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Stress co-tolerance and trehalose content in baking strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Authors:J G Lewis  R P Learmonth  P V Attfield  K Watson
Institution:(1) Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of New England, Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia, AU;(2) Department of Biology, University of Southern Queensland, Toowoomba, QLD 4350, Australia, AU;(3) Yeast Physiology Research Group, Burns Philp Technology and Research Centre, PO Box 219, North Ryde, NSW 2113, Australia, AU
Abstract:Fourteen wild-type baking strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae were grown in batch culture to true stationary phase (exogenous carbon source exhausted) and tested for their trehalose content and their tolerance to heat (52°C for 4.5 min), ethanol (20% v/v for 30 min), H2O2 (0.3 M for 60 min), rapid freezing (−196°C for 20 min, cooling rate 200°C min−1), slow freezing (−20°C for 24 h, cooling rate 3°C min−1), salt (growth in 1.5 M NaCl agar) or acetic acid (growth in 0.4% w/v acetic acid agar) stresses. Stress tolerance among the strains was highly variable and up to 1000-fold differences existed between strains for some types of stress. Compared with previously published reports, all strains were tolerant to H2O2 stress. Correlation analysis of stress tolerance results demonstrated relationships between tolerance to H2O2 and tolerance to all stresses except ethanol. This may imply that oxidative processes are associated with a wide variety of cellular stresses and also indicate that the general robustness associated with industrial yeast may be a result of their oxidative stress tolerance. In addition, H2O2 tolerance might be a suitable marker for the general assessment of stress tolerance in yeast strains. Trehalose content failed to correlate with tolerance to any stress except acetic acid. This may indicate that the contribution of trehalose to tolerance to other stresses is either small or inconsistent and that trehalose may not be used as a general predictor of stress tolerance in true stationary phase yeast. Received 10 October 1995/ Accepted in revised form 10 September 1996
Keywords:: Saccharomyces cerevisiae  stress tolerance  baking yeast  trehalose  oxidative stress
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