AbstractWe consider a graph-theoretical formalization of the process of gene assembly in ciliates introduced in Ehrenfeucht et al. (2003) [3], where a gene is modeled as a signed graph. The gene assembly, based on three types of operations only, is then modeled as a graph reduction process (to the empty graph). Motivated by the robustness of the gene assembly process, the notions of parallel reduction and parallel complexity of signed graphs have been considered in Harju et al. (2006) [7]. We describe in this paper an exact algorithm for computing the parallel complexity of a given signed graph and for finding an optimal parallel reduction for it. Checking the parallel applicability of a given set of operations and scanning all possible sel...
Summary. Gene assembly in ciliates is a life process fascinating from both the biological and the co...
Since the publication of the human genome in 2001, the price and the time of DNA sequencing have dro...
Assembling genomic sequences from a set of overlapping reads is one of the most fundamental problems...
AbstractWe consider a graph-theoretical formalization of the process of gene assembly in ciliates in...
AbstractWe consider a graph-based model for the process of gene assembly in ciliates, as proposed in...
AbstractWe study parallel complexity of signed graphs motivated by the highly complex genetic recomb...
AbstractWe investigate some differences between the general intramolecular model for gene assembly a...
AbstractWe present in this paper a graph theoretical model of gene assembly, where (segments of) gen...
AbstractThe simple intramolecular model for gene assembly in ciliates is particularly interesting be...
AbstractDNA processing in ciliates, a very ancient group of organisms, is among the most sophisticat...
The simple intramolecular model for gene assembly in ciliates consists of three molecular operations...
AbstractThe intramolecular model for gene assembly in ciliates considers three operations, ld, hi, a...
AbstractThe concept of breakpoint graph, known from the theory of sorting by reversal, has been succ...
Motivated by genome rearrangements that take place in some species of ciliates we introduce a combin...
AbstractThe simple intramolecular model for gene assembly in ciliates consists of three molecular op...
Summary. Gene assembly in ciliates is a life process fascinating from both the biological and the co...
Since the publication of the human genome in 2001, the price and the time of DNA sequencing have dro...
Assembling genomic sequences from a set of overlapping reads is one of the most fundamental problems...
AbstractWe consider a graph-theoretical formalization of the process of gene assembly in ciliates in...
AbstractWe consider a graph-based model for the process of gene assembly in ciliates, as proposed in...
AbstractWe study parallel complexity of signed graphs motivated by the highly complex genetic recomb...
AbstractWe investigate some differences between the general intramolecular model for gene assembly a...
AbstractWe present in this paper a graph theoretical model of gene assembly, where (segments of) gen...
AbstractThe simple intramolecular model for gene assembly in ciliates is particularly interesting be...
AbstractDNA processing in ciliates, a very ancient group of organisms, is among the most sophisticat...
The simple intramolecular model for gene assembly in ciliates consists of three molecular operations...
AbstractThe intramolecular model for gene assembly in ciliates considers three operations, ld, hi, a...
AbstractThe concept of breakpoint graph, known from the theory of sorting by reversal, has been succ...
Motivated by genome rearrangements that take place in some species of ciliates we introduce a combin...
AbstractThe simple intramolecular model for gene assembly in ciliates consists of three molecular op...
Summary. Gene assembly in ciliates is a life process fascinating from both the biological and the co...
Since the publication of the human genome in 2001, the price and the time of DNA sequencing have dro...
Assembling genomic sequences from a set of overlapping reads is one of the most fundamental problems...