A symmetry-inclusive algebraic approach to genome rearrangement
From MaRDI portal
Publication:6370637
arXiv2106.09927MaRDI QIDQ6370637FDOQ6370637
Authors: Venta Terauds, Joshua Stevenson, Jeremy G. Sumner
Publication date: 18 June 2021
Abstract: Of the many modern approaches to calculating evolutionary distance via models of genome rearrangement, most are tied to a particular set of genomic modelling assumptions and to a restricted class of allowed rearrangements. The "position paradigm", in which genomes are represented as permutations signifying the position (and orientation) of each region, enables a refined model-based approach, where one can select biologically plausible rearrangements and assign to them relative probabilities/costs. Here, one must further incorporate any underlying structural symmetry of the genomes into the calculations and ensure that this symmetry is reflected in the model. In our recently-introduced framework of {em genome algebras}, each genome corresponds to an element that simultaneously incorporates all of its inherent physical symmetries. The representation theory of these algebras then provides a natural model of evolution via rearrangement as a Markov chain. Whilst the implementation of this framework to calculate distances for genomes with `practical' numbers of regions is currently computationally infeasible, we consider it to be a significant theoretical advance: one can incorporate different genomic modelling assumptions, calculate various genomic distances, and compare the results under different rearrangement models. The aim of this paper is to demonstrate some of these features.
This page was built for publication: A symmetry-inclusive algebraic approach to genome rearrangement
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q6370637)