Dekkera yeasts have often been considered as alternative sources of ethanol production that could compete with S. cerevisiae. The two lineages of yeasts independently evolved traits that include high glucose and ethanol tolerance, aerobic fermentation, and a rapid ethanol fermentation rate. The Saccharomyces yeasts attained these traits mainly through whole genome duplication approximately 100 million years ago (Mya). However, the Dekkera yeasts, which were separated from S. cerevisiae approximately 200 Mya, did not undergo whole genome duplication (WGD) but still occupy a niche similar to S. cerevisiae. Upon analysis of two Dekkera yeasts and five closely related non-WGD yeasts, we found that a massive loss of cis-regulatory elements occur...
Gene regulation change has long been recognized as an important mechanism for phenotypic evolution. ...
<div><p>There is an enormous genetic diversity evident in modern yeasts, but our understanding of th...
Baker's yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae rapidly converts sugars to ethanol and carbon dioxide at both...
Yeasts are unicellular fungi exhibiting a huge diversity of life styles and physiologies and their e...
The yeast Dekkera/Brettanomyces bruxellensis can cause enormous economic losses in wine industry due...
The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is characterized by its ability to: (a) degrade glucose or fructo...
Yeast metabolism has been a subject of research since the XIX century, when Louis Pasteur had proved...
Brewing and wine production are among the oldest technologies and their products are almost indispen...
The genetic basis underlying how organisms adapt to different environments and evolve new life style...
Saccharomyces yeasts degrade sugars to two-carbon components, in particular ethanol, even in the pre...
Dekkera bruxellensis is a non-conventional Crabtree-positive yeast with a good ethanol production ca...
Under aerobic conditions, most yeasts such as Kluyveromyces lactis, prefer the respiratory pathway a...
The non-conventional wine and beer yeast Dekkera bruxellensis is of great interest for the food indu...
As a result of ancestral whole-genome and small-scale duplication events, the genomes of Saccharomyc...
Recently, the non-conventional yeast Dekkera bruxellensis has been gaining more and more attention i...
Gene regulation change has long been recognized as an important mechanism for phenotypic evolution. ...
<div><p>There is an enormous genetic diversity evident in modern yeasts, but our understanding of th...
Baker's yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae rapidly converts sugars to ethanol and carbon dioxide at both...
Yeasts are unicellular fungi exhibiting a huge diversity of life styles and physiologies and their e...
The yeast Dekkera/Brettanomyces bruxellensis can cause enormous economic losses in wine industry due...
The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is characterized by its ability to: (a) degrade glucose or fructo...
Yeast metabolism has been a subject of research since the XIX century, when Louis Pasteur had proved...
Brewing and wine production are among the oldest technologies and their products are almost indispen...
The genetic basis underlying how organisms adapt to different environments and evolve new life style...
Saccharomyces yeasts degrade sugars to two-carbon components, in particular ethanol, even in the pre...
Dekkera bruxellensis is a non-conventional Crabtree-positive yeast with a good ethanol production ca...
Under aerobic conditions, most yeasts such as Kluyveromyces lactis, prefer the respiratory pathway a...
The non-conventional wine and beer yeast Dekkera bruxellensis is of great interest for the food indu...
As a result of ancestral whole-genome and small-scale duplication events, the genomes of Saccharomyc...
Recently, the non-conventional yeast Dekkera bruxellensis has been gaining more and more attention i...
Gene regulation change has long been recognized as an important mechanism for phenotypic evolution. ...
<div><p>There is an enormous genetic diversity evident in modern yeasts, but our understanding of th...
Baker's yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae rapidly converts sugars to ethanol and carbon dioxide at both...