Bagheri Bahareh, Bauer Florian F, Setati Mathabatha E
Department of Viticulture and Oenology, Institute for Wine Biotechnology, Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, South Africa.
Front Microbiol. 2017 Oct 16;8:1988. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2017.01988. eCollection 2017.
Natural, also referred to as spontaneous wine fermentations, are carried out by the native microbiota of the grape juice, without inoculation of selected, industrially produced yeast or bacterial strains. Such fermentations are commonly initiated by non- yeast species that numerically dominate the must. Community composition and numerical dominance of species vary significantly between individual musts, but will in most cases dominate the late stages of the fermentation and complete the process. Nevertheless, non- species contribute significantly, positively or negatively, to the character and quality of the final product. The contribution is species and strain dependent and will depend on each species or strain's absolute and relative contribution to total metabolically active biomass, and will therefore, be a function of its relative fitness within the microbial ecosystem. However, the population dynamics of multispecies fermentations are not well understood. Consequently, the oenological potential of the microbiome in any given grape must, can currently not be evaluated or predicted. To better characterize the rules that govern the complex wine microbial ecosystem, a model yeast consortium comprising eight species commonly encountered in South African grape musts and an ARISA based method to monitor their dynamics were developed and validated. The dynamics of these species were evaluated in synthetic must in the presence or absence of using direct viable counts and ARISA. The data show that specifically suppresses certain species while appearing to favor the persistence of other species. Growth dynamics in Chenin blanc grape must fermentation was monitored only through viable counts. The interactions observed in the synthetic must, were upheld in the natural must fermentations, suggesting the broad applicability of the observed ecosystem dynamics. Importantly, the presence of indigenous yeast populations did not appear to affect the broad interaction patterns between the consortium species. The data show that the wine ecosystem is characterized by both mutually supportive and inhibitory species. The current study presents a first step in the development of a model to predict the oenological potential of any given wine mycobiome.
自然发酵,也称为自发葡萄酒发酵,是由葡萄汁中的天然微生物群进行的,无需接种选定的、工业生产的酵母或细菌菌株。此类发酵通常由在葡萄汁中数量占主导的非酵母菌种引发。不同葡萄汁之间,菌种的群落组成和数量优势差异显著,但在大多数情况下,这些菌种会主导发酵后期并完成发酵过程。然而,非酵母菌种对最终产品的特性和质量有显著的正向或负向贡献。这种贡献取决于菌种和菌株,并且将取决于每个菌种或菌株对总代谢活性生物量的绝对和相对贡献,因此,将是其在微生物生态系统中相对适应性的函数。然而,多菌种发酵的种群动态尚未得到很好的理解。因此,目前无法评估或预测任何给定葡萄汁中微生物群落的酿酒学潜力。为了更好地描述控制复杂葡萄酒微生物生态系统的规则,开发并验证了一个由南非葡萄汁中常见的八种菌种组成的酵母联合体模型以及一种基于自动核糖体间隔区分析(ARISA)的方法来监测它们的动态。在有或没有[具体物质未提及]的情况下,使用直接活菌计数和ARISA评估了这些菌种在合成葡萄汁中的动态。数据表明,[具体物质未提及]特别抑制某些菌种,同时似乎有利于其他菌种的持续存在。仅通过活菌计数监测了白诗南葡萄汁发酵中的生长动态。在合成葡萄汁中观察到的相互作用在自然葡萄汁发酵中也得到了证实,这表明所观察到的生态系统动态具有广泛的适用性。重要的是,本地酵母种群的存在似乎并未影响联合体菌种之间广泛的相互作用模式。数据表明,葡萄酒生态系统的特点是既有相互支持的菌种,也有相互抑制的菌种。当前的研究为开发一个预测任何给定葡萄酒真菌群落酿酒学潜力的模型迈出了第一步。