9. Selection and development of new brewing yeasts with superior industrial phenotypes
Alicia Gutierrez Linares (1),
Veerle Saels (1), Jan Steensels (1), Kevin Verstrepen (1); (1) KU
Leuven CMPG & VIB Lab for Systems Biology, Leuven, Belgium
Technical Session 3: Yeast Biotechnology
Sunday, August 14 • 9:45–11:30 a.m.
Plaza Building, Concourse Level, Governor’s Square 15
Yeasts, and more specifically Saccharomyces cerevisiae,
possess many properties that make them suitable for biotechnological
applications and industrial fermentations. However, many strains
currently used in industry, especially in beer brewing, are used because
of historical grounds, rather than being selected for having the most
optimal characteristics. While nature harbors a huge yeast diversity,
the specific conditions found in industrial fermentation processes
require an ideal combination of many yeast properties that are not
habitually in nature, such as fermentation vigor, high ethanol
production and an attractive aroma profile. Nowadays, several innovative
yeast improvement strategies, such as hybridization, have been used to
create novel yeasts with advantageous features. In this study, we
carried out high-throughput screening of 600 natural and industrial
yeast strains for a broad plethora of industrially relevant yeast
characteristics, such as stress tolerance (ethanol, temperature, osmotic
pressure, etc.), fermentation performance and aroma production, to
select the most interesting parental strains for further breeding. Our
main scope was to develop novel superior brewer’s yeast strains through
different selection methods and breeding approaches, such as direct
mating and large-scale genome shuffling. Mimicked beer fermentation
performed with the developed hybrids revealed that this approach
successfully developed new yeast variants with improved aroma profile
and increased fermentation capacity, which can directly be implemented
in industry. Moreover, the developed hybrids form the perfect tool for
investigation of genetic underpinnings of industrially relevant yeast
properties. For example, new genes and superior alleles involved in the
production of fruity acetate esters were identified. This new genetic
information, in turn, will lead to the development of new, more targeted
yeast improvement strategies, such as marker-assisted breeding.
Alicia Gutierrez Linares acquire her B.S. degree in biology at the
University of Valencia (Spain) in 2007 and M.S. degree in food science
and engineering at Polytechnic University of Valencia (Spain) in 2009.
She did an international Ph.D. degree in food science, technology and
management at Polytechnic University of Valencia (Spain), and she
carried out the study at the Institute of Agrochemistry and Food
Technology regarding “Nitrogen Metabolism in Wine Yeast During Alcoholic
Fermentation: Effect on Growth, Fermentation Activity and Aroma
Production.” Her first postdoc with a Marie Curie Fellowship was at
Carlsberg Research Center (Denmark, Copenhagen) on “Non-conventional
Yeasts and Their Aroma Production in Fermented Beverages.” In November
2015, Alicia joined CMPG Lab for Genetics and Genomics at KU Leuven
(Belgium), led by Prof. Kevin Verstrepen, as a postdoc.