Industrial brewing yeast engineered for the production of primary flavor determinants in hopped beer

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作者
Charles M. Denby
Rachel A. Li
Van T. Vu
Zak Costello
Weiyin Lin
Leanne Jade G. Chan
Joseph Williams
Bryan Donaldson
Charles W. Bamforth
Christopher J. Petzold
Henrik V. Scheller
Hector Garcia Martin
Jay D. Keasling
机构
[1] University of California,California Institute of Quantitative Biosciences (QB3)
[2] Joint BioEnergy Institute,Department of Plant and Microbial Biology
[3] University of California,Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
[4] Biological Systems and Engineering Division,Department of Bioengineering
[5] University of California,Department of Food Science and Technology
[6] DOE Agile BioFoundry,Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
[7] University of California Davis,Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
[8] Lagunitas Brewing Company,Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Sustainability
[9] Environmental Genomics and Systems Biology Division,undefined
[10] University of California,undefined
[11] Technical University of Denmark,undefined
来源
Nature Communications | / 9卷
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摘要
Flowers of the hop plant provide both bitterness and “hoppy” flavor to beer. Hops are, however, both a water and energy intensive crop and vary considerably in essential oil content, making it challenging to achieve a consistent hoppy taste in beer. Here, we report that brewer’s yeast can be engineered to biosynthesize aromatic monoterpene molecules that impart hoppy flavor to beer by incorporating recombinant DNA derived from yeast, mint, and basil. Whereas metabolic engineering of biosynthetic pathways is commonly enlisted to maximize product titers, tuning expression of pathway enzymes to affect target production levels of multiple commercially important metabolites without major collateral metabolic changes represents a unique challenge. By applying state-of-the-art engineering techniques and a framework to guide iterative improvement, strains are generated with target performance characteristics. Beers produced using these strains are perceived as hoppier than traditionally hopped beers by a sensory panel in a double-blind tasting.
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