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Consensus Tree Under the Ancestor-Descendant Distance is NP-Hard.

Yuanyuan QiMohammed El-Kebir
Published in: Journal of computational biology : a journal of computational molecular cell biology (2023)
Due to uncertainty in tumor phylogeny inference from sequencing data, many methods infer multiple, equally plausible phylogenies for the same cancer. To summarize the solution space T of tumor phylogenies, consensus tree methods seek a single best representative tree S under a specified pairwise tree distance function. One such distance function is the ancestor-descendant (AD) distance [Formula: see text] , which equals the size of the symmetric difference of the transitive closures of the edge sets [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] . Here, we show that finding a consensus tree S for tumor phylogenies T that minimizes the total AD distance ∑ T ∈ T d ( S , T ) is NP-hard.
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