PYCC 8413

PYCC 8413
1 - Taxon name
Torulaspora delbrueckii
2 - Classification
Ascomycota
3 - Strain (species name) changes
NA
4 - Status of the strain
NA
5 - Basis for identification
Molecular (whole genome sequence)
6 - Identified by
Margarida Silva
7 - Original strain number
ZP 713
8 - Accession numbers in other collections
NA
9 - Biological Safety Level
BSL-1
10 - Access and Benefit Sharing (CBD, Nagoya protocol)
No known ABS restrictions
11 - PYCC strain status
Open
12 - Mediterranean strain
No
13 - Substrate of isolation
Bark of Quercus rubra
14 - Category of substrate
Vascular plants, mosses & algae
15 - Locality
Heritage Trail, Pinery Provincial Park, SW Ontario
16 - Country of origin
Canada
18 - Sample Collected by
Tanya Berkers and André Lachance, Jul. 2008
19 - Isolated by and date of isolation
Jul. 2008
20 - Isolation details
Saccharomyces selective enrichment protocol (Sampaio and Gonçalves, 2008) and incubation at 10 °C
21 - Deposited by
J.P. Sampaio, Oct. 2019
22 - History
J.P. Sampaio > PYCC
23 - Preservation
Glass beads; 20% Glycerol; -150ºC
24 - Price per culture
90€
25 - Remarks
NA
26 - Medium for growth
YMA
Title
A glimpse at an early stage of microbe domestication revealed in the variable genome of Torulaspora delbrueckii, an emergent industrial yeast

Author

Margarida Silva, Ana Pontes, Ricardo Franco‐Duarte, Pedro Soares, José Paulo Sampaio, Maria João Sousa, Patrícia H. Brito

Abstract

AbstractMicrobe domestication has a major applied relevance but is still poorly understood from an evolutionary perspective. The yeast Torulaspora delbrueckii is gaining importance for biotechnology but little is known about its population structure, variation in gene content or possible domestication routes. Here, we show that T. delbrueckii is composed of five major clades. Among the three European clades, a lineage associated with the wild arboreal niche is sister to the two other lineages that are linked to anthropic environments, one to wine fermentations and the other to diverse sources including dairy products and bread dough (Mix‐Anthropic clade). Using 64 genomes we assembled the pangenome and the variable genome of T. delbrueckii. A comparison with Saccharomyces cerevisiae indicated that the weight of the variable genome in the pangenome of T. delbrueckii is considerably smaller. An association of gene content and ecology supported the hypothesis that the Mix‐Anthropic clade has the most specialized genome and indicated that some of the exclusive genes were implicated in galactose and maltose utilization. More detailed analyses traced the acquisition of a cluster of GAL genes in strains associated with dairy products and the expansion and functional diversification of MAL genes in strains isolated from bread dough. In contrast to S. cerevisiae, domestication in T. delbrueckii is not primarily driven by alcoholic fermentation but rather by adaptation to dairy and bread‐production niches. This study expands our views on the processes of microbe domestication and on the trajectories leading to adaptation to anthropic niches.

Publication Date

Link to Publication