Introduction to the Biology of Spoilage Yeasts and Brettanomyces - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 25
About This Presentation
Title:

Introduction to the Biology of Spoilage Yeasts and Brettanomyces

Description:

Introduction to the Biology of Spoilage Yeasts and Brettanomyces Linda F. Bisson Department of Viticulture and Enology University of California Presentation Outline ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:117
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 26
Provided by: ucceUcdav
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Introduction to the Biology of Spoilage Yeasts and Brettanomyces


1
Introduction to the Biology of Spoilage Yeasts
and Brettanomyces
  • Linda F. Bisson
  • Department of Viticulture and Enology
  • University of California

2
Presentation Outline
  • Introduction to Yeast Spoilage
  • The Biology of Brettanomyces

3
Introduction to Yeast Spoilage

4
Types of Yeast Spoilage
  • Film formers
  • Residual sugar utilizers
  • Survivalists

5
Film Formers
  • Candida, Pichia
  • Candida spp
  • P. anomala
  • P. membranifaciens
  • Torulaspora
  • Hansenula
  • Dependent upon oxygen exposure and head space
  • May be aromatically neutral or sources of
    off-aromas

6
Residual Sugar Utilizers
  • Saccharomyces
  • Zygosaccharomyces
  • Z. bailii
  • Z. bisporous
  • Z. rouxii
  • Saccharomycodes ludwigii
  • Can grow in bottle post-bottling
  • Can form turbidity and be aromatically neutral
  • Can form off-characters

7
Survivalists
  • Brettanomyces/Dekkera
  • Pichia guilliermondii
  • Produce off-characters

8
Types of Yeast Spoilage
  • Off-character
  • Turbidity
  • Films and sediments

9

the Biology of Brettanomyces/Dekkera

10
Historical Background
  • Brettanomyces is a budding yeast found widely
    distributed in nature.
  • Discovered in beer in 1904 (Claussen), in wine
    (Krumbholz Tauschanoff, 1930) and again in 1940
    (Custers).
  • Results in a variety of aromas.
  • English Character or Lambic Beers.
  • Spoilage/Regional Character in wines.

11
Taxonomy
  • Anamorphic/non-sexual form Brettanomyces
    Teleomorphic/sexual form Dekkera
  • Several species are found B. bruxellensis, B.
    anomala, B. custerianus
  • Characteristic traits
  • Ascomycete yeast
  • Reproduce by budding
  • Observation of sporulation is rare
  • Pseudohyphae formed
  • Fermentation end products acetic acid and CO2
    dominate
  • Fermentation more rapid in presence of air
    Custers effect

12
Morphology
  • Cell Morphology
  • Ogival, bullet shaped, non-uniform
  • Sometimes arranged in pseudohyphae.
  • Ascospore Morphology
  • Conquistador hat-shaped
  • 1 to 4 spores/ascus

13
Brettanomyces Genomics
  • Chromosomal number varies by strain
  • Chromosome configuration not well preserved
  • Not a simple haploid or diploid
  • Hybrid between two strains with similar but
    different genomes?
  • Diploid progenitor that lost the ability to
    engage in sexual reproduction (genome renewal)
  • Accumulation of allelic differences and
    polymorphisms
  • Hyper-mutagenic?
  • Defective in repair?

14
Brettanomyces Characteristics
  • Custers effect oxygen stimulates glycolysis
  • Capable of ethanol production from sugars
    anaerobially
  • Produce acetic acid from sugars aerobically
  • Can produce viable petite (non-fermenting)
    off-spring

15
Brettanomyces vs. Saccharomyces
  • Saccharomyces grows 5 times faster
  • Brettanomyces has slightly higher ethanol yields
    (10-15)
  • Saccharomyces produces more glycerol (6 fold
    higher)
  • Brettanomyces produces more biomass (20 to 30
    more)
  • Brettanomyces more tolerant of large changes in
    pH and temperature
  • Brettanomyces has a more energy-efficient
    metabolism

16
Metabolism of Brettanomyces
  • Can use numerous sugars, ethanol, other carbon
    compounds, and even amino acids as carbon sources
  • Can survive in very nutrient poor condition
  • Can survive extreme environments and is found in
    VNC states
  • Produces diverse metabolic end products from
    grape components
  • Volatile Phenols
  • Tetrahydropyrazines

17
Brettanomyces and Oxygen
  • Oxygen stimulates growth, acetic acid formation
    and glycolysis (Custers effect)
  • Oxidation of acetaldehyde to acetic acid is
    favored over reduction to alcohol
  • Leads to depletion of NAD
  • Requires co-substrates or oxygen for acetic acid
    production
  • Redox state of cytoplasm has a strong impact on
    metabolites produced

18
Brettanomyces Spoilage Characters
  • Vinyl phenols
  • Ethyl phenols
  • Biogenic amines
  • Putrescine
  • Cadaverine
  • Spermidine
  • Acetic acid

19
Vinyl Phenol Formation
  • Detoxification?
  • Co-Substrate?

20
Vinyl Phenol Formation
  • 4-EP formation is growth associated
  • 4-EP formation not correlated with acetic acid
    formation
  • High 4-EP producers tolerate higher environmental
    levels of p-coumaric acid

21
Production of Vinyl Phenols by Brettanomyces
22
Is That Smell Desirable?
  • Three main spoilage compounds
  • 4-Ethylphenol (band aid)
  • 4-Ethylguaiacol (smoky medicinal)
  • 4-Ethylcatechol (horsy)
  • Detection threshold varies with varietal from 126
    to 420 ppb of 4-EP depending upon matrix
  • Recovery Thresholds
  • 50 of tasters can detect 605 ppb in wine or 440
    ppb in water of 4-EP
  • Chatonnet has defined spoilage as
  • gt426 ppb of 4-EP and 4-EG
  • gt620 ppb of 4-EP

23
Incidence of Spoilage
Country gt426ppb gt620ppb France
36 28 Italy 49 19 Australia
59 46 Portugal 42 27
Wines may contain up to 50 ppm (!) of 4-EP
24
Brett Signature Taints Tasting
  • Glass 1 Control (Merlot)
  • Glass 2 1000ppb 4-EP
  • Glass 3 620 ppb 4-EP
  • Glass 4 400ppb 4-EG
  • Glass 5 430 350ppb 4-EP 80 4-EG
  • Glass 6 2200 1800 4-EP 400 4-EG

25
Brett Alternative Substrates Tasting
  • Glass 1 Control Brett in media minus
    supplements
  • Glass 2 Ferulic acid
  • Glass 3 Coumaric acid
  • Glass 4 Phenylalanine
  • Glass 5 Tryptophan and Tyrosine
  • Glass 6 Lysine
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com