The phylum Bryozoa is an understudied, yet commonly-occurring, globally distributed bilaterian metazoan organismal group. They have a colonial lifestyle and an evolutionary history that spans at least 480 million years but likely longer. Despite their contentious phylogenetic affinities among metazoans, disproportionately few genomic investigations have been performed thus far. Here, we describe the first chromosome-level genome assembly of an individual Flustra foliacea colony belonging to the order Cheilostomatida, collected in southern Norway. The haplotype-resolved assembly of F. foliacea contains two pseudo-haplotypes spanning 956 megabases and 880 megabases, respectively. Both assemblies are highly complete both in terms of scaffolding (>90% of sequences placed in 8 autosomal chromosomal pseudomolecules), and gene content (BUSCO completeness scores > 90%). We also present gene and repeat annotations of the two assemblies. A comparison of our newly sequenced F. foliacea with five previously published bryozoan genomes supports the hypothesis that the group has undergone extensive genome rearrangements. This includes multiple chromosomal fusions in F. foliacea since their split with other cheilostome bryozoans. These fusions were enriched with long terminal repeat (LTR) retrotransposons, highlighting the complex interplay between genome organization and genomic repeats. Our study contributes to a deeper understanding of bryozoan genome evolution and the role of repeats in metazoan genome organization.
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H T Baalsrud
University of Oslo
O K Tørresen
University of Oslo
Bram Danneels
University of Bergen
Journal of Heredity
University of Oslo
University of Bergen
Natural History Museum
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Baalsrud et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a1350eed1d949a99abe91c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/jhered/esag013