The genome of the obligate intracellular pathogen Coxiella burnetii contains a large number of selfish genetic elements, including two group I introns (Cbu.L1917 and Cbu.L1951) and an intervening sequence that interrupts the 23S rRNA gene, an intein (Cbu.DnaB) within dnaB and 29 insertion sequences. Here, we describe the ability of the intron-encoded RNAs (ribozymes) to retard bacterial growth rate (toxicity) and examine the functionality and phylogenetic history of Cbu.DnaB. When expressed in Escherichia coli, both introns repressed growth, with Cbu.L1917 being more inhibitory. Both ribozymes were found to associate with ribosomes of Coxiella and E. coli. In addition, ribozymes significantly reduced in vitro luciferase translation, again with Cbu.L1917 being more inhibitory. We analyzed the relative quantities of ribozymes and genomes throughout a 14-day growth cycle of C. burnetii and found that they were inversely correlated, suggesting that the ribozymes have a negative effect on Coxiella's growth. We determined possible sites for ribozyme associations with 23S rRNA that could explain the observed toxicities. Further research is needed to determine whether the introns are being positively selected because they promote bacterial persistence or whether they were fixed in the population due to genetic drift. The intein, Cbu.DnaB, is able to self-splice, leaving the host protein intact and presumably functional. Similar inteins have been found in two extremophilic bacteria (Alkalilimnicola ehrlichei and Halorhodospira halophila) that are distantly related to Coxiella, making it difficult to determine whether the intein was acquired by horizontal gene transfer or was vertically inherited from a common ancestor.Bacterial genomes are in a constant state of flux. Bacteria gain new DNA through horizontal gene transfer (HGT), whereas nucleotide deletion results in loss of DNA (54). While environmental bacteria often have large genomes (e.g., Pseudomonas aeruginosa, ϳ6 Mb) that contain a large number of elements acquired through HGT, host-associated bacteria have relatively smaller genomes (e.g., Rickettsia rickettsii, ϳ1.2 Mb; Chlamydophila abortus, ϳ1.1 Mb) with little or no DNA of foreign origin (18,72). The advent of wholegenome sequencing has facilitated the detailed comparative analyses of obligate intracellular bacterial genomes, leading to identification of factors such as the prevalence of pseudogenes and insertion sequences that can be used to distinguish early adapters from bacteria that have shifted recently from a freeliving to a host-restricted lifestyle (48). A relevant case is the obligate intracellular pathogen Coxiella burnetii, whose genome was found to be undergoing reductive evolution and to contain a large number of selfish genetic elements and "young" pseudogenes, suggesting a recent shift to its current niche (66).C. burnetii, a purple bacterium of the gamma subdivision, is the causative agent of Q fever (12). Most human infections are acquired through inhalation of contaminated aerosols of anim...