Albertin Warren, Panfili Aurélie, Miot-Sertier Cécile, Goulielmakis Aurélie, Delcamp Adline, Salin Franck, Lonvaud-Funel Aline, Curtin Chris, Masneuf-Pomarede Isabelle
Univ. de Bordeaux, ISVV, EA 4577, Unité de recherche Œnologie, F-33140 Villenave d'Ornon, France; Bordeaux Sciences Agro, F-33175 Gradignan, France.
Univ. de Bordeaux, ISVV, EA 4577, Unité de recherche Œnologie, F-33140 Villenave d'Ornon, France.
Food Microbiol. 2014 Sep;42:188-95. doi: 10.1016/j.fm.2014.03.012. Epub 2014 Mar 24.
Although many yeasts are useful for food production and beverage, some species may cause spoilage with important economic loss. This is the case of Dekkera/Brettanomyces bruxellensis, a contaminant species that is mainly associated with fermented beverages (wine, beer, cider and traditional drinks). To better control Brettanomyces spoilage, rapid and reliable genotyping methods are necessary to determine the origins of the spoilage, to assess the effectiveness of preventive treatments and to develop new control strategies. Despite several previously published typing methods, ranging from classical molecular methods (RAPD, AFLP, REA-PFGE, mtDNA restriction analysis) to more engineered technologies (infrared spectroscopy), there is still a lack of a rapid, reliable and universal genotyping approach. In this work, we developed eight polymorphic microsatellites markers for the Brettanomyces/Dekkera bruxellensis species. Microsatellite typing was applied to the genetic analysis of wine and beer isolates from Europe, Australia and South Africa. Our results suggest that B. bruxellensis is a highly disseminated species, with some strains isolated from different continents being closely related at the genetic level. We also focused on strains isolated from two Bordeaux wineries on different substrates (grapes, red wines) and for different vintages (over half a century). We showed that all B. bruxellensis strains within a cellar are strongly related at the genetic level, suggesting that one clonal population may cause spoilage over decades. The microsatellite tool now paves the way for future population genetics research of the B. bruxellensis species.
尽管许多酵母对食品生产和饮料有益,但某些酵母种类可能会导致变质,造成重大经济损失。德克酵母/布鲁塞尔酒香酵母就是这样的例子,它是一种污染物种,主要与发酵饮料(葡萄酒、啤酒、苹果酒和传统饮品)有关。为了更好地控制酒香酵母造成的变质,需要快速可靠的基因分型方法来确定变质的源头、评估预防措施的有效性以及制定新的控制策略。尽管此前已发表了多种分型方法,从经典分子方法(随机扩增多态性DNA、扩增片段长度多态性、限制性内切酶分析-脉冲场凝胶电泳、线粒体DNA限制性分析)到更先进的技术(红外光谱法),但仍缺乏一种快速、可靠且通用的基因分型方法。在这项研究中,我们为布鲁塞尔酒香酵母开发了8个多态性微卫星标记。微卫星分型被应用于对来自欧洲、澳大利亚和南非的葡萄酒及啤酒分离株的遗传分析。我们的结果表明,布鲁塞尔酒香酵母是一种广泛传播的物种,一些从不同大陆分离出的菌株在基因水平上密切相关。我们还重点研究了从波尔多两个酒庄不同底物(葡萄、红葡萄酒)以及不同年份(半个多世纪)分离出的菌株。我们发现酒窖内所有的布鲁塞尔酒香酵母菌株在基因水平上都高度相关,这表明一个克隆群体可能在几十年间造成变质。微卫星工具现在为未来对布鲁塞尔酒香酵母物种的群体遗传学研究铺平了道路。