Rearrangement sorting problems impact profoundly in measuring genome similarities and tracing historic scenarios of species. However, recent studies on genome rearrangement mechanisms disclosed a statistically significant evidence, repeats are situated at the ends of rearrangement relevant segments and stay unchanged before and after rearrangements.To reflect the principle behind this evidence, we propose flanked block-interchange, an operation on strings that exchanges two substrings flanked by identical left and right symbols in a string. The flanked block-interchange distance problem is formulated as finding a shortest sequence of flanked block-interchanges to transform a string into the other. We propose a sufficient and necessary condition for deciding whether two strings can be transformed into each other by flanked block-interchanges. This condition is linear time verifiable. Under this condition for two strings, we present a [Formula: see text]-approximation algorithm for the flanked block-interchange distance problem where each symbol occurs at most k times in a string and a polynomial algorithm for this problem where each symbol occurs at most twice in a string. We show that the problem of flanked block-interchange distance is NP-hard at last.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TCBB.2024.3351440 | DOI Listing |
Rearrangement sorting problems impact profoundly in measuring genome similarities and tracing historic scenarios of species. However, recent studies on genome rearrangement mechanisms disclosed a statistically significant evidence, repeats are situated at the ends of rearrangement relevant segments and stay unchanged before and after rearrangements.To reflect the principle behind this evidence, we propose flanked block-interchange, an operation on strings that exchanges two substrings flanked by identical left and right symbols in a string.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Bioinformatics
August 2018
Department of Computer Science, City University of Hong Kong, 83 Tat Chee Ave., Hong Kong, People's Republic of China.
Background: Genome rearrangements describe changes in the genetic linkage relationship of large chromosomal regions, involving reversals, transpositions, block interchanges, deletions, insertions, fissions, fusions and translocations etc. Many algorithms for calculating rearrangement scenarios between two genomes have been proposed. Very often, the calculated rearrangement scenario is not unique for the same pair of permutations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Genomics
March 2017
Department of Computer Science, City University of Hong Kong, 83 Tat Chee Ave., Hong Kong, SAR, People's Republic of China.
Background: Genome rearrangement describes gross changes of chromosomal regions, plays an important role in evolutionary biology and has profound impacts on phenotype in organisms ranging from microbes to humans. With more and more complete genomes accomplished, lots of genomic comparisons have been conducted in order to find genome rearrangements and the mechanisms which underlie the rearrangement events. In our opinion, genomic comparison of different individuals/strains within the same species (pan-genome) is more helpful to reveal the mechanisms for genome rearrangements since genomes of the same species are much closer to each other.
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