There is an increasing demand for fast and reliable methods to distinguish Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (M. paratuberculosis) from closely related mycobacteria and also a need for rapid strain specific typing of clinical isolates for epidemiological reasons. In the present study, the potential of rep-PCR as a fingerprinting method for M. paratuberculosis was assessed and compared to conventional RFLP A PCR assay was designed and optimised to obtain reproducible fingerprints of mycobacterial DNA with primers targeting the enterobacterial intergenic consensus (ERIC) sequence and the M. paratuberculosis specific insertion sequence IS900. Reproducible fingerprints were obtained with 60 strains of M. paratuberculosis, 16 strains of M. avium subsp. avium, 3 strains of M. intracellulare, and 11 other mycobacterial strains. A species-specific band pattern that was clearly distinguishable from that of other mycobacteria was obtained with M. paratuberculosis. The rep-PCR did not detect any differences among M. paratuberculosis strains of different RFLP types, and was therefore not considered as an alternative fingerprinting method. However, the species-specific band pattern make IS900/ERIC-PCR a suitable alternative for distinguishing M. paratuberculosis from other mycobacteria, especially in cases of IS900 PCR positive mycobacteria. The fingerprinting method reported was fast and easy to perform, and produced highly reproducible results. (C) 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.