Understanding Wine through Yeast Interactions
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Type of Interaction | Mode of Interaction | Yeast Species Association 1 | Description of Interaction | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Positive interactions (mutualism/commensalism) | Modification of environment via metabolite exchange (e.g., redox balance via acetaldehyde production) | Sc–Mp | Reorientation of carbon fluxes and modification of NAD+/NADH balance by Mp | [7] |
Sc–Sc × Su | Acetaldehyde production by Sc × Su and utilization by Sc | [5] | ||
Release of beneficial products (e.g., amino acids) | Sc–Td | Cys-3SH 2 release by Td and uptake by Sc | ||
[19] | ||||
Cell contact-dependent effects | Sc–Td | Sc growth stimulation in contact with Td | [20] | |
Production of putative quorum sensing molecules (e.g., aromatic alcohols) | Sc–Sb | Changes in species associations dependent on the concentration of tryptophol and melatonin in the growth medium | [14] | |
Sc–Td | [14] | |||
Unknown | Sc–Hv | Increased survival rate of Hv in the presence of Sc | [21] | |
Negative interactions (competition/amensalism) | Substrate uptake (e.g., nitrogen, glucose, oxygen) | Lt–Hu | Space occupation by Lt | [22] |
Sc–Lt | Possible faster nutrient uptake by Sc | [8] | ||
Sc–Hv | Oxygen uptake by Hv | [23] | ||
Sc–Td | Oxygen uptake and biomass production by Td | [24] | ||
Sc–Mp | Iron sequestration by Mp | [9] | ||
Sc–Su | Faster substrate uptake and higher growth rates of Su under low temperature | [25] | ||
Production of lethal compounds (e.g., killer toxins, short-chain fatty acids, peptides) | Ci–Pg | Peptides produced by Ci against Pg | [26] | |
Ci–Db | Peptides produced by Ci against Db | [26] | ||
Sc–Hu | Peptides produced by Sc against Hu | [27] | ||
Sc–Td | Peptides produced by Sc against Td | [27] | ||
Sc–Su | Putative killer toxins produced by Sc | [28] | ||
Sc–Hu | Killer toxins produced by Sc | [29] | ||
Cell contact-dependent effects | Sc–Lt | Viability loss of Lt in contact with Sc | [11] | |
Sc–Hu | Viability loss of Hu in contact with Sc | [30] | ||
Sc–Sk | Suppression of Sk in contact with Sc | [31] | ||
Sc–Sc | Contact-mediated Sc inter-strain dominance | [32,33] | ||
Production of putative quorum-sensing molecules (e.g., aromatic alcohols) | Sc–Sb | Changes in species associations dependent on the concentration of tryptophol and melatonin in the growth medium | [14] | |
Sc–Td | [14] |
2. NS–NS Interactions
3. NS–Sc Interactions
3.1. Hanseniaspora spp.
3.2. Torulaspora delbrueckii
3.3. Lachancea thermotolerans
3.4. Metschnikowia pulcherrima
4. Interactions between Saccharomyces Species
5. Insight into Interaction Mechanisms
6. Concluding Comments
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Yeast Species 1 | Fermentation Conditions 2 (Inoculation Modality—Medium—Other Evaluated Parameters) | Method Applied | Experimental Approach and Implementations | Remarks 3 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sc–Td | SM—High sugar SGM—Fermentation stage | RNA-seq analysis of yeasts transcriptomes in single vs. mixed cultures | Use of chimeric Sc/Td transcriptome for high-quality reads alignment | Species-specific transcriptomic response to competition and high-sugar environment; ESR genes in Td and HOG pathway or glycerol catabolic pathways genes in Sc | [84] |
Sc–Td | SM—HN or LN SGM—Fermentation stage | RNA-seq analysis of Sc transcriptome in single vs. mixed cultures | Multiple comparisons for identification of competition-specific transcriptional responses | Stronger induction of Sc genes under HN in response to competition | [54] |
Sc–Td | SM—SGM—2 vs. 12–14h interaction | RNA-seq analysis of Sc transcriptome in single vs. mixed cultures | Use of chimeric Sc/Td genome for reads mapping | Species-common response to biotic stress via HSP12 induction. Delayed transcriptomic Td response to co-culture compared to Sc | [82] |
Sc–Lt | SM—SGM—Aerobic or anaerobic environment | RNA-seq and global analysis of each transcriptome in single cultures vs. total transcriptome of the mixed culture | Chemostat-simulating fermentation system for stable populations and growth medium composition | Cell-wall integrity genes in both species. Upregulation of iron and copper acquisition systems in Sc vs. downregulation in Lt | [85] |
Sc–Lt | SM—SGM—Lt death stage (early vs. late) at microaerobic environment | Tandem mass tag-based proteomics of Sc in single vs. mixed cultures | Cell staining and flow cytometry for species seperation, extraction of proteins from two cellular sub-fractions | Death phase-dependent protein expression; SRPs regulation indicative for increased Sc enzymatic activity at EDP and relief from stress at LDP | [86] |
Sc–Mp | SQ—NGM—Different timepoints during fermentation | Transcriptional analysis of Sc genes involved in acetic acid and glycerol pathways in single vs. mixed cultures | Use of primers specific for Sc genomic DNA | Time-dependent redirection of genes involved in the acetic acid and glycerol production pathways | [65] |
Sc–Db | SM—SGM—Fermentation stage, microaerobic conditions, restriction of yeast contact | Microarray analysis of Sc transcriptome in single vs. mixed cultures | Double compartment membrane fermentors for species separation | Key role of PAU gene family in Sc–NS competition | [87] |
Sc–Hu or Sc–Cs or Sc–Td | SM—SGM—Early stages of interaction in aerobic environment | RNA-seq analysis of Sc transcriptome in single vs. mixed cultures | Focus at early fermentation stages and use of aerobic regime | Regulation of: NCR genes in Td; CATT and SCMP genes in Cs; “response to stimulus” and “response to stress” genes in Hu | [81] |
Sc–Sk | SM—SGM—Fermentation temperature and stage | RNA-seq analysis of yeast transcriptomes in single vs. mixed cultures | Pair-end and read length sequencing for effective seperation of sequences from genomes of high identity | Nutrient uptake and cell division genes regulation favored by yeast competition; weaker response of Sk at EEP | [31] |
Sc–Sc (dominant vs. non-dominant strain) | SM—NGM—Growth state of the non-dominant strain | RNA-seq analysis of strains transcriptomes in single vs. mixed cultures | Fluorescent labeling of strains and discrimination by flow cytometer | Regulation of 330 genes in non-dominant vs. 32 genes in dominant strain; competitive advantage of dominant strain via overexpression of SSU1 sulphite resistance gene | [32] |
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Zilelidou, E.A.; Nisiotou, A. Understanding Wine through Yeast Interactions. Microorganisms 2021, 9, 1620. https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms9081620
Zilelidou EA, Nisiotou A. Understanding Wine through Yeast Interactions. Microorganisms. 2021; 9(8):1620. https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms9081620
Chicago/Turabian StyleZilelidou, Evangelia A., and Aspasia Nisiotou. 2021. "Understanding Wine through Yeast Interactions" Microorganisms 9, no. 8: 1620. https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms9081620
APA StyleZilelidou, E. A., & Nisiotou, A. (2021). Understanding Wine through Yeast Interactions. Microorganisms, 9(8), 1620. https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms9081620