4.2 Article

Profiling the Yeast Communities of Wine Fermentations Using Terminal Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism Analysis

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ENOLOGY AND VITICULTURE
Volume 63, Issue 2, Pages 185-194

Publisher

AMER SOC ENOLOGY VITICULTURE
DOI: 10.5344/ajev.2011.11077

Keywords

TRFLP; culture-independent methods; community profiling

Funding

  1. Oregon Wine Board
  2. California Competitive Grants Program for Research in Viticulture and Enology
  3. D.E. Gallo educational enhancement fund
  4. A.L. & R.C. Heck research fellowship
  5. Wine Spectator scholarship
  6. R.C. Briess scholarship
  7. M.J. Lewis endowment
  8. Jastro & Shields fellowship
  9. NIH [IU01TW008160]
  10. USDA-AFRI [2008-35621-04750]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (TRFLP), used most often to describe bacterial communities, presents a high-throughput, low-cost solution for analyzing mixed yeast communities in wine and other fermentations. In this study, a TRFLP approach was developed for the identification and discrimination of yeasts and used to construct a TRFLP database comprising 121 strains of yeast (representing 24 genera and 72 species) associated with wine and food fermentations. This database exhibits sensitive discrimination among species and robust intraspecific conservation of TRFLP profiles, enabling reliable characterization of mixed yeast communities. The yeast ecology of sweet, botrytized wine fermentations from two separate vintages was analyzed using this database, demonstrating the utility of this method for fast-paced, qualitative detection and identification of differences in yeast community structures over time in a complex, diverse fermentation system.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.2
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available