Enumeration of binary trees compatible with a perfect phylogeny
Julia A. Palacios, Anand Bhaskar, Filippo Disanto, Noah A., Rosenberg

TL;DR
This paper investigates the enumeration of binary and multifurcating tree shapes compatible with perfect phylogenies under the infinitely-many-sites mutation model, providing recursive formulas with implications for evolutionary inference.
Contribution
It introduces recursive enumeration methods for binary and multifurcating tree shapes compatible with perfect phylogenies, advancing understanding of their combinatorial properties.
Findings
Recursive enumeration formulas for tree shapes
Compatibility conditions for perfect phylogenies
Implications for evolutionary parameter inference
Abstract
Evolutionary models used for describing molecular sequence variation suppose that at a non-recombining genomic segment, sequences share ancestry that can be represented as a genealogy--a rooted, binary, timed tree, with tips corresponding to individual sequences. Under the infinitely-many-sites mutation model, mutations are randomly superimposed along the branches of the genealogy, so that every mutation occurs at a chromosomal site that has not previously mutated; if a mutation occurs at an interior branch, then all individuals descending from that branch carry the mutation. The implication is that observed patterns of molecular variation from this model impose combinatorial constraints on the hidden state space of genealogies. In particular, observed molecular variation can be represented in the form of a perfect phylogeny, a tree structure that fully encodes the mutational…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolution and Genetic Dynamics · Bioinformatics and Genomic Networks · Genetic diversity and population structure
