Comparing RNA structures using a full set of biologically relevant edit operations is intractable
Guillaume Blin (IGM), Sylvie Hamel (DIRO), St\'ephane Vialette (IGM)

TL;DR
This paper proves that comparing RNA structures with a full set of biologically relevant edit operations is computationally intractable without imposing strong restrictions, highlighting the complexity of RNA structural comparison.
Contribution
It provides a theoretical proof that full comparison of RNA structures with biologically relevant edits is NP-hard without restrictions.
Findings
Comparison with full edit operations is NP-complete.
Strong restrictions are necessary for polynomial-time algorithms.
Previous polynomial algorithms relied on restrictive assumptions.
Abstract
Arc-annotated sequences are useful for representing structural information of RNAs and have been extensively used for comparing RNA structures in both terms of sequence and structural similarities. Among the many paradigms referring to arc-annotated sequences and RNA structures comparison (see \cite{IGMA_BliDenDul08} for more details), the most important one is the general edit distance. The problem of computing an edit distance between two non-crossing arc-annotated sequences was introduced in \cite{Evans99}. The introduced model uses edit operations that involve either single letters or pairs of letters (never considered separately) and is solvable in polynomial-time \cite{ZhangShasha:1989}. To account for other possible RNA structural evolutionary events, new edit operations, allowing to consider either silmutaneously or separately letters of a pair were introduced in \cite{jiangli};…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRNA and protein synthesis mechanisms · RNA modifications and cancer · RNA Research and Splicing
