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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, October 2008, p. 6041-6052, Vol. 74, No. 19
0099-2240/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.00394-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Department of Biochemistry, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Private Bag X54001, Durban 4000, South Africa,1 Institute for Wine Biotechnology, Faculty of AgriSciences, University of Stellenbosch, Private Bag X1, Matieland (Stellenbosch) 7602, South Africa,2 The Australian Wine Research Institute, P.O. Box 197, Glen Osmond (Adelaide), South Australia 5064, Australia3
Received 16 February 2008/ Accepted 5 August 2008
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Alternatively, clarification can be achieved by natural settling of the yeast. While single yeast cells tend to settle over time, natural settling becomes a viable option in industrial processes only when cells aggregate, a process also referred to as flocculation. Flocculation is defined as the asexual, reversible, and calcium-dependent aggregation of yeast cells to form flocs containing large numbers of cells that rapidly sediment to the bottom of the liquid growth substrate (7, 53). Although flocculation could provide a seemingly ideal solution to the removal of yeast cells after primary fermentation, it should not occur before the fermentation is completed. As a matter of fact, early flocculation may result in sluggish or stuck fermentation and final products with high residual sugars and unsatisfactory aromatic characteristics (63).
Flocculation in S. cerevisiae is mediated by specific cell surface lectins (or flocculins) that are capable of binding directly to mannose residues of mannan molecules on adjacent cells (37, 53). This interaction leads to cellular aggregation and finally settling. In some specific cases, cellular aggregation does not lead to settling, but to yeast cells rising to the surface of the substrate and forming an air-liquid interfacial biofilm. This behavior is also referred to as flotation or flor formation (41, 70).
In S. cerevisiae, two distinct flocculation phenotypes have been characterized on the basis of their sensitivity to sugar inhibition, namely, Flo1 (mannose sensitive) and NewFlo (mannose and glucose sensitive) (55). Most brewer's yeast strains are of the NewFlo phenotype, and flocculation in these strains is initiated after the end of exponential respiro-fermentative phase of growth (47). The late onset of flocculation in yeast cells with the NewFlo phenotype makes them ideally suited to their task by aiding separation of biomass from the brew.
The genetic basis of flocculation has been the object of several investigations. These studies suggest that a family of subtelomeric genes, FLO1, FLO5, FLO9, and FLO10, encode specific lectins that are responsible for flocculation (56). A nonsubtelomeric gene, FLO11/MUC1 (30, 35), on the other hand, encodes a protein that has been associated with flocculation, flor formation, invasive growth, and substrate adhesion (3, 18, 24, 35, 70). All Flo proteins are glycosylphosphatidylinositol-linked glycoproteins that share a common three-domain structure consisting of an N-terminal lectin domain, a central domain of highly repeated sequences rich in serine and threonine residues, and a carboxyl-terminal domain containing a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchoring sequence (reviewed in reference 62). In recent studies (33, 34), evidence was presented that the difference between the NewFlo and Flo1 flocculation phenotypes may be at least partially due to variations in the number of repeat sequences within the FLO1 coding sequence.
The regulation of FLO gene expression is complex, and in particular, the promoter of FLO11 has been intensively studied. FLO11 expression is tightly controlled by environmental factors, and several signaling cascades, including the Ras-cyclic AMP-dependent kinase complex, the filamentous-growth-controlling mitogen-activated protein kinase, and the main glucose repression pathways have been directly linked to FLO11 regulation (reviewed in reference 62). Two transcriptional regulators, Mss11p and Flo8p, have been shown to play a central role in the control of flocculation and flotation phenotypes (4, 32, 58). These investigations have shown that FLO11 transcriptional regulation is particularly dependent on the nutritional status and specific composition of the growth environment. Less information is available regarding the regulation of other FLO genes, although it has been shown that FLO1 expression is also controlled by nutritional status signals, such as carbon and/or nitrogen starvation (47), and other environmental indicators, such as pH (52) and ionic strength (26).
In addition to this transcriptional regulation, FLO gene activity has been shown to be modulated by other regulatory systems. In particular, data suggest that these genes are often under promoter-specific epigenetic control allowing S. cerevisiae cells in a homogenous population to reversibly switch between active FLO gene expression and silent modes (19). Furthermore, sequence analysis reveals that several DNA motifs in the central domain are conserved among different FLO genes, promoting diversity of adhesins by frequent intragenic recombination events (61).
Considering the complexity of FLO gene regulation, it is evident that manipulation of both physiological and environmental factors offers winemakers and brewers limited avenues to control or alter flocculation during fermentations. Therefore, it is not surprising that industrial yeast strains generally possess a less than optimal flocculation profile (8, 60). For this reason, replacement of the native promoters of these genes with less complex promoters conferring expression patterns that would be better adapted to industrial needs may result in yeast strains that display improved flocculation behavior for specific industrial purposes.
In previous attempts to modify flocculation behavior, the flocculation genes FLO1 and FLO5 were introduced into nonflocculent S. cerevisiae brewing yeast strains (2, 23, 65-67). However, the resultant modified yeast strains flocculated constitutively and displayed reduced fermentation performance or increased fermentation times. In an approach similar to the one described here, Verstrepen et al. (63) brought the chromosomal FLO1 gene of the haploid nonflocculent S. cerevisiae FY23 laboratory strain under the transcriptional control of the HSP30 stationary-phase promoter. The resulting strain showed strong flocculation toward the end of fermentation, resulting in a distinctly clearer beer than the beer obtained with wild-type cells (63).
In this study, we assess the suitability of six genome-integrated promoter-gene combinations to control stationary-phase-specific flocculation. For this purpose, the native promoters of the dominant flocculation genes FLO1, FLO5, and FLO11 in the haploid S. cerevisiae FY23 strain were replaced with the inducible promoters ADH2 and HSP30. The ADH2 promoter is subjected to carbon catabolite repression and has been shown to be repressed several hundredfold during growth on glucose (16, 42). Derepression of the ADH2 promoter generally coincides with transition to growth on ethanol (39). The HSP30 promoter, on the other hand, has been shown to be induced during entry into the stationary phase of growth, which coincides with the depletion of glucose from the medium, which is found under low-stress nutrient-rich wort and wine fermentation conditions (15, 44, 45). In addition, the HSP30 promoter is activated by several stress factors, including heat shock and sudden exposure to either ethanol or sorbate (40, 44, 49). Unlike ADH2 regulation, which is reasonably well understood (14, 59, 69), the mechanism by which HSP30 is induced in response to stress remains unclear.
Since the dominant FLO genes are transcriptionally silent in the S. cerevisiae FY23 strain due to a nonsense mutation in the FLO8 gene (32, 61, 68), expression regulated by either the ADH2 or HSP30 promoter constructs allows both assessments of the phenotypic consequences of the expression of a particular Flo protein and of the transcriptional character of a promoter in the same genetic background. Indeed, it is difficult to compare reports on flocculation in the literature due to the numerous techniques employed and the variations therein, coupled with the different yeast strain genetic backgrounds (26). Therefore, the inducible expression of three dominant flocculation genes, FLO1, FLO5, and FLO11, in the haploid laboratory strain S. cerevisiae FY23 strain reported in this study presents a unique opportunity to compare the adhesion characteristics (flocculation, invasive growth, and flor formation) of the aforementioned flocculation genes.
Our data show that each promoter-open reading frame (ORF) combination leads to specific flocculation and adhesion behaviors and results in additional important changes in cell surface properties, including hydrophobicity. The data indicate that highly specific flocculation behavior can be stably conferred to individual yeast strains.
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(Gibco BRL/Life Technologies, Rockville, MD) was used as a host for all plasmid amplifications. |
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TABLE 1. S. cerevisiae strains employed in this study
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DNA manipulation, construction of promoter replacement cassettes, and yeast transformations.
Restriction enzymes and T4 DNA ligase were purchased from Roche Diagnostics GmbH (Mannheim, Germany). Expand High Fidelity PCR system (Roche Diagnostics GmbH) was employed for PCR amplifications. The amplification products were purified from agarose gels and cloned into pGEM-T Easy vector (Promega Corporation, Madison, WI) according to the specifications of the manufacturer. Standard procedures for bacterial transformations and plasmid isolation from E. coli were performed (46). Standard procedures for isolation and manipulation of DNA were employed in all other aspects of this study (1). The strategy for construction of promoter replacement cassettes was adapted from the strategy used in reference 64. The ADH2 promoter region bearing a FLO1 promoter (FLO1p) homologous sequence was amplified from pDLG5 plasmid (29) by PCR with ADH2-F and ADH2::FLO1-R primers (Table 2). The SM resistance yielding SMR1-410 (SMR1) marker gene inclusive of promoter and terminator sequences was PCR amplified from plasmid pWX509 (9) with the SMR1-R and FLO1::SMR1-F primer pair. The ADH2-FLO1p 834-bp fragment in pGEM-T Easy was recovered by double restriction digestion with BglII and SpeI, while the FLO1p-SMR1 insert (2,962 base pairs [bp]) was released by triple digestion with Alw441, BamHI, and SphI. Both fragments were subsequently ligated. The FLO1p-SMR1-ADH2-FLO1p vector was PCR amplified by using shorter primers FLO1-F and FLO1-R and ligation reaction mixture as the template. The integrating FLO1 promoter replacement cassette (3,764 bp) was extracted from agarose gels and purified. A similar strategy was employed for the construction and synthesis of FLO1p-SMR1-HSP30-FLO1p, FLO5p-SMR1-ADH2-FLO5p, FLO5p-SMR1-HSP30-FLO5p, FLO11p-SMR1-ADH2-FLO11p, and FLO11p-SMR1-HSP30-FLO11p integrating promoter replacement cassettes. The primer pairs for different ORFs are as follows: primers FLO5-F and FLO5-R for FLO5 and primers FLO11-F and FLO11-R for FLO11. Note that the HSP30 promoter (HSP30p)-containing region was amplified using FY23 chromosomal DNA as the template. Yeast transformation with 5 µg of DNA was performed according to the lithium acetate method described by Gietz and Schiestl (17). Chromosomal integration was achieved by a double-crossover homologous recombination event in which the FLO1, FLO5, or FLO11 gene was placed under transcriptional control of either the ADH2 or HSP30 promoter. The deletion of native promoters was confirmed by PCR using homologous primer sets. The primer pairs for transgenic strains were as follows: primers FLO1-F and FLO1-R for strains FY23-F1A and FY23-F1H, primers FLO5-F and FLO5-R for strains FY23-F5A and FY23-F5H, and primers FLO11-F and FLO11-R for strains FY23-F11A and FY23-F11H. In addition, the integration of promoter replacement cassettes in transformed yeast was further confirmed by PCR using heterologous primer sets that contained a forward primer from outside the region of integration and genomic DNA isolated from transformants. The primer pairs for different transformants were as follows: primers FLO1-F2 and ADH2-R for strain FY23-F1A, primers FLO1-F2 and HSP30-R for strain FY23-F1H, primers FLO5-F2 and ADH2-R for strain FY23-F5A, primers FLO5-F2 and HSP30-R for strain FY23-F5H, primers FLO11-F2 and ADH2-R for strain FY23-F11A, and primers FLO11-F2 and HSP30-R for strain FY23-F11H. The wild-type FY23 strain served as a control in these confirmation experiments.
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TABLE 2. Primers used in this study
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Glucose determination.
Cells were pelleted from 1-ml samples of experimental cultures by microcentrifugation (10,000 rpm, 1 min). The cell extracts were subsequently filtered through a 0.22-µm cellulose acetate filter and stored at –20°C until glucose analysis. The concentration of glucose in the culture medium was determined using a GAGO-20 glucose assay kit (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) according to the specifications of the manufacturer, using a Biotek 800ELX microplate reader (Biotek Instruments Inc., Winooski, VT).
Flocculation assays.
The flocculent ability of yeast strains was established using the modified Helm's assay as described by D'Hautcourt and Smart (13). The percentage of flocculation reported in this paper represents the arithmetic mean of three independent determinations. To assess the influence of pH on flocculation, a composite suspension buffer with a very wide buffering range was adapted from the buffer used by Stratford (54) to replace the buffer employed in the above protocol. This buffer contained 10 mM calcium chloride, 50 mM Tris base, 50 mM succinic acid, 100 mM potassium hydroxide, and 4% (vol/vol) ethanol. The pH of the composite suspension buffer was adjusted with 5 M HCl, and flocculation was assessed as described above. To investigate sugar inhibition of FLO1 and FLO5 flocculation phenotypes, either mannose or glucose was added at various concentrations to both the washing and suspension buffers that are employed in the modified Helm's assay (13).
RNA extraction and cDNA synthesis.
FY23, FY23-F11A, and FY23-F11A strains were precultured and treated as described above. Experimental batch cultures were inoculated in triplicate at an initial density of 5 x 105 cells/ml into 100 ml YEPD broth and incubated at 30°C with shaking (160 rpm) for 12, 16, and 48 h. To investigate the transcription of FLO genes, samples from batch cultures were washed with ice-cold H2O, pelleted, and resuspended in ice-cold AE buffer (50 mM sodium acetate, 10 mM EDTA [pH 5.0]). Total RNA was isolated as previously described (48). DNA contamination was eliminated by DNase I (Roche Diagnostics) treatment. One microgram of total RNA was used as the template for cDNA synthesis using the ImProm-II reverse transcription system according to the manufacturer's instructions (Promega). cDNA samples were diluted 50 times with H2O before real-time PCR analysis.
QRT-PCR analysis.
Primers and probes used for quantitative real-time PCR (QRT-PCR) analysis are listed in Table 3 and were designed using Primer Express software version 3 (Applied Biosystems, CA). Reagents were purchased from Applied Biosystems and Kapa Biosystems (Cape Town, South Africa). QRT-PCR runs and collection of spectral data were performed with the 7500 cycler (Applied Biosystems). Sybr green was used for the detection of PDA1 and FLO11 amplicons with final primer concentrations of 100 nM. Specific probes and primers were designed to differentiate between the cDNA species corresponding to the extensively homologous FLO1 and FLO5 genes. Probes were modified by the addition of a 3' minor groove binder and nonfluorescent quencher, as well as the 5' attachment of fluorescent dyes as indicated in Table 3 (Applied Biosystems). Probe and primer concentrations were 250 nM and 900 nM, respectively, in QRT-PCRs. Cycling conditions during QRT-PCR were as follows: 50°C for 2 min, 95°C for 10 min, 40 cycles of 95°C for 15 s followed by 60°C for 1 min. When using Sybr green, a dissociation curve analysis was included to verify amplicon authenticity. Preliminary data analyses were performed with Signal Detection Software (SDS) version 1.3.1. (Applied Biosystems). Individual QRT-PCR runs were performed at least in duplicate. The relative expression value for each sample was defined as 2–Ct(target) where Ct(target) represents the cycle number at which a sample reaches a predetermined threshold signal value for the specific target gene. Relative expression data were normalized to the relative expression value of the housekeeping gene PDA1 in each respective sample, thus giving normalized relative expression for a target gene as 2–Ct(target)/2–Ct(PDA1).
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TABLE 3. Real-time PCR primers and probes used in this study
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Invasive growth plate assays.
Yeast cultures processed as described above were adjusted to an optical density (measured at a wavelength of 600 nm) of 1.0, and 10-µl aliquots were dropped onto SCLD and SCLDLUT plates without piercing the agar surface and incubated for 5 days at 30°C. Using a gloved finger, superficial growth of yeast colonies was physically removed by washing the plates under a steady stream of water. Plates were allowed to air dry, and cells that invaded the agar were photographed.
Flor formation and buoyant cell density.
Cells were precultured in YEPD medium, deflocculated, and washed as described above. Subsequently, 3 x 108 cells were recovered by microcentrifugation (10,000 rpm, 1 min), washed once, resuspended in 1 ml flor medium (pH 3.5), and added to test tubes (16 by 165 mm) containing 4 ml flor medium. Biofilm formation was photographed in natural light after 5 days of static incubation at 30°C. Alternatively, the cultures were incubated statically at 30°C for 60 h, after which 1-ml samples were withdrawn from just below the meniscus. The optical density of samples was determined spectrophotometrically at 600 nm.
Analysis of stress-induced expression of FLO1- and FLO5-encoded flocculins.
FY23, FY23-F5H, and FY23-F1H strains were precultured and treated as described earlier. Experimental cultures were inoculated at an initial density of 5 x 105 cells/ml into 40 ml YEPD broth and incubated at 30°C with shaking (160 rpm) for 10 h. The incubation of untreated cells was extended for another 45 min at 30°C, whereas other cultures were exposed to the following stress treatments: heat shock for 30 min at 42°C, heat shock for 45 min at 42°C, 3% (vol/vol) ethanol for 30 min at 30°C, 6% (vol/vol) ethanol for 30 min at 30°C, and 6% (vol/vol) ethanol and heat shock for 30 min at 42°C. Ethanol (100%) was added directly to culture medium to yield a final concentration of 6% (vol/vol), and cultures were incubated at defined temperatures with shaking at 160 rpm. All cultures were placed on ice before flocculation was determined using the modified Helm's assay.
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FIG. 1. Chromosomal integration of either the ADH2 or HSP30 promoter upstream of a dominant FLO gene in S. cerevisiae strain FY23. (A) Promoter replacement strategy. (B) The deletion of native promoters was confirmed by PCR using homologous primer pairs described in Materials and Methods. The amplification of the native promoter sequence was observed only in the wild-type FY23 strain (FLO1p [837 bp] [lane 2]), FLO5p [1,988 bp] [lane 5], and FLO11p [2,748 bp] [lane 8]), while only the integration cassette was amplified in strains FY23-F1A (FLO1p-SMR1-ADH2-FLO1p, 3,719 bp, lane 3), FY23-F1H (FLO1p-SMR1-HSP30-FLO1p, 4,198 bp, lane 4), FY23-F5A (FLO5p-SMR1-ADH2-FLO5p, 3,701 bp, lane 6), FY23-F5H (FLO5p-SMR1-HSP30-FLO5p, 4,180 bp, lane 7), FY23-F11A (FLO11p-SMR1-ADH2-FLO11p, 3,737 bp, lane 9), and FY23-F11H (FLO11p-SMR1-HSP30-FLO11p, 4,276 bp, lane 10). Lane 1 contained DNA molecular weight markers (phage lambda DNA restricted with HindIII). (C) The integration of promoter replacement cassettes were confirmed by PCR using heterologous primer sets that contained a forward primer from outside the region of integration and genomic DNA as the template as described in Materials and Methods. The amplification of FLO1p-SMR1-ADH2p (4,191 bp, strain FY23-F1A, lane 2), FLO1p-SMR1-HSP30p (4,670 bp, strain FY23-F1H, lane 4), FLO5p-SMR1-ADH2p (4,098 bp, strain FY23-F5A, lane 6), FLO5p-SMR1-HSP30p (4,577 bp, strain FY23-F5H, lane 8), FLO11p-SMR1-ADH2p (4,333 bp, strain FY23-F11A, lane 10), FLO11p-SMR1-HSP30p (4,812 bp, strain FY23-F11H, lane 12) is evident only in transformants, while lacking in the wild-type FY23 strain with corresponding primer pairs (lanes 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, and 11). Lane 13 contained DNA molecular weight markers (phage lambda DNA restricted with HindIII).
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The growth rates and sugar utilization capabilities of the wild-type strain FY23 and its six transformants were assessed in YEPD medium containing 2% glucose at 2-hour intervals (Fig. 2 and 3). No significant differences between the wild-type FY23 strain and the transformants regarding biomass growth, cell number, and sugar utilization capability were observed. As seen during the initial screen, strains transformed with combinations involving FLO1 and FLO5 ORFs showed flocculent behavior. Maximal flocculent ability of these strains was displayed 2 to 4 h after glucose depletion (Fig. 2B and 3B). In the ADH2p-FLO1 and ADH2p-FLO5 transformants, flocculation was observed approximately 2 h after glucose exhaustion, while maximum flocculation potential was evident after an additional 4 h (Fig. 2B).
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FIG. 2. (A) Growth of FY23 (wild type) ( ), FY23-F1A ( ), FY23-F5A ( ), and FY23-F11A (218) strains. (B) Glucose utilization of FY23 (wild type) ( ), FY23-F1A ( ), FY23-F5A ( ), and FY23-F11A () strains and flocculation profiles of FY23 (wild type) ( ), FY23-F1A ( ), FY23-F5A ( ), and FY23-F11A ( ) strains. Yeast strains were cultivated in YEPD broth containing 2% glucose at 30°C with shaking (160 rpm). Values represent the means of experiments performed in triplicate, and error bars represent standard deviations.
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FIG. 3. (A) Growth of FY23 (wild type) ( ), FY23-F1H ( ), FY23-F5H ( ), and FY23-F11H (218) strains. (B) Glucose utilization of FY23 (wild type) ( ), FY23-F1H ( ), FY23-F5H ( ), and FY23-F11H () strains and flocculation profiles of FY23 (wild type) ( ), FY23-F1H ( ), FY23-F5H ( ), and FY23-F11H ( ) strains. Yeast strains were cultivated in YEPD broth containing 2% glucose at 30°C with shaking (160 rpm). Each point represents the mean of experiments performed in triplicate, and error bars represent standard deviations.
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FIG. 4. Floc formation by FY23 (wild type), FY23-F1A, FY23-F1H, FY23-F5A, and FY23-F5H strains. Yeast strains were cultivated for 48 h in YEPD broth containing 2% glucose at 30°C with shaking (160 rpm) and photographed in situ.
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The flocculent abilities of the wild-type FY23 strain and six transformed yeast strains were studied over a broad pH range (Fig. 5). The FY23-F11A and FY23-F11H strains and the wild-type FY23 strain displayed no significant flocculation ability over the entire pH range. The FY23-F1A and FY23-F1H strains displayed relatively stable flocculation between pH 2 and 10, whereas flocculation was reduced by nearly 40% at pH 1. In contrast, flocculation exhibited by the FY23-F5A and FY23-F5H strains was stable between pH 3 and 10, while flocculation was reduced by approximately 20% at pH 2 and completely abolished at pH 1. This supports previous findings which reported that Flo1-type flocculation displays a broad tolerance to pH (54), while a significantly reduced range (pH 4 to 5) was observed for NewFlo-type flocculation (51).
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FIG. 5. Effect of pH on flocculation of FY23 (wild type) ( ), FY23-F1A ( ), FY23-F1H ( ), FY23-F5A (x), FY23-F5H ( ), FY23-F11A (), and FY23-F11H (218) strains. Yeast strains were grown for 48 h in YEPD broth containing 2% glucose at 30°C with shaking (160 rpm). Flocculation was determined using a modified Helm's assay as described by D'Hautcourt and Smart (13) that incorporated a composite suspension buffer with a very wide buffering range from Stratford (54). Each point represents the mean of experiments performed in triplicate, and error bars represent standard deviations.
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FIG. 6. Effects of mannose (A) and glucose (B) on flocculation of FY23 (wild type) (x), FY23-F1A ( ), FY23-F1H ( ), FY23-F5A ( ), and FY23-F5H ( ) strains. Yeast strains were grown for 48 h in YEPD broth containing 2% glucose at 30°C with shaking (160 rpm). Flocculation was determined using a modified Helm's assay as described in Materials and Methods. Values represent the means of experiments performed in triplicate, and error bars represent standard deviations.
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FIG. 7. Relative QRT-PCR expression of FLO1, FLO5, and FLO11 transcripts in FY23 (wild type), FY23-F11A, and FY23-F11H strains. Samples were taken from sampling points corresponding to exponential growth phase, entry into stationary growth phase, and upon completion of fermentation. As indicated, a bracket denotes the expression of a particular FLO gene. The relative expression value for each sample was defined as 2–Ct(target) where Ct(target) represents the cycle number at which a sample reaches a predetermined threshold signal value for the specific target gene. Relative expression data were normalized to the relative expression value of the housekeeping gene PDA1 in each respective sample, thus giving normalized relative expression for a target gene as 2–Ct(target)/2–Ct(PDA1). The highest mRNA expression level was arbitrarily set at 1.0. Values represent the means of experiments performed in triplicate, and error bars represent standard deviations.
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FIG. 8. Stress-induced expression of FLO1- and FLO5-encoded flocculins in HSP30 transformants. Yeast strains cultivated for 10 h in YEPD were subjected to the following treatments: A, untreated (45 min at 30°C); B, heat shock for 30 min at 42°C; C, heat shock for 45 min at 42°C; D, 3% (vol/vol) ethanol for 30 min at 30°C; E, 6% (vol/vol) ethanol for 30 min at 30°C; F, 6% (vol/vol) ethanol and heat shock for 30 min at 42°C. The results are averages of three independent determinations, and error bars represent standard deviations.
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FIG. 9. (A) Biofilm formation. Cells were precultured in YEPD broth and recovered by centrifugation, washed once with flor medium, and resuspended at a density of 6 x 107 cells ml–1 in 5 ml flor medium contained in glass test tubes (16 by 165 mm). The tubes were photographed after 5 days of static incubation at 30°C. (B) Buoyant cell density determinations. The cultures were incubated statically at 30°C for 60 h, after which 1-ml samples were withdrawn from just below the meniscus. The optical density (OD) of samples was determined spectrophotometrically at 600 nm. The results are averages of three independent determinations, and error bars represent standard deviations.
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FIG. 10. Haploid invasive growth of FY23-F5A (colony 1), FY23-F5H (colony 2), FY23-F1A (colony 3), FY23-F1H (colony 4), FY23-F11A (colony 5), FY23-F11H (colony 6), and FY23 (wild type) (colonies 7 and 8) strains after 5 days growth at 30°C on SCLDLUT (A) and SCLD (B) media.
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FIG. 11. Impact of ADH2 and HSP30 expression of FLO genes on cell surface hydrophobicity. The wild-type FY23 strain and transformants were cultivated for 48 h in YEPD broth containing 2% glucose at 30°C with shaking (160 rpm). The MHI was determined according to the biphasic-solvent partition assay described by Hinchcliffe et al. (22). The results are averages of three independent determinations, and error bars represent standard deviations.
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In this study, the genomic FLO1, FLO5, and FLO11 ORFs were brought under the transcriptional control of promoters of the ADH2 and HSP30 genes by replacement of their native promoter sequences. The distinct advantage of the cloning strategy employed here over those used by other research groups (10, 12) is that no subcloning of the FLO genes is required. Furthermore, expression levels are independent of plasmid-related artifacts, such as variable copy numbers and the increased risk of intragenic recombinations. Indeed, FLO genes contain intragenic tandem repetitive sequences that have been previously reported as difficult to clone or even as "unclonable" sequences (57). Our data therefore provide reliable baseline information regarding the intrinsic ability of the three FLO genes to induce adhesion-related phenotypes.
The data show that FLO1-based constructs induce flocculation most efficiently, while FLO5-based constructs, while still leading to significant flocculation, are less efficient. FLO11-based constructs, on the other hand, induce flocculation only weakly. These constructs, however, strongly induced flor formation and cell adhesion, phenotypes that were not observed with FLO1 or FLO5. Strains expressing FLO11 also presented the highest cell surface hydrophobicity. Hydrophobicity was significantly lower in strains expressing FLO5, while strains expressing FLO1 presented intermediate hydrophobicity levels. These data suggest that hydrophobicity per se is not a major determinant of adhesion-related phenotypes but that the specific sequences of the FLO genes are mainly responsible for phenotype specificity.
The observed flocculation patterns were in all cases consistent with the reported and measured expression patterns conferred by the two promoters. In the case of HSP30p-FLO1 and HSP30p-FLO5 transformants, the onset of flocculation occurred toward the end of the respiro-fermentative exponential growth phase and was concomitant with the depletion of glucose from the medium. This is consistent with a previous study which showed in particular that the levels of HSP30 mRNA increased before glucose exhaustion and climaxes with glucose exhaustion (44). The study also confirms the stress-inducible nature of HSP30p-controlled expression of FLO1 and FLO5 genes to yield flocculent phenotypes in response to specific stress conditions that include heat shock or exposure to ethanol. Although an ethanol concentration of 6% (vol/vol) is recommended for maximal induction of HSP30p, it is possible that this concentration brings about a toxic effect in the laboratory strains, which could be responsible for the absence of flocculation in these cells (11, 40).
Other groups have previously engineered the expression of individual FLO genes. The FLO1 gene was constitutively expressed, thereby creating transgenic yeast strains that exhibited a constitutive flocculation property irrespective of the growth phase (2, 23, 66, 67). However, efficient fermentation requires a high suspended cell count, and constitutively flocculating yeast may lead to sluggish or stuck fermentations. These transgenic yeast strains are therefore not ideally suited for industrial batch-wise fermentation processes. Cunha and coworkers (12) reported controlled expression of the FLO5 gene by employing a modified ADH2 promoter. However, the native core promoter and ORF sequences of the FLO5 gene used by Cunha et al. (12) were sourced from the YEp-FLO5 plasmid. This plasmid was originally created by Bidard and coworkers (5) and was reported to contain the FLO5 gene from the S. cerevisiae 17-13D strain. However, later studies by this research team retracted and confirmed that the FLO5 gene used in the initial study was in fact identical to the FLO1 gene sequence (6). We therefore assume that Cunha et al. (12) used the FLO1 gene in their studies. This implies that our research study is the first to report inducible promoter-controlled FLO5 and FLO11 gene expression.
Cunha et al. (12) employed a multicopy plasmid-based strategy fusing the poly(T), UAS1, and UAS2 regions of the ADH2 promoter upstream of the native core promoter and ORF of the FLO1 gene for expression in the laboratory yeast strain W303-1a. The same modified promoter was also employed to control FLO1 gene expression by cloning an integrative cassette to disrupt the CAN1 gene in a commercial baking yeast strain (Fleischmann). Similar to our study, the strains were reported to flocculate after glucose exhaustion in nutrient-rich medium (12). However, when using the native ADH2 promoter, the onset of flocculation observed for ADH2p-FLO1 and ADH2p-FLO5 transformants in our study is in line with data published by Lee and DaSilva (31) who reported a similar native ADH2 promoter-mediated expression pattern for β-galactosidase in S. cerevisiae transformed with a chromosomally integrated ADH2p-lacZ cassette. Moreover, the native ADH2 promoter on multicopy plasmids was shown to drive β-xylanase production only after glucose exhaustion (27, 36), clearly suggesting that modification of the native ADH2 promoter as suggested by Cunha et al. (12) is not necessary. Chambers et al. (10) employed the glucose-repressible S. cerevisiae JEN1 promoter to regulate FLO1 gene-mediated flocculation. However, the FY23-F1A and FY23-F5A strains reported here display a much later onset of flocculation in comparison to their JEN1-FLO1 transgenic S. cerevisiae strain W303. These observations are clearly significant, as an early onset of flocculation might lead to a "stuck" or "hanging" fermentation because of insufficient contact between settled yeast cells and the medium. Some authors have reported nondetectable to significant decreases in ethanol production when converting nonflocculent yeast strains into flocculent strains (12, 23, 63, 65-67). Although decreased ethanol production will not meet the requirements of bioethanol production, it may be attractive to the alcoholic beverage industries that are currently faced with a growing consumer demand for lower-alcohol beers and wines (21, 38).
The decreased flocculation abilities observed for all strains in chemically defined minimal media may be attributed to starvation for auxotrophically required nutrients, as recent studies by Pronk (43) recommend increased supplementation of auxotrophic nutrients in comparison to those used in this study as prescribed by Sherman et al. (50). Lee and DaSilva (31) reported 10-fold-lower β-galactosidase activities for transgenic S. cerevisiae strains expressing lacZ under transcriptional control of the ADH2 promoter when grown in minimal medium containing 2% glucose (wt/vol), which further supports these findings. Comparison of the relative promoter strengths of ADH2p and HSP30p for FLO gene expression in minimal media seems to suggest an increased nutritional demand for assimilable nitrogen by ADH2p. Although this study shows that ADH2p is responsible for later induction of flocculation and stronger flocculent phenotypes in nutrient-rich medium than HSP30p, it is most probable that ADH2p-controlled flocculation may not be suitable for certain industrial batch fermentation processes, such as winemaking because grape musts are sometimes deficient in assimilable nitrogen compounds (20).
Although no observable adhesion phenotype was evident for the FLO11 transformants used in this study, Bayly et al. (3) presented evidence that FLO11-encoded flocculin yielded a strongly flocculent Flo1 phenotype in untransformed S. cerevisiae strain YIY345. However, it was also reported that FLO11 overexpression in S. cerevisiae strain
1278b promotes very weak calcium-independent flocculation, while overexpression in S. cerevisiae strain S288C does not promote cell-to-cell adhesion (18, 62). It is possible that the flocculent ability of FY23-F11A and FY23-F11H strains may be too weak to be assessed by the modified Helm's assay employed in this study.
As mentioned previously, a nonsense mutation in the FLO8 gene ensures that the dominant FLO genes are transcriptionally silent in the S. cerevisiae FY23 strain employed in this study (32, 61, 68). Thus, it is possible to eliminate contributions by other dominant FLO genes and exclusively assess the phenotypic consequences of FLO11 expression. Therefore, it may be concluded that ADH2- and HSP30-facilitated FLO11 expression is sufficiently responsible for flor formation. This finding is further supported by earlier reports that identified FLO11 as a primary factor for flor formation in other S. cerevisiae strain types (24, 25, 70).
It has been proposed that flor wine yeast begins to form flor via a FLO11-mediated mechanism only when glucose repression of FLO11 transcription is eliminated due to depletion of grape sugar after alcoholic fermentation (24). Based on the findings of this study, it can be suggested that the ADH2 or HSP30 promoter can be utilized to induce flor formation in nonflor wine yeast in a manner that will mimic natural flor wine yeast. The fact that the FY23-11A strain displayed decreased invasive growth in minimal agar that contained only auxotrophic nutritional requirements in comparison to complete nutrient supplementation further supports the previously mentioned notion that the ADH2 promoter displays an increased demand for assimilable nitrogen. Surprisingly, no invasive growth phenotype was associated with the FY23-F11H strain. This suggests that growth on solid media is not an ideal induction condition for the HSP30 promoter.
This study highlights that specific adhesion properties appear to be defined primarily by the properties of specific flocculins and not by general cell wall properties, such as hydrophobicity. Each FLO gene leads to specific phenotypes and phenotype intensities, with FLO1 and FLO5 resulting in cell aggregation and flocculation, whereas FLO11 expression leads to invasive growth and flor formation. Clearly, the timing and intensities of the phenotypes are entirely dependent on the transcriptional regulation of each individual FLO gene.
The data clearly demonstrate that the flocculation behavior of industrial yeast can be fine-tuned to optimize specific production processes. The modified yeast strains used in this study contain only yeast-derived DNA sequences and can be regarded as self-cloned strains. Such modified strains are generally recognized as safe and may be approved more readily for industrial exploitation (60). The bioengineering of S. cerevisiae strains capable of controlled flocculation reported in this study may also benefit downstream processing in the pharmaceutical and nutraceutical industries which employ S. cerevisiae in batch-wise fermentations for the biosynthesis of high-value natural products, such as isoprenoids, flavanoids, and long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids. We are currently investigating the impact of the same constructs in industrial wine yeast strains.
Published ahead of print on 15 August 2008. ![]()
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