Bio::Tree::Compatible(User Contributed Perl DocumentatBio::Tree::Compatible(3)NAMEBio::Tree::Compatible - Testing compatibility of phylogenetic trees
with nested taxa.
SYNOPSIS
use Bio::Tree::Compatible;
use Bio::TreeIO;
my $input = Bio::TreeIO->new('-format' => 'newick',
'-file' => 'input.tre');
my $t1 = $input->next_tree;
my $t2 = $input->next_tree;
my ($incompat, $ilabels, $inodes) = Bio::Tree::Compatible::is_compatible($t1,$t2);
if ($incompat) {
my %cluster1 = %{ Bio::Tree::Compatible::cluster_representation($t1) };
my %cluster2 = %{ Bio::Tree::Compatible::cluster_representation($t2) };
print "incompatible trees\n";
if (scalar(@$ilabels)) {
foreach my $label (@$ilabels) {
my $node1 = $t1->find_node(-id => $label);
my $node2 = $t2->find_node(-id => $label);
my @c1 = sort @{ $cluster1{$node1} };
my @c2 = sort @{ $cluster2{$node2} };
print "label $label";
print " cluster"; map { print " ",$_ } @c1;
print " cluster"; map { print " ",$_ } @c2; print "\n";
}
}
if (scalar(@$inodes)) {
while (@$inodes) {
my $node1 = shift @$inodes;
my $node2 = shift @$inodes;
my @c1 = sort @{ $cluster1{$node1} };
my @c2 = sort @{ $cluster2{$node2} };
print "cluster"; map { print " ",$_ } @c1;
print " properly intersects cluster";
map { print " ",$_ } @c2; print "\n";
}
}
} else {
print "compatible trees\n";
}
DESCRIPTION
NB: This module has exclusively class methods that work on
Bio::Tree::TreeI objects. An instance of Bio::Tree::Compatible cannot
itself represent a tree, and so typically there is no need to create
one.
Bio::Tree::Compatible is a Perl tool for testing compatibility of
phylogenetic trees with nested taxa represented as Bio::Tree::Tree
objects. It is based on a recent characterization of ancestral
compatibility of semi-labeled trees in terms of their cluster
representations.
A semi-labeled tree is a phylogenetic tree with some of its internal
nodes labeled, and it can represent a classification tree as well as a
phylogenetic tree with nested taxa, with labeled internal nodes
corresponding to taxa at a higher level of aggregation or nesting than
that of their descendents.
Two semi-labeled trees are compatible if their topological restrictions
to the common labels are such that for each node label, the smallest
clusters containing it in each of the trees coincide and, furthermore,
no cluster in one of the trees properly intersects a cluster of the
other tree.
Future extensions of Bio::Tree::Compatible include a
Bio::Tree::Supertree module for combining compatible phylogenetic trees
with nested taxa into a common supertree.
FEEDBACK
Mailing Lists
User feedback is an integral part of the evolution of this and other
Bioperl modules. Send your comments and suggestions preferably to the
Bioperl mailing list. Your participation is much appreciated.
bioperl-l@bioperl.org - General discussion
http://bioperl.org/wiki/Mailing_lists - About the mailing lists
Support
Please direct usage questions or support issues to the mailing list:
bioperl-l@bioperl.org
rather than to the module maintainer directly. Many experienced and
reponsive experts will be able look at the problem and quickly address
it. Please include a thorough description of the problem with code and
data examples if at all possible.
Reporting Bugs
Report bugs to the Bioperl bug tracking system to help us keep track of
the bugs and their resolution. Bug reports can be submitted via the
web:
http://bugzilla.open-bio.org/
SEE ALSO
· Philip Daniel and Charles Semple. Supertree Algorithms for Nested
Taxa. In: Olaf R. P. Bininda-Emonds (ed.) Phylogenetic Supertrees:
Combining Information to Reveal the Tree of Life, Computational
Biology, vol. 4, chap. 7, pp. 151-171. Kluwer (2004).
· Charles Semple, Philip Daniel, Wim Hordijk, Roderic D. M. Page, and
Mike Steel: Supertree Algorithms for Ancestral Divergence Dates and
Nested Taxa. Bioinformatics 20(15), 2355-2360 (2004).
· Merce Llabres, Jairo Rocha, Francesc Rossello, and Gabriel
Valiente: On the Ancestral Compatibility of Two Phylogenetic Trees
with Nested Taxa. J. Math. Biol. 53(3), 340-364 (2006).
AUTHOR - Gabriel Valiente
Email valiente@lsi.upc.edu
APPENDIX
The rest of the documentation details each of the object methods.
postorder_traversal
Title : postorder_traversal
Usage : my @nodes = @{ $tree->postorder_traversal }
Function: Return list of nodes in postorder
Returns : reference to array of Bio::Tree::Node
Args : none
For example, the postorder traversal of the tree
"(((A,B)C,D),(E,F,G));" is a reference to an array of nodes with
internal_id 0 through 9, because the Newick standard representation for
phylogenetic trees is based on a postorder traversal.
+---A +---0
| |
+---+---C +---4---2
| | | | | |
| | +---B | | +---1
| | | |
+ +-------D 9 +-------3
| |
| +-----E | +-----5
| | | |
+-----+-----F +-----8-----6
| |
+-----G +-----7
cluster_representation
Title : cluster_representation
Usage : my %cluster = %{ $tree->cluster_representation }
Function: Compute the cluster representation of a tree
Returns : reference to hash of array of string indexed by
Bio::Tree::Node
Args : none
For example, the cluster representation of the tree
"(((A,B)C,D),(E,F,G));" is a reference to a hash associating an array
of string (descendent labels) to each node, as follows:
0 --> [A]
1 --> [B]
2 --> [A,B,C]
3 --> [D]
4 --> [A,B,C,D]
5 --> [E]
6 --> [F]
7 --> [G]
8 --> [E,F,G]
9 --> [A,B,C,D,E,F,G]
common_labels
Title : common_labels
Usage : my $labels = $tree1->common_labels($tree2);
Function: Return set of common node labels
Returns : Set::Scalar
Args : Bio::Tree::Tree
For example, the common labels of the tree "(((A,B)C,D),(E,F,G));" and
the tree "((A,B)H,E,(J,(K)G)I);" are: "[A,B,E,G]".
+---A +---A
| |
+---+---C +-------H
| | | | |
| | +---B | +---B
| | |
+ +-------D +-----------E
| |
| +-----E | +-------J
| | | |
+-----+-----F +---I
| |
+-----G +---G---K
topological_restriction
Title : topological_restriction
Usage : $tree->topological_restriction($labels)
Function: Compute the topological restriction of a tree to a subset
of node labels
Returns : Bio::Tree::Tree
Args : Set::Scalar
For example, the topological restrictions of each of the trees
"(((A,B)C,D),(E,F,G));" and "((A,B)H,E,(J,(K)G)I);" to the labels
"[A,B,E,G]" are as follows:
+---A +---A
| |
+---+---+ +---+
| | | |
| +---B | +---B
+ |
| +---E +-------E
| | |
+-------+ +---+---G
|
+---G
is_compatible
Title : is_compatible
Usage : $tree1->is_compatible($tree2)
Function: Test compatibility of two trees
Returns : boolean
Args : Bio::Tree::Tree
For example, the topological restrictions of the trees
"(((A,B)C,D),(E,F,G));" and "((A,B)H,E,(J,(K)G)I);" to their common
labels, "[A,B,E,G]", are compatible. The respective cluster
representations are as follows:
[A] [A]
[B] [B]
[E] [E]
[G] [G]
[A,B] [A,B]
[E,G] [A,B,E,G]
[A,B,E,G]
As a second example, the trees "(A,B);" and "((B)A);" are incompatible.
Their respective cluster representations are as follows:
[A] [B]
[B] [A,B]
[A,B]
The reason is, the smallest cluster containing label "A" is "[A]" in
the first tree but "[A,B]" in the second tree.
+---A A---B
|
+
|
+---B
As a second example, the trees "(((B,A),C),D);" and "((A,(D,B)),C);"
are also incompatible. Their respective cluster representations are as
follows:
[A] [A]
[B] [B]
[C] [C]
[D] [D]
[A,B] [B,D]
[A,B,C] [A,B,D]
[A,B,C,D] [A,B,C,D]
The reason is, cluster "[A,B]" properly intersects cluster "[B,D]".
There are further incompatibilities between these trees: "[A,B,C]"
properly intersects both "[B,D]" and "[A,B,D]".
+---B +-------A
| |
+---+ +---+ +---D
| | | | |
+---+ +---A | +---+
| | + |
+ +-------C | +---B
| |
+-----------D +-----------C
perl v5.14.1 2011-07-22 Bio::Tree::Compatible(3)