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Insertions on Double Occurrence Words Motivated by DNA Rearrangement
Mathematical BiologySpeaker: | Margherita Ferrari, University of South Florida |
Related Webpage: | http://math.usf.edu/faculty/mmferrari/ |
Location: | Zoom |
Start time: | Mon, Feb 22 2021, 2:10PM |
A double occurrence word (DOW) is a word in which every symbol appears exactly twice; two DOWs are equivalent if one is a symbol-to-symbol image of the other. We consider the so called repeat pattern (αα) and the return pattern (ααR), with gaps allowed between the α’s. DOWs and repeat/return words have been used in studies of DNA rearrangement in certain species of ciliates. Motivated by the genome architecture of the ciliate Oxytricha trifallax, we introduce a notion of inserting repeat/return words into DOWs and study how two distinct insertions into the same word can produce equivalent DOWs. Given a DOW w, we characterize the structure of w which allows two distinct insertions to yield equivalent DOWs. This characterization depends on the locations of the insertions and on the length of the inserted repeat/return words and implies that when one inserted word is a repeat word and the other is a return word, then both words must be trivial (i.e., have only one symbol). The characterization also introduces a method to generate families of words recursively.
Contact Mariel Vazquez for any questions mrlvazquez@ucdavis.edu