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Constructing majority-rule supertrees.

Authors :
Dong J
Fernández-Baca D
McMorris FR
Source :
Algorithms for molecular biology : AMB [Algorithms Mol Biol] 2010 Jan 04; Vol. 5, pp. 2. Date of Electronic Publication: 2010 Jan 04.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Background: Supertree methods combine the phylogenetic information from multiple partially-overlapping trees into a larger phylogenetic tree called a supertree. Several supertree construction methods have been proposed to date, but most of these are not designed with any specific properties in mind. Recently, Cotton and Wilkinson proposed extensions of the majority-rule consensus tree method to the supertree setting that inherit many of the appealing properties of the former.<br />Results: We study a variant of one of Cotton and Wilkinson's methods, called majority-rule (+) supertrees. After proving that a key underlying problem for constructing majority-rule (+) supertrees is NP-hard, we develop a polynomial-size exact integer linear programming formulation of the problem. We then present a data reduction heuristic that identifies smaller subproblems that can be solved independently. While this technique is not guaranteed to produce optimal solutions, it can achieve substantial problem-size reduction. Finally, we report on a computational study of our approach on various real data sets, including the 121-taxon, 7-tree Seabirds data set of Kennedy and Page.<br />Conclusions: The results indicate that our exact method is computationally feasible for moderately large inputs. For larger inputs, our data reduction heuristic makes it feasible to tackle problems that are well beyond the range of the basic integer programming approach. Comparisons between the results obtained by our heuristic and exact solutions indicate that the heuristic produces good answers. Our results also suggest that the majority-rule (+) approach, in both its basic form and with data reduction, yields biologically meaningful phylogenies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1748-7188
Volume :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Algorithms for molecular biology : AMB
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
20047658
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/1748-7188-5-2