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Wine yeast fermentation vigor may be improved by elimination of recessive growth-retarding alleles

✍ Scribed by Manuel Ramírez; José A. Regodón; Francisco Pérez; José E. Rebollo


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
128 KB
Volume
65
Category
Article
ISSN
0006-3592

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✦ Synopsis


The presence of recessive growth-retarding alleles can reduce the fitness of industrial wine yeasts. In nature, these alleles are supposed to be eliminated through "genome renewal". We emulated this process in the laboratory to increase the fermentation vigor of wine yeasts. The procedure is simply to sporulate the yeast strains and select new homozygous single-spore descendants. Most of the yeasts achieve a faster onset of fermentation when recessive deleterious genes are eliminated. The increase of the degree of homozygosity has no relation, either direct or inverse, with the fermentation vigor of the yeasts or with the quality of the resulting wine. However, in some strains in which recessive growth-retarding alleles have been eliminated, the fermentation vigor and the quality of the wine were found to be improved simultaneously.