English

constNJ: an algorithm to reconstruct sets of phylogenetic trees satisfying pairwise topological constraints

Populations and Evolution 2009-09-30 v2

Abstract

This paper introduces constNJ, the first algorithm for phylogenetic reconstruction of sets of trees with constrained pairwise rooted subtree-prune regraft (rSPR) distance. We are motivated by the problem of constructing sets of trees which must fit into a recombination, hybridization, or similar network. Rather than first finding a set of trees which are optimal according to a phylogenetic criterion (e.g. likelihood or parsimony) and then attempting to fit them into a network, constNJ estimates the trees while enforcing specified rSPR distance constraints. The primary input for constNJ is a collection of distance matrices derived from sequence blocks which are assumed to have evolved in a tree-like manner, such as blocks of an alignment which do not contain any recombination breakpoints. The other input is a set of rSPR constraints for any set of pairs of trees. ConstNJ is consistent and a strict generalization of the neighbor-joining algorithm; it uses the new notion of "maximum agreement partitions" to assure that the resulting trees satisfy the given rSPR distance constraints.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0901.1598,
  title  = {constNJ: an algorithm to reconstruct sets of phylogenetic trees satisfying pairwise topological constraints},
  author = {Frederick A. Matsen},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0901.1598},
  year   = {2009}
}

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R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:59:51.163Z