Abstract

BackgroundDuring the final phases of bioethanol fermentation, yeast cells face high ethanol concentrations. This stress results in slower or arrested fermentations and limits ethanol production. Novel Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains with superior ethanol tolerance may therefore allow increased yield and efficiency. Genome shuffling has emerged as a powerful approach to rapidly enhance complex traits including ethanol tolerance, yet previous efforts have mostly relied on a mutagenized pool of a single strain, which can potentially limit the effectiveness. Here, we explore novel robot-assisted strategies that allow to shuffle the genomes of multiple parental yeasts on an unprecedented scale.ResultsScreening of 318 different yeasts for ethanol accumulation, sporulation efficiency, and genetic relatedness yielded eight heterothallic strains that served as parents for genome shuffling. In a first approach, the parental strains were subjected to multiple consecutive rounds of random genome shuffling with different selection methods, yielding several hybrids that showed increased ethanol tolerance. Interestingly, on average, hybrids from the first generation (F1) showed higher ethanol production than hybrids from the third generation (F3). In a second approach, we applied several successive rounds of robot-assisted targeted genome shuffling, yielding more than 3,000 targeted crosses. Hybrids selected for ethanol tolerance showed increased ethanol tolerance and production as compared to unselected hybrids, and F1 hybrids were on average superior to F3 hybrids. In total, 135 individual F1 and F3 hybrids were tested in small-scale very high gravity fermentations. Eight hybrids demonstrated superior fermentation performance over the commercial biofuel strain Ethanol Red, showing a 2 to 7% increase in maximal ethanol accumulation. In an 8-l pilot-scale test, the best-performing hybrid fermented medium containing 32% (w/v) glucose to dryness, yielding 18.7% (v/v) ethanol with a productivity of 0.90 g ethanol/l/h and a yield of 0.45 g ethanol/g glucose.ConclusionsWe report the use of several different large-scale genome shuffling strategies to obtain novel hybrids with increased ethanol tolerance and fermentation capacity. Several of the novel hybrids show best-parent heterosis and outperform the commonly used bioethanol strain Ethanol Red, making them interesting candidate strains for industrial production.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13068-015-0216-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • During the final phases of bioethanol fermentation, yeast cells face high ethanol concentrations

  • Large-scale screening of Saccharomyces yeasts for ethanol production and sporulation Because we aimed to exploit the natural variation among Saccharomyces yeasts to create novel hybrids with increased ethanol tolerance, we screened a collection consisting of 318 Saccharomyces strains isolated from different natural niches and industries such as wine, ale, or biofuel production

  • The average ethanol production varied widely among strains from different industries, with strains used for bioethanol production showing the highest average production, followed by wine yeasts, wild isolates, sake yeasts, spirits yeasts, and beer and bakery strains

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Summary

Introduction

During the final phases of bioethanol fermentation, yeast cells face high ethanol concentrations This stress results in slower or arrested fermentations and limits ethanol production. Novel strains with improved ethanol tolerance may further increase productivity by allowing higher initial sugar concentrations that yield increased final ethanol concentrations. Ethanol tolerance is a complex phenotype, which is underscored by transcriptome and single-gene knockout studies of ethanol-exposed strains that identified hundreds of genes with very different functions to be associated with ethanol tolerance (reviewed by Ma and Liu [4]) These studies have shed some light on the mechanisms of ethanol tolerance, detailed mechanistic insight explaining how and why cells can resist high ethanol concentrations is still lacking. There is no strict definition for ethanol tolerance and it is unclear how the different methods used to measure ethanol tolerance relate to the stress encountered in industrial fermentations [6]

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