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. 2013 Apr 1;51(3):300–308. doi: 10.3109/13693786.2012.723223

Table 2.

Comparison of species ID by three-locus sequencing, RLB and RCA amongst eight Trichosporon species studied.

Strain ID by three-locus sequencing* No. of isolates
(IGS1 genotype*)
Strain ID by RLB Strain ID by RCA
Trichosporon asahii 36 (4) T. asahii T. asahii
Trichosporon cutaneum 1 (1) T. cutaneum T. cutaneum
Trichosporon dermatis 1 (1) T. dermatis T. dermatis
Trichosporon domesticum 4 (1) T. domesticum T. domesticum
Trichosporon inkin 1 (1) T. inkin T. inkin
Trichosporon japonicum 2 (2) T. japonicum T. japonicum
Trichosporon jirovecii 2 (2) T. jirovecii T. jirovecii
Trichosporon laibachii 1 (1) T. laibachii T. laibachii

Abbreviations: ID, identification; IGS1, intergenic spacer 1 region; RLB, reverse line blot hybridization assay; RCA, rolling circle amplification. *Genotypes within species were further assigned based on IGS1 sequences as previously described [12]. †Identification of T. dermatis relied on obtaining a positive hybridization result with the group-specific probe which hybridizes with T. dermatis and T. jirovecii and subsequent absence of a RLB signal using a T. jirovecii-specific probe. Similarly, T. japonicum strains were first assigned to the T. asahii-T. japonicum group by hybridization with a combined T. asahii and T. japonicum group-specific probe and then as T. japonicum by absence of a probe signal with a T. asahii-specific probe (Figs. 1 and 2).