Thiamine and Biotin: Relevance in the Production of Volatile and Non-Volatile Compounds during Saccharomyces cerevisiae Alcoholic Fermentation in Synthetic Grape Must

Author:

Evers Marie Sarah12ORCID,Roullier-Gall Chloé1,Morge Christophe2,Sparrow Celine2,Gobert Antoine2,Vichi Stefania3ORCID,Alexandre Hervé1

Affiliation:

1. Institut Universitaire de la Vigne et du Vin Jules Guyot, UMR PAM, Université de Bourgogne, 2 Rue Claude Ladrey, 21000 Dijon, France

2. Sofralab SAS, 79 Avenue Alfred Anatole Thévenet, 51530 Magenta, France

3. Food Science and Gastronomy Department, University of Barcelona, Nutrition, INSA (Institut de Recerca en Nutricio I Seguretat Alimentaria), 08921 Santa Coloma de Gramenet, Spain

Abstract

Vitamins are major cofactors to numerous key metabolic pathways in enological yeasts, and both thiamine and biotin, notably, are believed to be essential to yeast fermentation and growth, respectively. In order to further assess and clarify their role in winemaking, and in the resulting wine, alcoholic fermentations of a commercial Saccharomyces cerevisiae active dried yeast were conducted in synthetic media containing various concentrations of both vitamins. Growth and fermentation kinetics were monitored and proved the essential character of biotin in yeast growth, and of thiamine in fermentation. The synthetic wine volatile compounds were quantified, and notable influences of both vitamins appeared, through a striking positive effect of thiamine on the production of higher alcohols, and of biotin on fatty acids. Beyond the evidence of this influence on fermentations and on the production of volatiles, this work proves, for the first time, the impact held by vitamins on wine yeasts’ exometabolome, investigated through an untargeted metabolomic analysis. This highlighted chemical differences in the composition of synthetic wines through a notably marked influence of thiamine on 46 named S. cerevisiae metabolic pathways, and especially in amino acid-associated metabolic pathways. This provides, overall, the first evidence of the impact held by both vitamins on the wine.

Funder

Association Nationale de la Recherche et de la Technologie

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Plant Science,Health Professions (miscellaneous),Health (social science),Microbiology,Food Science

Reference65 articles.

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