Finding approximate and constrained motifs in graphs

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Abstract

One of the emerging topics in the analysis of biological networks is the inference of motifs inside a network. In the context of metabolic network analysis, a recent approach introduced in [14], represents the network as a vertex-colored graph, while a motif is represented as a multiset of colors. An occurrence of a motif in a vertex-colored graph G is a connected induced subgraph of G whose vertex set is colored exactly as . We investigate three different variants of the initial problem. The first two variants, Min-Add and Min-Substitute, deal with approximate occurrences of a motif in the graph, while the third variant, Constrained Graph Motif (or CGM for short), constrains the motif to contain a given set of vertices. We investigate the classical and parameterized complexity of the three problems. We show that Min-Add and Min-Substitute are NP-hard, even when is a set, and the graph is a tree of degree bounded by 4 in which each color appears at most twice. Moreover, we show that Min-Substitute is in FPT when parameterized by the size of . Finally, we consider the parameterized complexity of the CGM problem, and we give a fixed-parameter algorithm for graphs of bounded treewidth, while we show that the problem is W[2]-hard, even if the input graph has diameter 2. © 2011 Springer-Verlag.

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Dondi, R., Fertin, G., & Vialette, S. (2011). Finding approximate and constrained motifs in graphs. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 6661 LNCS, pp. 388–401). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-21458-5_33

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