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FSTTCS
2004
Springer

Genome Halving Problem Revisited

14 years 5 months ago
Genome Halving Problem Revisited
The Genome Halving Problem is motivated by the whole genome duplication events in molecular evolution that double the gene content of a genome and result in a perfect duplicated genome that contains two identical copies of each chromosome. The genome then becomes a subject to rearrangements resulting in some rearranged duplicated genome. The Genome Halving Problem (first introduced and solved by Nadia El-Mabrouk and David Sankoff) is to reconstruct the ancestral pre-duplicated genome from the rearranged duplicated genome. The El-Mabrouk–Sankoff algorithm is rather complex and in this paper we present a simpler algorithm that is based on a generalization of the notion of the breakpoint graph to the case of duplicated genomes. This generalization makes the El-Mabrouk–Sankoff result more transparent and promises to be useful in future studies of genome duplications.
Max A. Alekseyev, Pavel A. Pevzner
Added 01 Jul 2010
Updated 01 Jul 2010
Type Conference
Year 2004
Where FSTTCS
Authors Max A. Alekseyev, Pavel A. Pevzner
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