1. Polygenic Analysis in Absence of Major Effector ATF1 Unveils Novel Components in Yeast Flavor Ester Biosynthesis.
- Author
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Holt S, Trindade de Carvalho B, Foulquié-Moreno MR, and Thevelein JM
- Subjects
- Acyltransferases genetics, Alcoholic Beverages microbiology, Endosomal Sorting Complexes Required for Transport genetics, Fermentation, Metabolic Engineering, Mutant Proteins genetics, Mutant Proteins metabolism, Proteins genetics, Saccharomyces cerevisiae enzymology, Saccharomyces cerevisiae genetics, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins genetics, Acetates metabolism, Acetyltransferases metabolism, Acyltransferases metabolism, Biosynthetic Pathways genetics, Endosomal Sorting Complexes Required for Transport metabolism, Proteins metabolism, Saccharomyces cerevisiae metabolism, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins metabolism, Volatile Organic Compounds metabolism
- Abstract
Flavor production in yeast fermentation is of paramount importance for industrial production of alcoholic beverages. Although major enzymes of flavor compound biosynthesis have been identified, few specific mutations responsible for strain diversity in flavor production are known. The ATF1 -encoded alcohol acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) transferase (AATase) is responsible for the majority of acetate ester biosynthesis, but other components affecting strain diversity remain unknown. We have performed parallel polygenic analysis of low production of ethyl acetate, a compound with an undesirable solvent-like off-flavor, in strains with and without deletion of ATF1 We identified two unique causative mutations, eat1
K179 fs and snf8E148 *, not present in any other sequenced yeast strain and responsible for most ethyl acetate produced in absence of ATF1 EAT1 encodes a putative mitochondrial ethanol acetyl-CoA transferase (EATase) and its overexpression, but not that of EAT1K179 fs , and strongly increases ethyl acetate without affecting other flavor acetate esters. Unexpectedly, a higher level of acetate esters (including ethyl acetate) was produced when eat1K179 fs was present together with ATF1 in the same strain, suggesting that the Eat1 and Atf1 enzymes are intertwined. On the other hand, introduction of snf8E148 * lowered ethyl acetate levels also in the presence of ATF1 , and it affected other aroma compounds, growth, and fermentation as well. Engineering of snf8E148 * in three industrial yeast strains (for production of wine, saké, and ale beer) and fermentation in an application-relevant medium showed a high but strain-dependent potential for flavor enhancement. Our work has identified EAT1 and SNF8 as new genetic elements determining ethyl acetate production diversity in yeast strains. IMPORTANCE Basic research with laboratory strains of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has identified the structural genes of most metabolic enzymes, as well as genes encoding major regulators of metabolism. On the other hand, more recent work on polygenic analysis of yeast biodiversity in natural and industrial yeast strains is revealing novel components of yeast metabolism. A major example is the metabolism of flavor compounds, a particularly important property of industrial yeast strains used for the production of alcoholic beverages. In this work, we have performed polygenic analysis of production of ethyl acetate, an important off-flavor compound in beer and other alcoholic beverages. To increase the chances of identifying novel components, we have used in parallel a wild-type strain and a strain with a deletion of ATF1 encoding the main enzyme of acetate ester biosynthesis. This revealed a new structural gene, EAT1 , encoding a putative mitochondrial enzyme, which was recently identified as an ethanol acetyl-CoA transferase in another yeast species. We also identified a novel regulatory gene, SNF8 , which has not previously been linked to flavor production. Our results show that polygenic analysis of metabolic traits in the absence of major effector genes can reveal novel structural and regulatory genes. The mutant alleles identified can be used to affect the flavor profile in industrial yeast strains for production of alcoholic beverages in more subtle ways than by deletion or overexpression of the already known major effector genes and without significantly altering other industrially important traits. The effect of the novel variants was dependent on the genetic background, with a highly desirable outcome in the flavor profile of an ale brewing yeast., (Copyright © 2018 Holt et al.)- Published
- 2018
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