The only LPG wiring necessary to connect to original vehicle wiring are the petrol injector break wires and the ignition on wire. There are 16 LPG system petrol injector break wires, each of the 8 original petrol injector wires are cut and an injector break wire connects to each side of the cut. The ignition on wire is usually connected to the positive wire at one of the petrol injectors. There's no connection to TPS, there might be a connection to one or both of the front lambda sensor signal wires but (if so) this will just be a connection (the lambda wire won't be cut). Depending on which AC Stag ECU is fitted (and maybe which installer and how it is set up) there may be a wire connected to a coil pack. Then of course the LPG system needs a power supply so is usually connected directly to the battery. All the other LPG system wires are separate to original vehicle wiring.
Often the injector break wiring is connected close to the petrol injectors, especially on a Thor. On a Gems the injector break wiring might be near petrol injectors or might be near the petrol ECU since on Gems the ECU and it's harness are handy to access near the battery.
Wherever the petrol injector break wiring is connected it is easy to see which original wires were cut. For starters the original petrol injector wires that were cut are a different colour to each petrol injector, so you can match up and reconnect them on that basis. Secondly the 16 LPG system wires that are connected to petrol injector wiring are 8 different coloured pairs of wires, one of each pair is a solid colour, the other of the pair is the same colour with a black stripe, so even if petrol injector wires were all the same colour you could re-match and re-connect petrol injector wires on that basis.
No need to even fully disconnect the (red) ignition on wire, you could just cut that and isolate it, same with any wires connected to lambda sensors.
Why are you removing it @Strangerover?