Abstract

Medium-chain fatty-acids (MCFA) are among the main aroma compounds of fermented beverages. High concentrations of MCFA have been found in sluggish and stuck fermentations. It has been suggested that they arrest cell growth, as they may be toxic, but the causes of sluggish and stuck fermentations are still unclear. The aim of this work was to see whether the production of MCFA is related to fatty acid synthesis in the absence of exogenous lipids and aeration, and whether their increase can be regarded as a consequence, instead of the cause, of sluggish and stuck fermentations. Two possibilities were considered: (i) MCFA are produced to replace unsaturated fatty acids (UFA) for cell membrane fluidity when the lack of oxygen makes desaturation of saturated fatty acids (SFA) impossible; or (ii) MCFA are produced following the release of medium-chain acyl-CoA from the fatty acid synthetase complex (FAS) due to the accumulation of SFA, and their hydrolysis to recycle CoA-SH. In the first hypothesis, MCFA should be active in cell metabolism and be found in cell structures; in the second, MCFA should be a discard and prevalently found outside the cell. We carried out a Saccharomyces cerevisiae fermentation experiment in a synthetic, lipid-free medium without aeration. We measured the fatty acid composition of yeast cells and the amounts of MCFA and their ethyl esters in the medium throughout the fermentation. Cell growth and the oxygen content of the medium were also monitored. We found that MCFA are not immobilized in cell structures, but mainly released into the medium. Cell growth is arrested because fatty acid biosynthesis is prevented by the lack of oxygen. The higher MCFA concentrations found in sluggish and stuck fermentations can be thus regarded as an effect, and not the cause, of this arrest. Some suggestions for the prevention of these events are proposed.

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