UK WILDCATS Seminar

UK WILDCATS Seminar

Work, Interactions & Leading Developments
in
Combinatorics, Algebra, Topology & Statistics

845 PATTERSON OFFICE TOWER
FALL 2009



Glenn Tesler


"Distribution of segment lengths in genome rearrangements"

Glenn Tesler
University of California, San Diego
Department of Mathematics



UK WILDCATS Seminar
Monday, September 21, 2009
4:00 pm, 845 Patterson Office Tower


Abstract:

The study of gene orders for constructing phylogenetic trees was introduced by Dobzhansky and Sturtevant in 1938. Different genomes may have homologous genes arranged in different orders. In the early 1990s, Sankoff and colleagues modelled this as ordinary (unsigned) permutations on a set of numbered genes 1,2,...,n, with biological events such as inversions modelled as operations on the permutations. Signed permutations may be used when the relative strands of the genes are known, and ``circular permutations'' may be used used for circular genomes. Pevzner, Bafna, and Hannenhalli further developed the model into the ``breakpoint graph,'' which has been very successful in analyzing sequences of inversions. We use combinatorial methods (generating functions, commutative and noncommutative formal power series, asymptotics, recursions, and enumeration formulas) to study the distributions of the number and lengths of conserved segments of genes between two or more unichromosomal genomes, including signed and unsigned genomes, and linear and circular genomes. This generalizes classical work on permutations from the 1940s-60s by Wolfowitz, Kaplansky, Riordan, Abramson, and Moser, who studied decompositions of permutations into strips of ascending or descending consecutive numbers. In our setting, their work corresponds to comparison of two unsigned genomes (known gene orders, unknown gene orientations).