Abstract

Lager beer is produced by Saccharomyces pastorianus, which is a natural allopolyploid hybrid between Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Saccharomyces eubayanus Lager strains are classified into two major groups based largely on genomic composition: group I and group II. Group I strains are allotriploid, whereas group II strains are allotetraploid. A lack of phenotypic diversity in commercial lager strains has led to substantial interest in the reconstitution of de novo allotetraploid lager strains by hybridization of S. cerevisiae and S. eubayanus strains. Such strategies rely on the hybridization of wild S. eubayanus isolates, which carry unacceptable traits for commercial lager beer such as phenolic off flavors and incomplete utilization of carbohydrates. Using an alternative breeding strategy, we have created de novo lager hybrids containing the domesticated S. eubayanus subgenome from an industrial S. pastorianus strain by hybridizing diploid meiotic segregants of this strain to a variety of S. cerevisiae ale strains. Five de novo hybrids were isolated which had fermentation characteristics similar to those of prototypical commercial lager strains but with unique phenotypic variation due to the contributions of the S. cerevisiae parents. Genomic analysis of these de novo lager hybrids identified novel allotetraploid genomes carrying three copies of the S. cerevisiae genome and one copy of the S. eubayanus genome. Most importantly, these hybrids do not possess the negative traits which result from breeding wild S. eubayanus The de novo lager strains produced using industrial S. pastorianus in this study are immediately suitable for industrial lager beer production.IMPORTANCE All lager beer is produced using two related lager yeast types: group I and group II, which are highly similar, resulting in a lack of strain diversity for lager beer production. To date, approaches for generating new lager yeasts have generated strains possessing undesirable brewing characteristics which render them commercially inviable. We have used an alternative approach that circumvents this issue and created new lager strains that are directly suitable for lager beer production. These novel lager strains also possess a unique genomic architecture, which may lead to a better understanding of industrial yeast hybrids. We propose that strains created using our approach be classified as a third group of lager strains (group III). We anticipate that these novel lager strains will be of great industrial relevance and that this technique will be applicable to the creation of additional novel lager strains that will help broaden the diversity in commercial lager beer strains.

Highlights

  • Lager beer is produced by Saccharomyces pastorianus, which is a natural allopolyploid hybrid between Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Saccharomyces eubayanus

  • To develop de novo lager yeast hybrids using the domesticated S. eubayanus subgenome of S. pastorianus, we isolated allodiploid meiotic segregants from a group II lager strain and rare mated them to a variety of diploid S. cerevisiae ale strains

  • The top five performing hybrids based on initial criteria of suitable fermentation kinetics, high maltotriose utilization, complete consumption of maltose, and low production of off-aroma compounds were carried forward for further characterization

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Summary

Introduction

Lager beer is produced by Saccharomyces pastorianus, which is a natural allopolyploid hybrid between Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Saccharomyces eubayanus. We have used an alternative approach that circumvents this issue and created new lager strains that are directly suitable for lager beer production These novel lager strains possess a unique genomic architecture, which may lead to a better understanding of industrial yeast hybrids. The strong phenotypic and, by extension, genotypic selection of lager yeast since their formation has resulted in a modern reliance on only a few closely related lager yeast strains (from each of the group I and group II lineages) for the entirety of lager beer production globally [11] Not surprisingly, this lack of diversity in available lager strains has created substantial interest in the creation of new lager strains. The inheritance of S. eubayanus mitochondria has been shown to be a major factor influencing cryotolerance of S. cerevisiae  S. eubayanus hybrids [19]

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