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Título: | Analysis of lipid composition reveals mechanisms of ethanol tolerance in the model yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae |
Autor: | Lairón Peris, María CSIC ORCID; Routledge, S.J.; Linney, J.A.; Alonso del Real, Javier CSIC ORCID; Spickett, C.M.; Pitt, A.R.; Guillamón, José Manuel CSIC ORCID ; Barrio, Eladio CSIC ORCID; Goddard, A.D.; Querol, Amparo CSIC ORCID | Palabras clave: | Ethanol S. cerevisiae Membrane properties |
Fecha de publicación: | 26-mar-2021 | Editor: | American Society for Microbiology | Citación: | Applied and Environmental Microbiology 87(12):10.1128/AEM.00440-21(2021) | Resumen: | Saccharomyces cerevisiae is an important unicellular yeast species within the biotechnological and food and beverage industries. A significant application of this species is the production of ethanol, where concentrations are limited by cellular toxicity, often at the level of the cell membrane. Here, we characterize 61 S. cerevisiae strains for ethanol tolerance and further analyse five representatives with varying ethanol tolerances. The most tolerant strain, AJ4, was dominant in co-culture at 0% and 10% ethanol. Unexpectedly, although it does not have the highest NIC or MIC, MY29 was the dominant strain in co-culture at 6% ethanol, which may be linked to differences in its basal lipidome. Whilst relatively few lipidomic differences were observed between strains, a significantly higher PE concentration was observed in the least tolerant strain, MY26, at 0% and 6% ethanol compared to the other strains that became more similar at 10%, indicating potential involvement of this lipid with ethanol sensitivity. Our findings reveal that AJ4 is best able to adapt its membrane to become more fluid in the presence of ethanol and lipid extracts from AJ4 also form the most permeable membranes. Furthermore, MY26 is least able to modulate fluidity in response to ethanol and membranes formed from extracted lipids are least leaky at physiological ethanol concentrations. Overall, these results reveal a potential mechanism of ethanol tolerance and suggests a limited set of membrane compositions that diverse yeast species use to achieve this. | Versión del editor: | https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.00440-21 | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10261/238163 | DOI: | 10.1128/AEM.00440-21 | ISSN: | 0099-2240 |
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AEM00440-21_Merged_PDF05_03_2021.pdf | Artículo principal | 924,61 kB | Adobe PDF | Visualizar/Abrir |
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