Strategy for adapting wine yeasts for bioethanol production

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Abstract

The Saccharomyces cerevisiae wine yeast strains 71B-1122 and K1-V1116 were used to derive strains that could tolerate and produce higher ethanol yields. Respiratory-deficient mutants resistant to 500 μg/mL lycorine were isolated. Two mutants, 71B-1122 YEBr L3 and K1-V1116 YEBr L4, were shown to achieve about 10% and 18% improvement in their glucose-to-ethanol conversion efficiency compared to their respective parent strains. The K1-V1116 YEBr L4 in particular can tolerate an ethanol yield of 18.8 ± 0.8% at 3.5 weeks of fermentation and continued to consume most of the sugar until less than 1% glucose was left.

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APA

Ooi, B. G., & Lankford, K. R. (2009). Strategy for adapting wine yeasts for bioethanol production. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 10(1), 385–394. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms10010385

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