recognizable in polynomial time. We finally address the question "how much information about all HGT events is contained in LDT graphs" with the help of simulations of evolutionary scenarios with a wide range of duplication, loss, and HGT events. In particular, we show that a simple greedy graph editing scheme can be used to efficiently detect HGT events that are implicitly contained in LDT graphs.Entities:
Keywords: Binary relation; Fitch graph; Gene families; Horizontal gene transfer; Indirect phylogenetic methods; Later-divergence-time; Polynomial-time recognition algorithm; Xenology
Year: 2021 PMID: 34218334 PMCID: PMC8254804 DOI: 10.1007/s00285-021-01631-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Math Biol ISSN: 0303-6812 Impact factor: 2.259