4.5 Article

Reconstruction of Ancestral Genomes in Presence of Gene Gain and Loss

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 3, Pages 150-164

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/cmb.2015.0160

Keywords

ancestral genome; chromosome evolution; genome rearrangement; gene order; DCJ; indel

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [IIS-1462107]
  2. Div Of Information & Intelligent Systems
  3. Direct For Computer & Info Scie & Enginr [1462107] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Since most dramatic genomic changes are caused by genome rearrangements as well as gene duplications and gain/loss events, it becomes crucial to understand their mechanisms and reconstruct ancestral genomes of the given genomes. This problem was shown to be NP-complete even in the simplest case of three genomes, thus calling for heuristic rather than exact algorithmic solutions. At the same time, a larger number of input genomes may actually simplify the problem in practice as it was earlier illustrated with MGRA, a state-of-the-art software tool for reconstruction of ancestral genomes of multiple genomes. One of the key obstacles for MGRA and other similar tools is presence of breakpoint reuses when the same breakpoint region is broken by several different genome rearrangements in the course of evolution. Furthermore, such tools are often limited to genomes composed of the same genes with each gene present in a single copy in every genome. This limitation makes these tools inapplicable for many biological datasets and degrades the resolution of ancestral reconstructions in diverse datasets. We address these deficiencies by extending the MGRA algorithm to genomes with unequal gene contents. The developed next-generation tool MGRA2 can handle gene gain/loss events and shares the ability of MGRA to reconstruct ancestral genomes uniquely in the case of limited breakpoint reuse. Furthermore, MGRA2 employs a number of novel heuristics to cope with higher breakpoint reuse and process datasets inaccessible for MGRA. In practical experiments, MGRA2 shows superior performance for simulated and real genomes as compared to other ancestral genome reconstruction tools.

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