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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, May 2001, p. 2056-2061, Vol. 67, No. 5
Departamento de Biotecnología,
Instituto de Agroquímica y Tecnología de Alimentos
(CSIC), 46100 Burjassot,1 and CECT
(Spanish Type Culture Collection), Universitat de València,
Burjassot,2 València, and
Bodegas González-Byass, Jerez de la Frontera,
Cádiz,3 Spain
Received 3 November 2000/Accepted 7 February 2001
Molecular and physiological analyses were used to study the
evolution of the yeast population, from alcoholic fermentation to
biological aging in the process of "fino" sherry wine making. The
four races of "flor" Saccharomyces cerevisiae (beticus,
cheresiensis, montuliensis, and rouxii) exhibited
identical restriction patterns for the region spanning the internal
transcribed spacers 1 and 2 (ITS-1 and ITS-2) and the 5.8S rRNA gene,
but this pattern was different, from those exhibited by non-flor
S. cerevisiae strains. This flor-specific pattern was
detected only after wines were fortified, never during alcoholic
fermentation, and all the strains isolated from the velum exhibited the
typical flor yeast pattern. By restriction fragment length polymorphism
of mitochondrial DNA and karyotyping, we showed that (i) the native
strain is better adapted to fermentation conditions than commercial
strains; (ii) two different populations of S. cerevisiae
strains are involved in the process of elaboration, of fino sherry
wine, one of which is responsible for must fermentation and the other,
for wine aging; and (iii) one strain was dominant in the flor
population integrating the velum from sherry wines produced in
González Byass wineries, although other authors have described a
succession of races of flor S. cerevisiae during wine
aging. Analyzing all these results together, we conclude that yeast
population dynamics during biological aging is a complex phenomenon and
differences between yeast populations from different wineries can be observed.
0099-2240/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.67.5.2056-2061.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Yeast Population Dynamics during the Fermentation
and Biological Aging of Sherry Wines
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Departamento de
Biotecnología, Instituto de Agroquímica y
Tecnología de Alimentos (CSIC), P.O. Box 73, 46100 Burjassot,
València, Spain. Phone: 34 96 390 00 22. Fax: 34 96 363 63 01. E-mail: aquerol{at}iata.csic.es.
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