Construction from a single parent of baker's yeast strains with high freeze tolerance and fermentative activity in both lean and sweet doughs

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Abstract

From a freeze-tolerant baker's yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), 2,333 spore clones were obtained. To improve the leavening ability in lean dough of the parent strain, we selected 555 of the high-maltose-fermentative spore clones by using a method in which a soft agar solution containing maltose and bromocresol purple was overlaid on yeast colonies. By measuring the gassing power in the dough, we selected 66 spore clones with a good leavening ability in lean dough and a total of 694 hybrids were constructed by crossing them. Among these hybrids, we obtained 50 novel freeze-tolerant strains with good leavening ability in all lean, regular, and sweet doughs comparable to that of commercial baker's yeast. Hybrids with improved leavening ability or freeze tolerance compared with the parent yeast and commercial baker's yeasts were also obtained. These results suggest that hybridization between spore clones derived from a single parent strain is effective for improving the properties of baker's yeasts.

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Nakagawa, S., & Ouchi, K. (1994). Construction from a single parent of baker’s yeast strains with high freeze tolerance and fermentative activity in both lean and sweet doughs. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 60(10), 3499–3502. https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.60.10.3499-3502.1994

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