The genome of the giant Nomura’s jellyfish sheds light on the early evolution of active predation

Background Unique among cnidarians, jellyfish have remarkable morphological and biochemical innovations that allow them to actively hunt in the water column and were some of the first animals to become free-swimming. The class Scyphozoa, or true jellyfish, are characterized by a predominant medusa life-stage consisting of a bell and venomous tentacles used for hunting and defense, as well as using pulsed jet propulsion for mobility. Here, we present the genome of the giant Nomura’s jellyfish (Nemopilema nomurai) to understand the genetic basis of these key innovations. Results We sequenced the genome and transcriptomes of the bell and tentacles of the giant Nomura’s jellyfish as well as transcriptomes across tissues and developmental stages of the Sanderia malayensis jellyfish. Analyses of the Nemopilema and other cnidarian genomes revealed adaptations associated with swimming, marked by codon bias in muscle contraction and expansion of neurotransmitter genes, along with expanded Myosin type II family and venom domains, possibly contributing to jellyfish mobility and active predation. We also identified gene family expansions of Wnt and posterior Hox genes and discovered the important role of retinoic acid signaling in this ancient lineage of metazoans, which together may be related to the unique jellyfish body plan (medusa formation). Conclusions Taken together, the Nemopilema jellyfish genome and transcriptomes genetically confirm their unique morphological and physiological traits, which may have contributed to the success of jellyfish as early multi-cellular predators. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1186/s12915-019-0643-7) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.


Background
Cnidarians, including jellyfish and their predominantly sessile relatives the coral, sea anemone, and hydra, first appeared in the Precambrian Era and are now key members of aquatic ecosystems worldwide (Fig. 1a) [1]. Between 500 and 700 million years ago, jellyfish developed novel physiological traits that allowed them to become one of the first free-swimming predators. The life cycle of the jellyfish includes a small polypoid, sessile stage which reproduces asexually to form the mobile medusa form that can reproduce both sexually and asexually (Fig. 1c) [2]. The class Scyphozoa, or true jellyfish, are characterized by a predominant medusa life-stage consisting of a bell and venomous tentacles used for hunting and defense [3]. Jellyfish medusae feature a radially symmetric body structure, powered by readily identifiable cell types such as motor neurons and striated muscles that expand and contract to create the most energy-efficient swimming method in the animal kingdom [4,5]. Over 95% water, jellyfish are osmoconformers that use ion gradients to deliver solutes to cells and tissues where sodium and calcium ions activate the muscle contractions that power their propulsion. Notably, many jellyfish species can survive in habitats with varying levels of salinity and are successful in low-oxygen environments, allowing them to bloom even in dead zones [6]. These innovations have allowed them to colonize aquatic habitats across the globe in both brackish and marine environments, spanning the shallow surface waters to the depths of the seas.

Jellyfish genome assembly and annotation
Here, we present the first de novo genome assembly of the Nomura's jellyfish (Nemopilema nomurai; Fig. 1b). It resulted in a 213-Mb genome comprised of 255 scaffolds and an N50 length of 2.71 Mb, containing only 1.48% gaps (Additional file 1: Tables S2 and S3). The Nemopilema hybrid assembly was created using a combination of short and long read sequencing technologies, consisting of 38.  Tables S4-S7). The resulting assembly shows the longest continuity among cnidarian genomes (Additional file 1: Table S9). We predicted 18,962 protein-coding jellyfish genes by combining de novo (using medusa bell and tentacle tissue transcriptomes) and homologous gene prediction methods (Additional file 1: Tables S10 and S11, Additional files 2 and 3). This process recovered the highest number of single-copy orthologous genes [7] among all published non-bilaterian metazoan genome assemblies to date (Additional file 1: Table S12). A total of 21.07% of the jellyfish genome was found to be made up of transposable elements, compared to those of Acropora digitifera (9.45%), Nematostella vectensis (33.63%), and Hydra vulgaris (42.87%) (Additional file 1: Table S13).
We compared the Nemopilema genome to other cnidarian genomes, including the recently published Aurelia aurita [8] and Clytia hemisphaerica genomes [9], all of which are from predominantly sessile taxa, to detect unique Scyphozoa function (active mobility), physical structure (medusa bell), and chemistry (venom). We also performed transcriptome analyses of both Nemopilema nomurai and the Sanderia malayensis jellyfish across three medusa tissue types and four developmental stages.

Evolutionary analysis of the jellyfish
To identify jellyfish-specific evolutionary traits, we examined gene family expansions and contractions across one unicellular holozoan and 13 metazoans using 18,458 orthologous gene families (see Additional file 1: Section 4.1). Of these, 10,434 were found in Nemopilema and 6764 were shared by all three available cnidarian classes (Scyphozoa: Nemopilema nomurai and Aurelia aurita; Hydrozoa: Hydra vulgaris [10], Clytia hemisphaerica; Anthozoa: Acropora digitifera [11] and Nematostella vectensis [12]; Fig. 2a). A phylogeny constructed using these orthologs revealed a monophyletic cnidarian clade that diverged from the metazoan stem prior to the evolution of the bilaterians ( Fig. 2b; Additional file 1: Figure S7). To determine how many genes appeared in every evolutionary era in the genome of Nomura's jellyfish, we also evaluated the evolutionary age of the protein-coding genes. Grouping jellyfish genes into three broad evolutionary eras, we observed that while the majority (80%) of genes are ancient (older than 741 Mya), a few (~3%) are of an intermediate age (741-239 Mya), and some (17%) are young (239 Mya to present; Fig. 2c; Additional file 1: Figure S10). Interestingly, normalizing the number of genes by the age and length of evolutionary era suggests that gene turnover is highest near the present time. In total, the Nemopilema genome contained 123 expanded and 164 contracted gene families compared to the common ancestor of Nemopilema and Aurelia ( Fig. 2b; see Additional file 1: Section 4.2). Gene Ontology (GO) terms related to sensory perception were under-represented in the Cnidaria lineage compared to Bilateria, accurately reflecting cnidarian's less complex sensory system (Additional file 1: Tables S14 and S15). However, neurotransmitter transport (GO:0006836, P = 6.01E− 10) was significantly enriched in Scyphozoa lineage compared to the common ancestor of Scyphozoa and Hydrozoa (Additional file 1: Tables S16 and S17), likely due to the balance and visual structures, such as the statocyst and ocelli, that are more elaborate in the mobile medusa than in sessile polyps [13]. Compared to the common ancestor of Nemopilema and Aurelia, Nemopilema showed expanded gene families associated with metallopeptidase activities (GO:0008237, P = 2.86E− 14; Additional file 1: Tables S18 and S19). Additionally, we found 1589 orthologous gene families that are specific to Scyphozoa. Enrichment tests of scyphozoan-specific genes showed the terms of sodium ion transport, ion channel activity, and neurotransmitter receptor activity (Additional file 1: Table S20).

Genomic context and muscle-associated genes
Jellyfish have two primary muscle types: the epitheliomuscular cells, which are the predominant muscle cells found in sessile cnidarians, and the striated muscle cells located in the medusa bell that are essential for swimming. To understand the evolution of active-swimming in jellyfish, we examined their codon bias compared to other metazoans by calculating the guanine and cytosine content at the third codon position (GC3) [14,15] (Additional file 1: Figure  S13). It has been suggested that genes with high level of GC3 are more adaptable to external stresses (e.g., environmental changes) [16]. Among the high-scoring top 100 GC3 biased genes, the regulation of muscle contraction, and neuropeptide signaling pathways, GO terms were specific to Nemopilema (Additional file 4: Tables S25 and  S26). Calcium plays a key role in the striated muscle contraction in jellyfish, and the calcium signaling pathway (GO:0004020, P = 5.60E− 10) showed a high level of GC3 biases specific to Nemopilema. Nemopilema and Aurelia top 500 GC3 genes were enriched in GO terms associated with homeostasis (e.g., cellular chemical homeostasis and sodium ion transport), which we speculate is essential for the activation of muscle contractions that power the jellyfish's mobile predation (Additional file 1: Section 5.1; Additional file 4: Tables S27 and S28). Since cnidarians have been reported to lack titin and troponin complexes, which are critical components of bilaterian striated muscles, it has been suggested that the two clades independently evolved striated muscles [17]. A survey of genes that encode muscle structural and regulatory proteins in cnidarians showed a conserved eumetazoan core actin-myosin contractile machinery shared with bilaterians (Additional file 1: Table  S32). However, like other cnidarians, Nemopilema lacks titin and troponin complexes, which are key components of bilaterian striated muscles. Also, γ-syntrophin, a component of the dystroglycan complex, was absent in Nemopilema, Aurelia, and Hydra. However, Nemopilema and Aurelia do possess α/β-Dystrobrevin and α/ ε-Sarcoglycan dystroglycan-associated costamere proteins, indicating that several components of the dystroglycan complex were lost after the Scyphozoa-Hydrozoa split. It was suggested that Hydra undergone secondary simplifications relative to Nematostella, which has a greater degree of muscle-cell-type specialization [10]. Compared to Hydra and Nematostella, Nemopilema and Aurelia show intermediate complexity of muscle structural and regulatory proteins between Hydra and Nematostella.

Medusa bell and tentacle transcriptome profiling
Jellyfish medusa bell and tentacles are morphologically distinct and perform discrete physiological functions [18,19]. We generated bell and tentacle transcriptomes from Nemopilema and the smaller Sanderia malayensis, which can be grown in the laboratory, to assess developmental regulation (Additional file 1: Table S29). Enrichment tests of highly expressed genes showed that muscle-associated functional categories (e.g., muscle myosin complex and muscle tissue morphogenesis) were enriched in the bell (  Fig. 3 Gene expression patterns of medusa bell and tentacle tissues and expansion of myosin heavy chain genes in jellyfish. a P value heatmap of enriched GO categories using highly expressed genes in medusa bell tissue. Greater than twofold and fourfold higher expression in medusa bell than tentacles are shown in each column. Only shared GO categories between N. nomurai and S. malayensis are shown. b P value heatmap of enriched GO categories using highly expressed genes in tentacle tissue. c Unrooted JTT model tree of myosin heavy chain genes using BLAST best hit method. d Expression pattern of MYH and MYL genes in Nemopilema. Genes that are not expressed in both tentacles and medusa bell were excluded S30-S33). Myosins comprise a superfamily of motor proteins and play a critical role in muscle contraction and are involved in a wide range of motility processes in Eukaryotes. Critically, the Myosin II family proteins, found in cells of both striated muscle tissue and smooth muscle tissue, are responsible for producing contraction in muscle cells [20]. Cnidarians possess both epitheliomuscular cells and striated muscle cells. Striated muscle is a critical component of the subumbrella of the medusa bell, where its fast contractions power the unique propulsion-based swimming of the jellyfish. We found that type II Myosin heavy chain (MYH) and Myosin light chain (MYL) gene families were highly expressed in the bell and are closely associated with striated and smooth muscle cells [17]. Interestingly, Nemopilema and Aurelia showed the largest copy numbers of MYH and MYL genes among non-bilaterian metazoans ( Fig. 3c; Additional file 1: Figures S14-S17; Tables S38-40), and six of the seven MYH genes and 12 out of 21 MYL genes in Nemopilema showed higher expression in the bell than the tentacles with very high~8.8 and~17-fold increase on average, respectively (Fig. 3d). These results suggest that the combinations of copy number expansion of type II Myosin gene families and high expression of muscle-associated genes confirmed that muscles in medusa bell are an important determinant of jellyfish motility.
Conversely, gene expression analyses of the tentacles revealed high RNA expression levels of neurotransmitter-associated functional categories (ion channel complex, postsynapse, and neurotransmitter receptor activity; Fig. 3b; Additional file 5: Tables S34-S37); consistent with the anatomy of jellyfish tentacles, which contain the sensory cells and a loose plexus of the neuronal subpopulation at the base of the ectoderm [21].

Body patterning in the jellyfish
There has been much debate surrounding the early evolution of body patterning in the metazoan common ancestor, particularly concerning the origin and expansion of Hox and Wnt gene families [22][23][24]. In total, 83 homeodomains were found in Nemopilema, while 82, 41, 120, and 148 of homeodomains were found from Aurelia, Hydra, Acropora, and Nematostella, respectively (Additional file 1: Table S41). Five of the eight Hox genes in Nemopilema are of the posterior type that are associated with aboral axis development [24] and clustered with Nematostella's posterior Hox genes, HOXE and HOXF (Additional file 1: Figures S18-S20). Aurelia has six posterior type Hox genes, but does not have the HOXB, C, and D type (HOX2 in humans). Though absent in Hydra and Acropora, synteny analyses of Para-Hox genes in Nemopilema show that the XLOX/CDX gene is located immediately downstream of GSX in the same tandem orientation as those in Nematostella, suggesting that XLOX/CDX was present in the cnidarian common ancestor and subsequently lost in some lineages (Additional file 1: Figure S21). Hox-related genes, EVX and EMX, are also present in Nemopilema and Aurelia, although they are absent in Hydra. Given the large amount of ancestral diversity in the Wnt genes, it has been proposed that Wnt signaling controlled body plan development in the early metazoans [25]. Nemopilema possesses 13 Wnt orthologs representing 10 Wnt subfamilies (Additional file1: Figure S22; Table S42). Wnt9 is absent from all cnidarians, likely representing losses in the cnidarian common ancestor. Cnidarians have undergone dynamic lineage-specific Wnt subfamily duplications, such as Wnt8 (Nematostella, Acropora, and Aurelia), Wnt10 (Hydra), and Wnt11, and Wnt16 (Nemopilema and Aurelia). It has been proposed that a common cluster of Wnt genes (Wnt1-Wnt6-Wnt10) existed in the last common ancestor of arthropods and deuterostomes [26]. Our analyses of cnidarian and bilaterian genomes revealed that Acropora also possess this cluster, while Nemopilema, Aurelia, and Hydra are missing Wnt6, suggesting loss of the Wnt6 gene in the Medusozoa common ancestor (Additional file 1: Figure  S23). Taken together, the jellyfish have comparable number of Hox and Wnt genes to other cnidarians, but the dynamic repertoire of these gene families suggests that cnidarians have evolved independently to adapt their physiological characteristics and life cycle.

Polyp to medusa transition in jellyfish
The polyp-to-medusa transition is prominent in jellyfish compared to the other sessile cnidarians. To understand the genetic basis of the medusa structure formation in the jellyfish, we compared transcriptional regulation between cnidarians and across jellyfish developmental stages (see Additional file 1: Sections 7.1 and 7.2). We assembled the Sanderia transcripts using six pooled samples of transcriptomes (Additional file 1: Table S43). The assembled transcripts had a total length of 61 Mb and resulted in 58,290 transcript isoforms and 43,541 unique transcripts, with a N50 of 2325 bp. On average, 87% of the RNA reads were aligned to into the assembled transcripts (Additional file 1: Table S44), indicating that the transcript assembly represented the majority of sequenced reads. Furthermore, the composition of the protein domains contained in the top 20 ranks was quite similar between Nemopilema and Sanderia (Additional file 1: Table S45). To obtain differentially expressed genes for each stage, we compared each stage with the previous or next stage in the life cycle of the jellyfish. The polyp stage, which represents a sessile stage in the jellyfish life cycle, showed enriched terms related to ion channel activity and energy metabolism (regulation of metabolic process, and amino sugar metabolic process; Additional file 1: Table S46). Active feeding in the polyp stimulates asexual proliferation either into more polyps or metamorphosis to strobila [27]. Since anthozoans do not form a medusa, the strobila asexual reproductive stage is an important stage in which to study the metamorphosis from polyp to medusa. In this stage, GO terms related to amide biosynthetic and metabolic process were highly expressed compared to the polyp stage (Additional file 1: Table S47). It has been reported that RF-amide and LW-amide neuropeptides were associated with metamorphosis in cnidarians [28][29][30]. However, we could not confirm this finding in our strobila and ephyra stage comparisons. In our system, the gene expression patterns of the two stages are quite similar. In the ephyra, the released mobile stage, GO terms involving amide biosynthetic and metabolic process were also highly expressed compared to the merged medusa stage (Additional file 1: Table S48). In the medusa, extracellular matrix, metallopeptidase activity, and immune system process terms were enriched (Additional file 1: Table S49), consistent with the physiology of their bell, tentacles, and oral arm tissue types.
Polyp-to-medusa metamorphosis was previously shown to be strongly associated with CL390 and retinoid X receptor (RXR) genes in the Aurelia aurita jellyfish [31]. Interestingly, CL390 was not found in Nemopilema or other published cnidarians, suggesting that it may be an Aurelia-specific strobilation inducer gene. However, we confirm that RXR is present in Nemopilema and absent from cnidarians without a medusa stage (Additional file 1: Figure S24). Retinoic acid (RA) signaling plays a central role during vertebrate growth and development [32], where it regulates transcription by interacting with the RA receptor (RAR) bound to RA response elements (RAREs) of nearby target genes [33]. Of the genes in the RA signaling pathway, Nemopilema possess ADH and RALDH enzymes that metabolize retinol to RA, and RXR and RAREs to activate transcription of the target gene (Fig. 4a). We discovered 1630 Nemopilema RARE regions with an average distance of 13 Kbp to the nearest gene ( Fig. 4b; Additional file 1: Tables S50 and  S51). Interestingly, four posterior Hox genes of Nemopilema and two Hox genes of Aurelia were located within ± 10 Kbp from RAREs, which is unique among the non-bilaterian metazoans ( Fig. 4c; Additional file 1: Table S52). Together, these findings suggest that retinoic acid signaling was present in early metazoans for regulating target genes with RXR and RAREs and that RXR and RAREs may play a critical role for polyp-to-medusa metamorphosis [31].

Identification of toxin-related domains in jellyfish
Jellyfish produce complex mixtures of proteinaceous venoms for active prey capture and defense [34]. We identified abundant toxin domains in Nemopilema when compared to the non-bilaterian metazoan gene sets in the Tox-Prot database [35]. In total, 67 out of 136 toxin domains aligned to non-bilaterian metazoans; of these 67 toxin domains, 52 were found in Nemopilema (Additional file 1: Table S53). Expectedly, the Nemopilema genome contains the largest number of venom or toxin-associated domains of the included non-bilaterian metazoans. These domains include Reprolysin (M12B) family zinc metalloprotease (PF01421), phospholipase A 2 (PF05826), and Prokineticin (PF06607) domains (Fig. 5). Also, Nemopilema and Aurelia possess 8 and 11 ShK domain-like (PF01549) domains, respectively, which are the most abundant in these species compared to other non-bilaterians. In particular, Reprolysin (M12B) family zinc metalloproteases are enzymes that cleave peptides and comprise most snake venom endopeptidases [36]. Furthermore, it has been reported that serine protease inhibitor and ShK domains were abundantly found in the transcriptomes of both the cannonball jellyfish (Stomolophus meleagris) and the box jellyfish (Chironex fleckeri) [37,38], and phospholipase A 2 is a well-characterized toxin-related enzyme, which is critical to the production of venom components, found in the class Scyphozoa [39].

Conclusions
An interesting branch on the tree of life, jellyfish have evolved remarkable morphological and biochemical innovations that allow them to actively hunt using pulsed jet propulsion and venomous tentacles. While the expansion and contraction of distinct families reflect the adaptation to salinity and predation and the convergent evolution of muscle elements, the Nemopilema genome strikes a balance between the conservation of many ancient genes and an innovative potential reflected in significant number of new genes that appeared since Rhizostomeae emerged. The Nemopilema nomurai genome has provided clues to the genetic basis of the innovative structure, function, and chemistry that have allowed this distinctive early group of predators to colonize the waters of the globe.  Illumina short reads (~400 bp insert-size) to the MT-COI gene of Chrysaora quinquecirrha (NC_020459.1), Cassiopea frondosa (NC_016466.1), Craspedacusta sowerbyi (NC_018537.1), and Aurelia aurita (NC_008446.1) jellyfish with BWA-MEM aligner [40]. Consensus sequences for each jellyfish were generated using SAMtools [41]. The consensus sequence from C. sowerbyi was excluded due to low coverage. We conducted multiple sequence alignment using MUSCLE [42] and ran the MEGA v7 [43] neighbor joining phylogenetic tree (gamma distribution) with 1000 bootstrap replicates. Mitochondrial DNA phylogenetic analyses confirmed the identification of the Nemopilema sample as Nemopilema nomurai.

Genome sequencing and scaffold assembly
For the de novo assembly of Nemopilema, PacBio SMRT and five Illumina DNA libraries with various insert sizes (400 bp, 5 Kb, 10 Kb, 15 Kb, and 20 Kb) were constructed according to the manufacturers' protocols. The Illumina libraries were sequenced using a HiSeq2500 with a read length of 100 bp (400 bp, 15 Kb, and 20 Kb) and a HiSeq2000 with a read length of 101 bp (5 Kb and 10 Kb). Quality filtered PacBio subreads were assembled into distinct contigs using the FALCON assembler [44] with various read length cutoffs. To extend contigs to scaffolds, we aligned the Illumina long mate-pair libraries (5 Kb, 10 Kb, 15 Kb, and 20 Kb) to contig sets and extended the contigs using SSPACE [45]. Gaps generated by SSPACE were filled by aligning the Illumina short-insert paired-end sequences using GapCloser [46]. We also generated TSLRs using an Illumina HiSeq2000, which were aligned to scaffolds to correct erroneous sequences and to close gaps using an in-house script. Detailed genome sequencing and assembly process are provided in Additional file 1: Section 2.2.

Genome annotation
The jellyfish genome was annotated for protein-coding genes and repetitive elements. We predicted protein-coding genes using a two-step process, with both homology-and evidence-based prediction. Protein sequences of the sea anemone, hydra, sponge, human, mouse, and fruit fly from the NCBI database and Cnidaria protein sequences from the NCBI Entrez protein database were used for homology-based gene prediction. Two tissue transcriptomes from Nemopilema were used for evidence-based gene prediction via AUGUSTUS [47]. Final Nemopilema protein-coding genes were determined using AUGUSTUS with exon (from the homology-based gene prediction) and intron (from the evidence-based gene prediction) hints. Repetitive elements were also predicted using Tandem Repeats Finder [48] and RepeatMasker [49]. Details of the annotation process are provided in Additional file 1: Sections 3.1 and 3.2.

Gene age estimation
Phylostratigraphy employs BLASTP-scored sequence similarity to estimate the minimal age of every protein-coding gene. The protein sequence is used to query the NCBI non-redundant database and detect the most distant species in which a sufficiently similar sequence is present inferring that the gene is at least as old as the age of the common ancestor [50]. For every species, we use the NCBI taxonomy. The timing of most divergence events is estimated using TimeTree [51] and the Encyclopedia of Life [52]. To facilitate detection of sequence similarity, we use the e value threshold of 10 −3 . We evaluate the age of all proteins whose length is equal or greater than 40 amino acids. We count the number of genes in each phylostratum, from the most ancient (PS 1) to the newest (PS 11). To see broad evolutionary patterns, we aggregate the counts from several phylostrata into three broad evolutionary eras: ancient (PS 1-5, cellular organisms to Eumetazoa, 4204 Mya to 741 Mya), middle (PS 6-7, Cnidaria to Scyphozoa, 741 Mya to 239 Mya), and young (PS 8-11, Rhizostomeae to Nemopilema nomurai, 239 Mya to present).

Transcriptome sequencing and expression profiling
Illumina RNA libraries from Nemopilema nomurai and Sanderia malayensis were sequenced using a HiSeq2500 with 100-bp read lengths. Since there is not a reference genome for S. malayensis, we de novo assembled a pooled six RNA-seq read set using the Trinity assembler [57]. Quality filtered RNA reads from Nemopilema and Sanderia were aligned to the Nemopilema genome assembly and the assembled transcripts, respectively, using the TopHat [58] program. Expression values were calculated by the Fragments Per Kilobase Of Exon Per Million Fragments Mapped (FPKM) method using Cufflinks [58], and differentially expressed genes were identified by DEGseq [59]. Details of the transcriptome analysis are presented in Additional file 1: Sections 5.2 and 7.1.

Hox and ParaHox analyses
We examined the homeodomain regions in Nemopilema using the InterProScan program. Hox and ParaHox genes were identified in Nemopilema by aligning the homeodomain sequences of human and fruit fly to the identified Nemopilema homeodomains. We considered only domains that were aligned to both the human and fruit fly. We also used this process for Acropora, Hydra, and Nematostella for comparison. Additionally, we added one Hox gene for Acropora and two Hox genes for Hydra, which are absent in the NCBI gene set, though they were present in previous studies [23,60]. Hox and ParaHox genes of Clytia hemisphaerica, a hydrozoan species with a medusa stage, were also added based on a previous study [61]. Finally, a multiple sequence alignment of these domains was conducted using MUSCLE, and a FastTree [62] maximum likelihood phylogeny was generated using the Jones-Taylor-Thornton (JTT) model with gamma option.

Wnt gene subfamily analyses
Wnt genes of Nematostella and Hydra were downloaded from previous studies [25,63], and those of Acropora were downloaded from the NCBI database. Wnt genes in Nemopilema and Aurelia were identified using the Pfam database by searching for "wnt family" domains. A multiple sequence alignment of Wnt genes was conducted using MUSCLE, and aligned sequences were trimmed using the trimAl program [64] with "gappyout" option. A phylogenetic tree was generated using RAxML with the PROTGAMMAJTT model and 100 bootstraps.
Further information, including sample preparation, assembly, genome annotation, and evolutionary analyses, can be found in Additional file 1 .