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Institute of Information Science, Academia Sinica

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Seminar

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TIGP -- A linear-time algorithm for reconstructing zero-recombinant haplotype configuration on a pedigree

  • LecturerProf. Kun-Pin Wu (Institute of Biomedical Informatics, National Yang Ming University)
    Host: TIGP Bioinformatics Program
  • Time2012-11-29 (Thu.) 14:00 ~ 15:30
  • LocationAuditorium 106 at new IIS Building
Abstract

When studying genetic diseases in which genetic variations are passed on to offspring, the ability to distinguish between paternal and maternal alleles is essential. Determining haplotypes from genotype data is called haplotype inference. Most existing computational algorithms for haplotype inference have been designed to use genotype data collected from individuals in the form of a pedigree. A haplotype is regarded as a hereditary unit and therefore input pedigrees are preferred that are free of mutational events and have a minimum number of genetic recombinational events. These ideas motivated the zero-recombinant haplotype configuration (ZRHC) problem, which strictly follows the Mendelian law of inheritance, namely that one haplotype of each child is inherited from the father and the other haplotype is inherited from the mother, both without any mutation. So far no linear-time algorithm for ZRHC has been proposed for general pedigrees, even though the number of mating loops in a human pedigree is usually very small and can be regarded as constant.

Given a pedigree with individuals, marker loci, and mating loops, we proposed an algorithm that can provide a general solution to the zero-recombinant haplotype configuration problem in O(kmn +k2m) time. In addition, this algorithm can be modified to detect inconsistencies within the genotype data without loss of efficiency. The proposed algorithm was subject to 12000 experiments to verify its performance using different (n, m) combinations. The value of was uniformly distributed between zero and six throughout all experiments. The experimental results show a great linearity in terms of execution time in relation to input size when both and are larger than 100. For those experiments where or mare less than 100, the proposed algorithm runs very fast, in thousandth to hundredth of a second, on a personal desktop computer.