Effect of yeast mannoproteins and grape polysaccharides on the growth of wine lactic acid and acetic acid bacteria

  1. Diez, L. 1
  2. Guadalupe, Z. 1
  3. Ayestarán, B. 1
  4. Ruiz-Larrea, F. 1
  1. 1 Instituto de Ciencias de la Vid y del Vino
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    Instituto de Ciencias de la Vid y del Vino

    Logroño, España

    ROR https://ror.org/01rm2sw78

Revista:
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

ISSN: 0021-8561

Any de publicació: 2010

Volum: 58

Número: 13

Pàgines: 7731-7739

Tipus: Article

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DOI: 10.1021/JF100199N PMID: 20553034 SCOPUS: 2-s2.0-77954556506 WoS: WOS:000279573900032 GOOGLE SCHOLAR

Altres publicacions en: Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

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Objectius de Desenvolupament Sostenible

Resum

Polysaccharides constitute one of the main groups of wine macromolecules, and the difficulty in separating and purifying them has resulted in them being less studied than other wine macromolecules. In this study, the biological activity of a number of polysaccharide fractions obtained from yeast lees, must, and wine has been analyzed against a large collection of both lactic acid bacteria (LAB) and acetic acid bacteria (AAB) of enological origin. Results showed that a high proportion of AAB strains (60-88%) was inhibited by concentrations lower than 50 mg/L polysaccharide fractions containing intermediate- (6-22 kD) and small-molecular-weight (<6 kD) mannoproteins and oligosaccharide fragments derived from cellulose and hemicelluloses. Results also showed that, in contrast, yeast mannoproteins in concentrations up to 200 mg/L activated the growth of 23-48% of the studied LAB strains when ethanol was present in the culture broth. Specially, yeast commercial mannoproteins of intermediate molecular weight (6-22 kD) were active in increasing Oenococcus oenl growth (81.5% of the studied O. oenl strains) in the presence of ethanol in the culture broth. These effects of wine polysaccharides on bacterial growth provide novel and useful information for microbiological control of wines and winemaking biotechnology. © 2010 American Chemical Society.