Abstract

BackgroundChanges in the order of mitochondrial genes are a good source of information for phylogenetic investigations. Phylogenetic hypotheses are often supported by parsimonious mitochondrial gene order rearrangement scenarios. CREx is a heuristic for computing short pairwise rearrangement scenarios for metazoan mitochondrial gene orders. Different from other methods, CREx considers four types of rearrangement operations: inversions, transpositions, inverse transpositions, and tandem duplication random loss operations.ResultsAn extensive analysis of the CREx reconstructions for artificial data has been presented and it is shown how the quality of the reconstructed rearrangement scenarios depends on the type of rearrangement model and additional parameter values. Moreover, a fast method is proposed to apply CREx to a large number of gene orders to find likely rearrangement scenarios and store them in a graph structure called RI-Graph. This method is applied to analyse all known metazoan mitochondrial gene orders. It is shown that the obtained RI-Graph contains many rearrangement scenarios that are described in the literature.ConclusionsThe prospects and limitations of CREx have been analysed empirically and a comparison with the literature on gene order evolution highlights its benefits. The newly developed method to apply CREx to a large number of gene orders is successful in computing an RI-graph that contains many rearrangement scenarios for metazoan gene orders that have also been described in the literature. This shows that the new method is very helpful for a fast analysis of a large number of gene orders which is relevant due to the strongly increasing number of known gene orders.

Highlights

  • Changes in the order of mitochondrial genes are a good source of information for phylogenetic investigations

  • The quality of the mitochondrial gene order rearrangement scenarios reconstructed with CREx has been analysed in an extensive study on artificial gene orders that have been simulated with different rearrangement models

  • The four type of rearrangement operations - inversion, transposition, inverse transposition, and tandem duplication random loss (TDRL) — that are relevant for mitochondrial gene order evolution have been considered

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Changes in the order of mitochondrial genes are a good source of information for phylogenetic investigations. Mitochondrial gene orders became a very fruitful source for such investigations as they are known for more than 1700 metazoan species They exhibit a small and usually preserved gene set [1]. The reconstruction of the evolution of gene orders for only three given gene orders is in almost all studied cases a NP-hard problem [11,12], e.g., even when only inversions are considered. This complicates studies considering combinations of different types of rearrangement operations in event based reconstruction methods, e.g., [13]. All four relevant types of rearrangement operations should be regarded

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call