Title :
Fourier Transform Inequalities for Phylogenetic Trees
Author :
Matsen, Frederick A.
Author_Institution :
UC Berkeley, Berkeley, CA
Abstract :
Phylogenetic invariants are not the only constraints on site-pattern frequency vectors for phylogenetic trees. A mutation matrix, by its definition, is the exponential of a matrix with non-negative off-diagonal entries; this positivity requirement implies non-trivial constraints on the site-pattern frequency vectors. We call these additional constraints "edge-parameter inequalities." In this paper, we first motivate the edge-parameter inequalities by considering a pathological site-pattern frequency vector corresponding to a quartet tree with a negative internal edge. This site-pattern frequency vector nevertheless satisfies all of the constraints described up to now in the literature. We next describe two complete sets of edge-parameter inequalities for the group-based models; these constraints are square-free monomial inequalities in the Fourier transformed coordinates. These inequalities, along with the phylogenetic invariants, form a complete description of the set of site-pattern frequency vectors corresponding to emph{bona fide} trees. Said in mathematical language, this paper explicitly presents two finite lists of inequalities in Fourier coordinates of the form "monomial les 1," each list characterizing the phylogenetically relevant semialgebraic subsets of the phylogenetic varieties.
Keywords :
Fourier transforms; bioinformatics; genetics; matrix algebra; trees (mathematics); Fourier transform inequalities; edge-parameter inequalities; mutation matrix; phylogenetic invariants; phylogenetic trees; semialgebraic sets; site-pattern frequency vectors; Backup/recovery; Impact of VLSI on system design; Algorithms; Bayes Theorem; Computational Biology; Fourier Analysis; Genetic Variation; Markov Chains; Models, Genetic; Models, Statistical; Mutation; Phylogeny;
Journal_Title :
Computational Biology and Bioinformatics, IEEE/ACM Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TCBB.2008.68