Yeast diversity and persistence in botrytis-affected wine fermentations

DA Mills, EA Johannsen, L Cocolin - Applied and environmental …, 2002 - Am Soc Microbiol
DA Mills, EA Johannsen, L Cocolin
Applied and environmental microbiology, 2002Am Soc Microbiol
Culture-dependent and-independent methods were used to examine the yeast diversity
present in botrytis-affected (“botrytized”) wine fermentations carried out at high (∼ 30° C)
and ambient (∼ 20° C) temperatures. Fermentations at both temperatures possessed similar
populations of Saccharomyces, Hanseniaspora, Pichia, Metschnikowia, Kluyveromyces, and
Candida species. However, higher populations of non-Saccharomyces yeasts persisted in
ambient-temperature fermentations, with Candida and, to a lesser extent, Kluyveromyces …
Abstract
Culture-dependent and -independent methods were used to examine the yeast diversity present in botrytis-affected (“botrytized”) wine fermentations carried out at high (∼30°C) and ambient (∼20°C) temperatures. Fermentations at both temperatures possessed similar populations of Saccharomyces, Hanseniaspora, Pichia, Metschnikowia, Kluyveromyces, and Candida species. However, higher populations of non-Saccharomyces yeasts persisted in ambient-temperature fermentations, with Candida and, to a lesser extent, Kluyveromyces species remaining long after the fermentation was dominated by Saccharomyces. In general, denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis profiles of yeast ribosomal DNA or rRNA amplified from the fermentation samples correlated well with the plating data. The direct molecular methods also revealed a Hanseniaspora osmophila population not identified in the plating analysis. rRNA analysis also indicated a large population (>106 cells per ml) of a nonculturable Candida strain in the high-temperature fermentation. Monoculture analysis of the Candida isolate indicated an extreme fructophilic phenotype and correlated with an increased glucose/fructose ratio in fermentations containing higher populations of Candida. Analysis of wine fermentation microbial ecology by using both culture-dependent and -independent methods reveals the complexity of yeast interactions enriched during spontaneous fermentations.
American Society for Microbiology