3 research outputs found

    High intragenomic, intergenomic, and phenotypic diversity in pulcherrimin-producing Metschnikowia yeasts indicates a special mode of genome evolution

    No full text
    Abstract In molecular systematics, the delimitation of yeast species is based on the notion that the barcode differences are smaller within species than between them. The most widely used barcodes are segments of the chromosomal repeats coding for ribosomal RNAs that are homogenised in yeasts. The analysis of these segments of the type strains of ten species recently merged in Metschnikowia pulcherrima and 37 new isolates demonstrated that this is not the case in this species. The intragenomic diversity significantly exceeded the threshold gaps used to differentiate related yeast species. Large segments of the D1/D2 domains were not diverse within the genomes and could therefore be used to determine the taxonomic affiliation of the isolates. The genome structures of the isolates were compared by RAPD and the RFLP of the mitochondrial DNA. Both patterns were highly heterogeneous. The sequence analysis of the PUL4 gene (a member of the PUL gene cluster involved in pulcherrimin production) revealed very high intragenomic differences, suggesting that the genomes may be chimerised. Three phenotypic traits related to the antimicrobial antagonism characteristic of the species were also highly diverse and prone to reversible segregation resembling epigenetic processes (silencing and reactivation of regulators) rather than mutations and back-mutations. These features make M. pulcherrima unique among yeasts and indicate that it evolves in a non-standard way

    Vinification without Saccharomyces: Interacting Osmotolerant and “Spoilage” Yeast Communities in Fermenting and Ageing Botrytised High-Sugar Wines (Tokaj Essence)

    No full text
    The conversion of grape juice to wine starts with complex yeast communities consisting of strains that have colonised the harvested grape and/or reside in the winery environment. As the conditions in the fermenting juice gradually become inhibitory for most species, they are rapidly overgrown by the more adaptable Saccharomyces strains, which then complete the fermentation. However, there are environmental factors that even Saccharomyces cannot cope with. We show that when the sugar content is extremely high, osmotolerant yeasts, usually considered as “spoilage yeasts“, ferment the must. The examination of the yeast biota of 22 botrytised Tokaj Essence wines of sugar concentrations ranging from 365 to 752 g∙L−1 identified the osmotolerant Zygosaccharomyces rouxii, Candida (Starmerella) lactis-condensi and Candida zemplinina (Starmerella bacillaris) as the dominating species. Ten additional species, mostly known as osmotolerant spoilage yeasts or biofilm-producing yeasts, were detected as minor components of the populations. The high phenotypical and molecular (karyotype, mtDNA restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) and microsatellite-primed PCR (MSP-PCR)) diversity of the conspecific strains indicated that diverse clones of the species coexisted in the wines. Genetic segregation of certain clones and interactions (antagonism and crossfeeding) of the species also appeared to shape the fermenting yeast biota
    corecore