Title :
Computing the Hybridization Number of Two Phylogenetic Trees Is Fixed-Parameter Tractable
Author :
Bordewich, Magnus ; Semple, Charles
Author_Institution :
Durham Univ., Durham
Abstract :
Reticulation processes in evolution mean that the ancestral history of certain groups of present-day species is non-tree-like. These processes include hybridization, lateral gene transfer, and recombination. Despite the existence of reticulation, such events are relatively rare and, so, a fundamental problem for biologists is the following: Given a collection of rooted binary phylogenetic trees on sets of species that correctly represent the tree-like evolution of different parts of their genomes, what is the smallest number of "reticulation" vertices in any network that explains the evolution of the species under consideration? It has been previously shown that this problem is NP-hard even when the collection consists of only two rooted binary phylogenetic trees. However, in this paper, we show that the problem is fixed-parameter tractable in the two-tree instance when parameterized by this smallest number of reticulation vertices.
Keywords :
biology computing; computational complexity; evolution (biological); genetics; molecular biophysics; tree codes; trees (mathematics); NP-hard problem; fixed-parameter tractable problem; genomes; hybridization network; lateral gene transfer; reticulation process; reticulation vertices; rooted binary phylogenetic trees; tree-like evolution; Binary sequences; Bioinformatics; Biology computing; Evolution (biology); Genetics; Genomics; History; Marine animals; Phylogeny; Polynomials; Rooted phylogenetic tree; agreement forest; hybridization network; reticulate evolution; subtree prune and regraft; Algorithms; Computer Simulation; Evolution; Genetics, Population; Hybridization, Genetic; Models, Genetic; Phylogeny;
Journal_Title :
Computational Biology and Bioinformatics, IEEE/ACM Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/tcbb.2007.1019