Novel Wine Yeast for Improved Utilisation of Proline during Fermentation

Proline is the predominant amino acid in grape juice, but it is poorly assimilated by wine yeast under the anaerobic conditions typical of most fermentations. Exploiting the abundance of this naturally occurring nitrogen source to overcome the need for nitrogen supplementation and/or the risk of stu...

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Main Authors: Danfeng Long, Kerry L. Wilkinson, Dennis K. Taylor, Vladimir Jiranek
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-02-01
Series:Fermentation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2311-5637/4/1/10
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spelling doaj-a450096f595d4025b88990e38cdc89f42020-11-24T23:38:03ZengMDPI AGFermentation2311-56372018-02-01411010.3390/fermentation4010010fermentation4010010Novel Wine Yeast for Improved Utilisation of Proline during FermentationDanfeng Long0Kerry L. Wilkinson1Dennis K. Taylor2Vladimir Jiranek3School of Public Health, Lanzhou University, 199 Donggang West Rd, Lanzhou 730000, ChinaSchool of Agriculture, Food and Wine, The University of Adelaide, PMB 1, Glen Osmond, SA 5064, AustraliaSchool of Agriculture, Food and Wine, The University of Adelaide, PMB 1, Glen Osmond, SA 5064, AustraliaSchool of Agriculture, Food and Wine, The University of Adelaide, PMB 1, Glen Osmond, SA 5064, AustraliaProline is the predominant amino acid in grape juice, but it is poorly assimilated by wine yeast under the anaerobic conditions typical of most fermentations. Exploiting the abundance of this naturally occurring nitrogen source to overcome the need for nitrogen supplementation and/or the risk of stuck or sluggish fermentations would be most beneficial. This study describes the isolation and evaluation of a novel wine yeast isolate, Q7, obtained through ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS) mutagenesis. The utilisation of proline by the EMS isolate was markedly higher than by the QA23 wild type strain, with approximately 700 and 300 mg/L more consumed under aerobic and self-anaerobic fermentation conditions, respectively, in the presence of preferred nitrogen sources. Higher intracellular proline contents in the wild type strain implied a lesser rate of proline catabolism or incorporation by this strain, but with higher cell viability after freezing treatment. The expression of key genes (PUT1, PUT2, PUT3, PUT4, GAP1 and URE2) involved in proline degradation, transport and repression were compared between the parent strain and the isolate, revealing key differences. The application of these strains for efficient conduct for nitrogen-limited fermentations is a possibility.http://www.mdpi.com/2311-5637/4/1/10prolinenitrogenwine fermentationyeast
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Danfeng Long
Kerry L. Wilkinson
Dennis K. Taylor
Vladimir Jiranek
spellingShingle Danfeng Long
Kerry L. Wilkinson
Dennis K. Taylor
Vladimir Jiranek
Novel Wine Yeast for Improved Utilisation of Proline during Fermentation
Fermentation
proline
nitrogen
wine fermentation
yeast
author_facet Danfeng Long
Kerry L. Wilkinson
Dennis K. Taylor
Vladimir Jiranek
author_sort Danfeng Long
title Novel Wine Yeast for Improved Utilisation of Proline during Fermentation
title_short Novel Wine Yeast for Improved Utilisation of Proline during Fermentation
title_full Novel Wine Yeast for Improved Utilisation of Proline during Fermentation
title_fullStr Novel Wine Yeast for Improved Utilisation of Proline during Fermentation
title_full_unstemmed Novel Wine Yeast for Improved Utilisation of Proline during Fermentation
title_sort novel wine yeast for improved utilisation of proline during fermentation
publisher MDPI AG
series Fermentation
issn 2311-5637
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Proline is the predominant amino acid in grape juice, but it is poorly assimilated by wine yeast under the anaerobic conditions typical of most fermentations. Exploiting the abundance of this naturally occurring nitrogen source to overcome the need for nitrogen supplementation and/or the risk of stuck or sluggish fermentations would be most beneficial. This study describes the isolation and evaluation of a novel wine yeast isolate, Q7, obtained through ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS) mutagenesis. The utilisation of proline by the EMS isolate was markedly higher than by the QA23 wild type strain, with approximately 700 and 300 mg/L more consumed under aerobic and self-anaerobic fermentation conditions, respectively, in the presence of preferred nitrogen sources. Higher intracellular proline contents in the wild type strain implied a lesser rate of proline catabolism or incorporation by this strain, but with higher cell viability after freezing treatment. The expression of key genes (PUT1, PUT2, PUT3, PUT4, GAP1 and URE2) involved in proline degradation, transport and repression were compared between the parent strain and the isolate, revealing key differences. The application of these strains for efficient conduct for nitrogen-limited fermentations is a possibility.
topic proline
nitrogen
wine fermentation
yeast
url http://www.mdpi.com/2311-5637/4/1/10
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