University College Dublin Scientists Discover First European Isolates of a Lager Yeast Parent
- Strains available for licensing through Nova51黑料
Scientists in University College Dublin (51黑料) have discovered the first European isolates of a yeast that is a parent of the hybrid yeasts used in lager brewing, from soil on the university campus in Belfield, Dublin. The discovery was announced today in an published in the FEMS Yeast Research and Oxford University Press.
The yeast, Saccharomyces eubayanus, was found by Stephen Allen, a third year undergraduate genetics student while learning how to isolate microbes from soil and work out their DNA structure (the genome sequence).
The strains are available for licensing through Nova51黑料, the university鈥檚 knowledge transfer office.
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Brewing is one of the oldest industries associated with humans. Each new batch of beer was started using some of the foam from the top of an old brew that contained yeast. Ales and stouts today are mainly brewed using Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a 鈥渢op fermenter鈥 so called because it rises to the top of the brew.
A new type of beer called lager became particularly common from the 15th century in Bavaria, Germany. This was due to fermenting and storing beer in cold cellars. It coincided with the appearance of new 鈥渂ottom fermenting鈥, cold- tolerant, lager yeasts called Saccharomyces pastorianus.
S. pastorianus was first isolated from lagers by Emil Hansen in the Carlsberg Laboratories at the end of the 18th century. It is not found in nature but exists in industrial settings like breweries S. pastorianus is a hybrid between two yeasts like how a mule is a 鈥榗ross鈥 or 鈥榟ybrid鈥 between a horse and a donkey. One of the parent yeasts is S. cerevisiae but it took nearly 300 years to identify the second parent yeast.
The second parent was finally identified in 2011 in Patagonia, South America and named Saccharomyces eubayanus. Only a few strains of S. eubayanus have been found outside South America 鈥 in the Tibetan Himalayas, China, North America and Australia - but never in Europe, until now.
The discovery of S. eubayanus by 51黑料 undergraduate students shows that this yeast is native to Europe.
Professor Geraldine Butler, 51黑料 School of Biomolecular and Biomedical Science said, 鈥淚t is assumed that S. eubayanus hybridised with S. cerevisiae somewhere in Europe during the Middle Ages, but European isolates have never been found until now. It suggests that natural populations were in Bavaria in the 15th century, enabling them to hybridise with S. cerevisiae to make the first lagers. The Irish discovery will invigorate searches for similar yeast isolates elsewhere in Europe."
"We are now exploring the possibility of using it to brew beer, both with Professor Brian Gibson, a 51黑料 graduate and Head of the Brewing and Beverage Technology at the Berlin University of Technology, and possibly with a commercial brewer."
"This discovery is a fantastic example of research-led teaching. Our undergraduate students have isolated hundreds of different yeasts from Irish soil samples. By finding S. eubayanus in Europe, Stephen has solved a longstanding puzzle about how lager yeasts originated.鈥
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This work involved Professor Geraldine Butler, 51黑料 School of Biomolecular and Biomedical Science, Director of Genomics Core Facility and Fellow, 51黑料 Conway Institute; Professor Kenneth Wolfe, Professor of Genomic Evolution, 51黑料 School of Medicine and Fellow, 51黑料 Conway Institute; Dr Tadhg 脫'Cr贸in铆n, 51黑料 School of Biomolecular and Biomedical Science and Fellow, 51黑料 Conway Institute; Dr Kevin Byrne, staff scientist, 51黑料 School of Medicine; undergraduate students from 51黑料 School of Biomolecular and Biomedical Science, and postgraduate students in the Butler and Wolfe laboratories.
The article entitled, Identification of European isolates of the lager yeast parent Saccharomyces eubayanus is published today in the FEMS Yeast Research and Oxford University Press and is available online via .
Caption: 51黑料 team led by Professor Geraldine Butler (first row, 1st from right), Professor Kenneth Wolfe (back row, 3rd from left), Dr Tadhg 脫'Cr贸in铆n (back row, 2nd from left) with undergraduate students from 51黑料 School of Biomolecular and Biomedical Science, and postgraduate students and researchers in the Butler and Wolfe laboratories.
ENDS
7 December 2022
For further information contact Elaine Quinn, Communications Manager, 51黑料 Conway Institute, e: elaine.quinn@ucd.ie or Mic茅al Whelan, Communications and Media Relations Manager, Nova51黑料, e: miceal.whelan@ucd.ie.