We previously isolated a mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain 85_9 whose glycerol assimilation was improved through adaptive laboratory evolution. To investigate the mechanism for this improved glycerol assimilation, genome resequencing of the 85_9 strain was performed, and the mutations in the open reading frame of HOG1, SIR3, SSB2, and KGD2 genes were found. Among these, a frameshift mutation in the HOG1 open reading frame was responsible for the improved glycerol assimilation ability of the 85_9 strain. Moreover, the HOG1 gene disruption improved glycerol assimilation. As HOG1 encodes a mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), which is responsible for the signal transduction cascade in response to osmotic stress, namely the high osmolarity glycerol (HOG) pathway, we investigated the effect of the disruption of PBS2 gene encoding MAPK kinase for Hog1 MAPK on glycerol assimilation, revealing that PBS2 disruption can increase glycerol assimilation. These results indicate that loss of function of Hog1 improves glycerol assimilation in S. cerevisiae. However, single disruption of the SSK2, SSK22 and STE11 genes encoding protein kinases responsible for Pbs2 phosphorylation in the HOG pathway did not increase glycerol assimilation, while their triple disruption partially improved glycerol assimilation in S. cerevisiae. In addition, the HOG1 frameshift mutation did not improve glycerol assimilation in the STL1-overexpressing RIM15 disruptant strain, which was previously constructed with high glycerol assimilation ability. Furthermore, the effectiveness of the HOG1 disruptant as a bioproduction host was validated, indicating that the HOG1 CYB2 double disruptant can produce L-lactic acid from glycerol.