Yeast
Yeast are a group of unicellular
fungi a few species of which are commonly used to
leaven bread and
ferment alcoholic beverages. Most yeasts belong to the
division Ascomycota. A few yeasts, such as
Candida albicans can cause
infection in humans. More than one-thousand
species of yeasts have been described. The most commonly used yeast is
Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which was domesticated for
wine,
bread and
beer production thousands of years ago. See
Yeast (baking).
Yeast physiology can be either obligately aerobic or facultatively fermentative. There is no known obligately anaerobic yeast. In the absence of
oxygen, fermentative yeasts produce their energy by converting
sugars into
carbon dioxide and
ethanol (alcohol). In brewing, the ethanol is used, while in baking the carbon dioxide raises the bread and the ethanol evaporates.
An example with
glucose as the substrate is
- C6H12O6 (glucose) →2C2H5OH + 2CO2
Yeasts can reproduce asexually through
budding or sexually through the formation of
ascospores. During asexual reproduction a new bud grows out of the parent yeast when the condition is right, then after the bud reaches an adult size, it separates from the parent yeast. Under low nutrient conditions, yeasts that are capapable of sexual reproduction will form ascospores. Yeasts that are not capable of going through the full sexual cycle are classified in the genus
Candida.
yeast related sites
Yeasts for leavening bread may be produced commercially or caught from the environment. Many yeasts can be isolated from sugar-rich environmental samples. Some good examples include fruits and berries (such as
grapes, apples or peaches), exudates from plants (such as plant saps or cacti). Some yeasts are found in association with insects.
The use of
potatoes, water from potato boiling,
eggs, or
sugar in a bread dough accelerates the growth of yeasts. Salt and
fats such as
butter slow yeast growth down. A common medium used for the cultivation of yeasts is called potato dextrose agar (PDA) or potato dextrose broth. Potato extract is made by
autoclaving cut-up potatoes with water for 5 to 10 minutes and then decanting off the broth. Dextrose (glucose) is then added (10 g/L), and the medium is sterilized by autoclaving.
Yeast fermentations comprise the oldest and largest application of microbial technology. They are used for beer and wine fermentations and bread production. Beer brewers classify yeasts as top-fermenting and bottom-fermenting. This distinction was introduced by the
Dane Emil Christian Hansen.
Top-fermenting yeasts (so-called because they float to the top of the beer) can produce higher alcohol concentrations and prefer higher temperatures. An example is
Saccharomyces cerevisiae, known to brewers as
ale yeast. They produce fruitier, sweeter,
real ale type beers. Bottom-fermenting yeasts ferment more sugars leaving a crisper taste and work well at low temperatures. An example is
Saccharomyces uvarum, formerly known as
Saccharomyces carlsbergensis. They are used in producing
lager-type beers. Brewers of wheat beers often use varieties of
Torulaspora delbrueckii.
Winemakers use a variety of different yeasts depending on the type of wine and the condition of the
grapes. Too high a sugar or alcohol concentration slows the growth of yeast, so for very ripe grapes with lots of sugar he or she would use a yeast tolerant of those conditions. If the yeast dies before all the fermentable sugar has been converted to alcohol, the result is a "stuck" fermentation. Some yeast is chosen because it tends to develop certain aromas, such as the distinctive "banana" smells of
Beaujolais from
Georges Duboeuf. Wild yeast are naturally present on the skins of grapes, so grape juice will spontaneously ferment unless the wild yeast are arrested by cold temperature or sulfates. Depending on the strain of indigenous yeast, the result may be unpalatable or possibly more complex than if a single cultured strain were used. In general, natural yeasts are riskier than cultured, and tend to be used by tradition-oriented,
Old World-style winemakers.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae is also known as budding or baker's yeast. It is used as a
model organism by biologists studying
genetics and
molecular biology (in particular the
cell cycle) because it is easy to culture but as a
eukaryote, it shares the complex internal cell structure of plants and animals.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae was the first eukaryotic genome that was completely sequenced. The yeast genome database
[1] is highly annotated and remains a very important tool for developing basic knowledge about the function and organization of eukaryotic cell genetics and physiology. Another important
S. cerevisiae database is maintained by the Munich Information Center for Protein Sequences
yeast relatd sites\n
[1].
Another important experimental model is
Schizosaccharomyces pombe or fission yeast.
\n

\n
\nImage of
Saccharomyces cerevisiae.