| Literature DB >> 29867821 |
Peter Morrison-Whittle1, Soon A Lee1, Bruno Fedrizzi2, Matthew R Goddard1,3.
Abstract
The products of microbial metabolism form an integral part of human industry and have been shaped by evolutionary processes, accidentally and deliberately, for thousands of years. In the production of wine, a great many flavor and aroma compounds are produced by yeast species and are the targets of research for commercial breeding programs. Here we demonstrate how co-evolution with multiple species can generate novel interactions through serial co-culture in grape juice. We find that after ~65 generations, co-evolved strains and strains evolved independently show significantly different growth aspects and exhibit significantly different metabolite profiles. We show significant impact of co-evolution of Candida glabrata and Pichia kudriavzevii on the production of metabolites that affect the flavor and aroma of experimental wines. While co-evolved strains do exhibit novel interactions that affect the reproductive success of interacting species, we found no evidence of cross-feeding behavior. Our findings yield promising avenues for developing commercial yeast strains by using co-evolution to diversify the metabolic output of target species without relying on genetic modification or breeding technologies. Such approaches open up exciting new possibilities for harnessing microbial co-evolution in areas of agriculture and food related research generally.Entities:
Keywords: co-culture; co-evolution; metabolite analysis; microbial interactions; wine yeast
Year: 2018 PMID: 29867821 PMCID: PMC5949342 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2018.00910
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Figure 1Generation of independently evolved and co-evolved yeast lines from a single ancestral colony by serial transfer in fresh juice.
Figure 2Sequential inoculation of experimental ferments: primary inoculation of C. glabrata and P. kudriavzevii pairs then a secondary inoculation of S. cerevisiae after 50 h.
Figure 3Bioscreen growth curves and relative fitness measures in juice A of co-evolved, independently evolved, and ancestral lines of (A) C. glabrata and P. kudriavzevii when grown together. (B) C. glabrata when grown in isolation. (C) P. kudriavzevii when grown in isolation. Relative fitness measures—V, lagtime, and cell densities—are expressed as the proportional difference between evolved lines and the ancestral line. Significant differences between co-evolved and independently evolved strains are denoted by “*”.
Results of Permutation ANOVA of Jaccard dissimilarities between overall metabolite profiles using independently evolved and co-evolved lines across two juices (9,999 permutations).
| Juice | 1 | 0.62054 | 0.62054 | 14.4233 | 0.38460 | 0.0005 |
| Culture status | 1 | 0.19789 | 0.19789 | 4.5995 | 0.12265 | 0.0222 |
| Interaction | 1 | 0.02063 | 0.02063 | 0.4795 | 0.01279 | 0.6279 |
| Residuals | 18 | 0.77442 | 0.04302 | 0.47997 | ||
| Total | 21 | 1.61347 | 1.00000 |
df, degrees of freedom; SS, sum-of-squares; MS, mean sum-of-squares; F.
Figure 4Jaccard dissimilarities of metabolite profiles—averaged across technical replicates—for (A) All metabolites, (B) Higher alcohols, (C) C6 compounds, (D) Esters, (E) Fatty acids, (F) Terpenes in Juice A.
Figure 5Relative metabolite concentrations of co-evolved and independently evolved lines in Juice A—the juice they were evolved in. The concentrations of metabolites are the proportional difference in concentration compared to the ancestral line.