Fermentation (Sep 2021)

Mechanisms of Metabolic Adaptation in Wine Yeasts: Role of Gln3 Transcription Factor

  • Aroa Ferrer-Pinós,
  • Víctor Garrigós,
  • Emilia Matallana,
  • Agustín Aranda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/fermentation7030181
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 3
p. 181

Abstract

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Wine strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae have to adapt their metabolism to the changing conditions during their biotechnological use, from the aerobic growth in sucrose-rich molasses for biomass propagation to the anaerobic fermentation of monosaccharides of grape juice during winemaking. Yeast have molecular mechanisms that favor the use of preferred carbon and nitrogen sources to achieve such adaptation. By using specific inhibitors, it was determined that commercial strains offer a wide variety of glucose repression profiles. Transcription factor Gln3 has been involved in glucose and nitrogen repression. Deletion of GLN3 in two commercial wine strains produced different mutant phenotypes and only one of them displayed higher glucose repression and was unable to grow using a respiratory carbon source. Therefore, the role of this transcription factor contributes to the variety of phenotypic behaviors seen in wine strains. This variability is also reflected in the impact of GLN3 deletion in fermentation, although the mutants are always more tolerant to inhibition of the nutrient signaling complex TORC1 by rapamycin, both in laboratory medium and in grape juice fermentation. Therefore, most aspects of nitrogen catabolite repression controlled by TORC1 are conserved in winemaking conditions.

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