Physical cell-cell contact elicits specific transcriptomic responses in wine yeast species

  • Luyt N
  • de Witt R
  • Divol B
  • et al.
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Abstract

Within the wine ecosystem, yeasts are the most relevant contributors to alcoholic fermentation and wine organoleptic characteristics. While some studies have described yeast-yeast interactions during alcoholic fermentation, such interactions remain ill-defined, and little is understood regarding the molecular mechanisms behind many of the phenotypes observed when two or more species are co-cultured. In particular, no study has investigated transcriptional regulation in response to physical interspecies cell-cell contact, as opposed to the generally better understood/characterized metabolic interactions. These data are of direct relevance to our understanding of microbial ecological interactions in general while also creating opportunities to improve ecosystem-based biotechnological applications such as wine fermentation. Furthermore, the presence of competitor species has rarely been considered an evolutionary biotic selection pressure. In this context, the data reveal novel gene functions. This, and further such analysis, is likely to significantly enlarge the genome annotation space.

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Luyt, N. A., de Witt, R. N., Divol, B., Patterton, H. G., Setati, M. E., Taillandier, P., & Bauer, F. F. (2024). Physical cell-cell contact elicits specific transcriptomic responses in wine yeast species. Microbiology Spectrum, 12(8). https://doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.00572-23

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