Abstract

Inspired by phylogenetic tree construction in computational biology, Lin et al. (The 11th Annual International Symposium on Algorithms and Computation (ISAAC 2000), pp. 539–551, 2000) introduced the notion of a k-phylogenetic root. A k-phylogenetic root of a graph G is a tree T such that the leaves of T are the vertices of G, two vertices are adjacent in G precisely if they are within distance k in T, and all non-leaf vertices of T have degree at least three. The k-phylogenetic root problem is to decide whether such a tree T exists for a given graph G. In addition to introducing this problem, Lin et al. designed linear time constructive algorithms for k≤4, while left the problem open for k≥5. In this paper, we partially fill this hole by giving a linear time constructive algorithm to decide whether a given tree chordal graph has a 5-phylogenetic root; this is the largest class of graphs known to have such a construction.

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