Neha Patil (Editor)

Candidatus Carsonella ruddii

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Kingdom
  
Bacteria

Genus
  
Candidatus Carsonella

Higher classification
  
Candidatus Carsonella

Order
  
unclassified

Phylum
  
Proteobacteria

Rank
  
Species

Candidatus Carsonella ruddii schaechterasmblogorga6a00d8341c5e1453ef011570

Scientific name
  
Candidatus Carsonella ruddii

Similar
  
Bacteria, Buchnera aphidicola, Proteobacteria, Blochmannia, Wigglesworthia glossinidia

Candidatus Carsonella ruddii is an obligate endosymbiotic Gamma Proteobacterium with one of the smallest genomes of any characterised bacteria.

Contents

Endosymbiosis

The species is an endosymbiont that is present in all species of phloem sap-feeding insects known as psyllids. The endosymbionts occurs in a specialised structure known as the bacteriome.

C. ruddii is not completely parasitic in its relationship with its host insect, but it supplies the host with some essential amino acids. It is therefore probably in the evolutionary process of becoming an organelle, like the mitochondria of mammalian cells.

Genome

In 2006 the genome of Ca. C. ruddii strain Pv (Carsonella-Pv) of the hackberry petiole gall psyllid, Pachypsylla venusta, was sequenced at RIKEN in Japan and the University of Arizona. It was shown that the genome consists of a circular chromosome of 159,662 base pairs and that it has a high coding density (97%) with many overlapping genes and reduced gene length. The number of predicted genes was 182, also the lowest on record (NCBI-Genome). In comparison, Mycoplasma genitalium, which has the smallest genome of any free-living organism, has a genome of 521 genes. Numerous genes considered essential for life seem to be missing, suggesting that the species may have achieved organelle-like status.

At the time of its sequencing, C. ruddii was thought to have the smallest genome of any characterized bacterial species. Nasuia deltocephalinicola is now considered to have the known smallest bacterial genome (112kb).

C. ruddii and related species appear to be actively undergoing gene loss.

References

Candidatus Carsonella ruddii Wikipedia