Calculating The Likelihood Of A Phylogenetic Tree – Question About Explanation In “Inferring Phylogenies”
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14.1 years ago
Ehamberg ▴ 130

Hi, new user here. I originally posted this question on http://www.reddit.com/r/bioinformatics/ but it was suggested that I should ask here as well.

I'm currently implementing an algorithm for calculating the likelihood of a given phylogenetic tree. I'm reading chapter 16 in Joseph Felsenstein's Inferring Phylogenies which explains this rather nicely, but I am stumped by one thing and would like to hear if you can help me.

Given the following tree, T,

         x|
          /\
         /  \
        /    \
     t6/      \t8
      /        \
    y/         /\t7
    /\      t3/  \
 t1/  \t2    / t4/\t5
  /    \    /   /  \
 A      C  C   C    G

and an assumption that evolution in different lineages is independent, we get the following:

P(A,C,C,C,G,x,y,z,w|T) = P(x)×P(y|x,t6)×P(A|y,t1)×…×P(G|w,t5),

i.e. each probability is only dependent on what's above it and the branch length. Ok, so far, so good. But then he writes:

The probability of x may be taken to be the probability that, at a random point on an evolving lineage, we would see base x (where x = A, C, G, or T). If we are allowed to assume that evolution has been proceeding for a very long time according to the particular model of base substitution that we are using, it is reasonable to take P(x) to be the equilibrium probability of base x under that model. The other probabilities are derived from the model of base substitution.

What I really don't understand is the text I highlighted in bold. (The rest was included for context.) Why does he suddenly talk about “a random point on an evolving lineage” when the text is talking about the tree shown above? Am I simply reading to much into his formulation or have I missed anything?

It was suggested that “the probability of x” may simply refer to any of the P(…) terms and not to the hypothetical state in the tree above, but I still find the phrasing weird.

phylogenetics • 5.3k views
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14.1 years ago
Paulo Nuin ★ 3.7k

You have to understand that the x on this case is indeed a random point in a lineage. You don't have information of what came before the x, and in this case you might not have data or taxa before the x. The actual base on x would have to be calculated from the leaves of the tree, backwards, and if you add taxa and information that precedes the x on the tree you will determine that x but another one will appear earlier in the lineage.

As phylogenetic trees are a photograph of the evolutionary moment only, you will never be able to go back in the lineage to a point where all possible x are determined.

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nicely explained

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thanks! that makes sense. :-)

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