Saccharomyces cerevisiae gene expression during fermentation of Pinot noir wines at industrially relevant scale

2021 
During a wine fermentation, Saccharomyces cerevisiae transforms grape must through metabolic activities that generate ethanol and other compounds. Thousands of genes change expression over the course of a wine fermentation to allow S. cerevisiae to adapt to and dominate the fermentation environment. Investigations into these gene expression patterns have previously revealed genes that underlie cellular adaptation to the grape must and wine environment involving metabolic specialization and ethanol tolerance. However, the vast majority of studies detailing gene expression patterns have occurred in controlled environments that do not recapitulate the biological and chemical complexity of fermentations performed at production scale. Here, we present an analysis of the S. cerevisiae RC212 gene expression program across 40 pilot-scale fermentations (150 liters) using Pinot noir grapes from 10 California vineyards across two vintages. We observe a core gene expression program across all fermentations irrespective of vintage similar to that of laboratory fermentations, in addition to novel gene expression patterns likely related to the presence of non-Saccharomyces microorganisms and oxygen availability during fermentation. These gene expression patterns, both common and diverse, provide insight into S. cerevisiae biology critical to fermentation outcomes at industry-relevant scales.
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