Typing of Clostridium difficile isolates endemic in Japan by sequencing of slpA and its application to direct typing Kato, Haru and Kato, Hideaki and Ito, Yoichiro and Akahane, Takayuki and Izumida, Sayuri and Yokoyama, Toshiyuki and Kaji, Chiharu and Arakawa, Yoshichika,, 59, 556-562 (2010), doi = https://doi.org/10.1099/jmm.0.016147-0, publicationName = Microbiology Society, issn = 0022-2615, abstract= A typing system for Clostridium difficile using sequencing of the surface-layer protein A encoding gene (slpA) was evaluated and used to analyse clinical isolates in Japan. A total of 160 stool specimens from symptomatic patients in Japan was examined and 87 C. difficile isolates were recovered. slpA sequence typing was found to have reliable typability and discriminatory power in comparison with PCR ribotyping, and the typing results were highly reproducible and comparable. slpA sequence typing was used to type C. difficile in DNA extracted directly from stool specimens. Among the 90 stool specimens in which direct typing results were obtained, 77 specimens were positive for C. difficile culture, and typing results from isolated strains agreed with those from direct typing in all 77 specimens. The slpA sequence type smz was dominant at all four hospitals examined, and this endemic type was detected by culture and/or direct typing in 61 (62 %) of 99 stool specimens positive for toxic culture and/or direct slpA sequence typing. Comparison of epidemic strains reported throughout the world revealed one isolate identified as slpA sequence type gc8, which was found to correspond to PCR ribotype 027 (BI/NAP1/027), whereas no isolates were found with the slpA gene identical to that of PCR ribotype 078 strain. slpA sequence typing is valuable for comparison of C. difficile strains epidemic in diverse areas because the typing results are reproducible and can easily be shared. In addition, slpA sequence typing could be applied to direct typing without culture., language=, type=