Comparative proteomics of industrial lager yeast reveals differential expression of the cerevisiae and non-cerevisiae parts of their genomes
Journal article, 2007

The proteomes of three industrial lager beer strains, CMBS33, OG2252 and A15, were analysed under standardised laboratory growth conditions. Protein spots in the 2-DE pattern of the lager strains were subjected to MS/MS to identify protein variants. We found the protein composition of the three lager strains to be qualitatively rather similar, while being substantially different from the Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain BY4742. Database searches using several fully sequenced genomes from the Saccharomyces genera indicated that the non-cerevisiae proteins in the 2-D pattern of lager strains were most closely related to S. bayanus. For many proteins the regulation of the bayanus-like protein and its cerevisiae counterpart varied in a strain-dependent manner, e.g. the bayanus-like form of Tdh3p was roughly eight-fold more abundant than the cerevisiae form in the OG2252 strain. We also found differential regulation of cerevisiae- and bayanus-like proteins during various stress conditions like low temperature growth, and adaptation to high temperatures or high salinity, e.g. for Arg1p, Sti1p and Pdc1p. Our data on the differential regulation of the two genomes in these hybrid strains may have important industrial implications for strain improvement and strain protection. © 2007 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA.

carlsbergensis

hybrids

wine

sequence

saccharomyces-cerevisiae

bayanus

genes

n-terminal acetyltransferases

pastorianus

acetylation

Author

Robert Caesar

University of Gothenburg

Johan Palmfeldt

University of Gothenburg

John Gustafsson

University of Gothenburg

Chalmers, Mathematical Sciences, Mathematical Statistics

Ellinor Pettersson

University of Gothenburg

Sayed Hossein Hashemi

University of Gothenburg

Anders Blomberg

University of Gothenburg

Proteomics

1615-9853 (ISSN) 1615-9861 (eISSN)

Vol. 7 22 4135-4147

Subject Categories

Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Medical Biotechnology (with a focus on Cell Biology (including Stem Cell Biology), Molecular Biology, Microbiology, Biochemistry or Biopharmacy)

DOI

10.1002/pmic.200601020

More information

Created

10/6/2017