Abstract

A small number (10 to 20) of yeast species cause major spoilage in foods. Spoilage yeasts of soft drinks are resistant to preservatives like sorbic acid, and they are highly fermentative, generating large amounts of carbon dioxide gas. Conversely, many yeast species derive energy from respiration only, and most of these are sorbic acid sensitive and so prevented from causing spoilage. This led us to hypothesize that sorbic acid may specifically inhibit respiration. Tests with respirofermentative yeasts showed that sorbic acid was more inhibitory to both Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Zygosaccharomyces bailii during respiration (of glycerol) than during fermentation (of glucose). The respiration-only species Rhodotorula glutinis was equally sensitive when growing on either carbon source, suggesting that ability to ferment glucose specifically enables sorbic acid-resistant growth. Sorbic acid inhibited the respiration process more strongly than fermentation. We present a data set supporting a correlation between the level of fermentation and sorbic acid resistance across 191 yeast species. Other weak acids, C2 to C8, inhibited respiration in accordance with their partition coefficients, suggesting that effects on mitochondrial respiration were related to membrane localization rather than cytosolic acidification. Supporting this, we present evidence that sorbic acid causes production of reactive oxygen species, the formation of petite (mitochondrion-defective) cells, and Fe-S cluster defects. This work rationalizes why yeasts that can grow in sorbic acid-preserved foods tend to be fermentative in nature. This may inform more-targeted approaches for tackling these spoilage organisms, particularly as the industry migrates to lower-sugar drinks, which could favor respiration over fermentation in many spoilage yeasts.IMPORTANCE Spoilage by yeasts and molds is a major contributor to food and drink waste, which undermines food security. Weak acid preservatives like sorbic acid help to stop spoilage, but some yeasts, commonly associated with spoilage, are resistant to sorbic acid. Different yeasts generate energy for growth by the processes of respiration and/or fermentation. Here, we show that sorbic acid targets the process of respiration, so fermenting yeasts are more resistant. Fermentative yeasts are also those usually found in spoilage incidents. This insight helps to explain the spoilage of sorbic acid-preserved foods by yeasts and can inform new strategies for effective control. This is timely as the sugar content of products like soft drinks is being lowered, which may favor respiration over fermentation in key spoilage yeasts.

Highlights

  • A small number (10 to 20) of yeast species cause major spoilage in foods

  • We examined the effect of sorbic acid on growth of the model and food spoilage yeast S. cerevisiae

  • This study shows that respiration by yeasts is more sensitive than fermentation to inhibition by the major food preservative sorbic acid

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Summary

Introduction

A small number (10 to 20) of yeast species cause major spoilage in foods. Many yeast species derive energy from respiration only, and most of these are sorbic acid sensitive and so prevented from causing spoilage. This insight helps to explain the spoilage of sorbic acid-preserved foods by yeasts and can inform new strategies for effective control This is timely as the sugar content of products like soft drinks is being lowered, which may favor respiration over fermentation in key spoilage yeasts. Complaints by consumers can be due to visible contamination, off-flavors, or products being “blown,” or exploding in sealed packaging This is caused by spoilage yeasts generating high levels of carbon dioxide through fermentation and can result in physical injury [5]. The Group 3 yeasts are very largely respiratory, and these species are sensitive to sorbic acid [6]

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