Inference of Phylogenetic Trees from the Knowledge of Rare Evolutionary Events
Marc Hellmuth, Maribel Hernandez-Rosales, Yangjing Long, Peter F., Stadler

TL;DR
This paper explores how rare evolutionary events can inform phylogenetic tree inference, revealing that the relation graph forms a tree and constraining root placement using non-symmetric data.
Contribution
It provides a combinatorial analysis of rare event-based phylogenetic information and characterizes the relation between event graphs and phylogenetic trees.
Findings
Relation graph must be a tree
Complete characterization of relation and phylogenetic tree connection
Non-symmetric information constrains root position
Abstract
Rare events have played an increasing role in molecular phylogenetics as potentially homoplasy-poor characters.In this contribution we analyze the phylogenetic information content from a combinatorial point of view by consid-ering the binary relation on the set of taxa defined by the existence of a single event separating two taxa. We showthat the graph-representation of this relation must be a tree. Moreover, we characterize completely the relationshipbetween the tree of such relations and the underlying phylogenetic tree. With directed operations such as tandem-duplication-random-loss events in mind we demonstrate how non-symmetric information constrains the position ofthe root in the partially reconstructed phylogeny.
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Taxonomy
TopicsGenome Rearrangement Algorithms · Genomics and Phylogenetic Studies · Algorithms and Data Compression
