Comparison of multilocus sequence typing and Ca3 fingerprinting for molecular subtyping epidemiologically-related clinical isolates of Candida albicans

Chowdhary, Anuradha ; Lee-Yang, Wendy ; Lasker, Brent A. ; Brandt, Mary E. ; Warnock, David W. ; Arthington-Skaggs, Beth A. (2006) Comparison of multilocus sequence typing and Ca3 fingerprinting for molecular subtyping epidemiologically-related clinical isolates of Candida albicans Medical Mycology, 44 (5). pp. 405-417. ISSN 1369-3786

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1080/13693780600612230

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13693780600612230

Abstract

Southern hybridization with the complex probe Ca3 is a well established tool for molecular subtyping of Candida albicans. Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) is a DNA sequence-based subtyping method recently applied to C. albicans and shown to have a high degree of intraspecies discriminatory power. However, its utility for studying the molecular epidemiology of sequential isolates from recurrent disease has not been established. We compared Ca3 Southern hybridization and MLST using seven housekeeping genes (CaAAT1a, CaACC1, CaADP1, CaPMI, CaSYA1, CaVPS13, CaZWF1b) for their ability to discriminate among 37 C. albicans isolates from recurrent cases of oropharyngeal candidiasis (OPC) in ten HIV-positive patients from India and the US. Among the 37 isolates, MLST identified 23 distinct genotypes (index of diversity = 97%); Ca3 Southern hybridization identified 21 distinct genotypes (index of diversity = 95%). Both methods clustered isolates into seven genetically-related groups and, with one exception, isolates that were indistinguishable by MLST were indistinguishable or highly related by Ca3 Southern hybridization. These results demonstrate that MLST performs equally well or better compared to Ca3 Southern hybridization for defining genetic-relatedness of sequential C. albicans isolates from recurrent cases of OPC in HIV-positive patients.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Oxford University Press.
Keywords:Candida Albicans; Ca3 Fingerprinting; MLST; Molecular Epidemiology; Molecular Subtyping.
ID Code:117603
Deposited On:27 Apr 2021 12:11
Last Modified:27 Apr 2021 12:11

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