1. Differences in metabolism among Saccharomyces species and their hybrids during wine fermentation.
- Author
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Contreras-Ruiz A, Minebois R, Alonso-Del-Real J, Barrio E, and Querol A
- Subjects
- Metabolome, Carbon metabolism, Hybridization, Genetic, Wine microbiology, Wine analysis, Fermentation, Saccharomyces genetics, Saccharomyces metabolism, Saccharomyces classification, Nitrogen metabolism
- Abstract
This study aimed to investigate how parental genomes contribute to yeast hybrid metabolism using a metabolomic approach. Previous studies have explored central carbon and nitrogen metabolism in Saccharomyces species during wine fermentation, but this study analyses the metabolomes of Saccharomyces hybrids for the first time. We evaluated the oenological performance and intra- and extracellular metabolomes, and we compared the strains according to nutrient consumption and production of the main fermentative by-products. Surprisingly, no common pattern was observed for hybrid genome influence; each strain behaved differently during wine fermentation. However, this study suggests that the genome of the S. cerevisiae species may play a more relevant role in fermentative metabolism. Variations in biomass/nitrogen ratios were also noted, potentially linked to S. kudriavzevii and S. uvarum genome contributions. These results open up possibilities for further research using different "omics" approaches to comprehend better metabolic regulation in hybrid strains with genomes from different species., (© 2024 The Author(s). Microbial Biotechnology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2024
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