FST 114: Final

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201 Terms

1
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What are the properties of yeast?

single cell, non motile, require carbon source

2
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What are the two reproductive methods of yeast?

budding and fission

3
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What do yeast require?

small, easy assimilated carbon and nitrogen sources, vectors for dispersal

4
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What is ploidy?

number of sets of chromosomes in a cell

5
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Prior to 1/30/13, what was the classification of yeast regarding sexual reproduction?

must have different genus names for sporulating and non sporulating yeast

6
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What are the features of anamorphs (yeast)?

non sporulated in lab, imperfect state

7
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What are the features of telemorphs (yeast)?

sporulated in lab, perfect state

8
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Currently, what was the classification of yeast regarding sexual reproduction?

can not have different genus names for otherwise identical sporulating and non sporulating yeast

9
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What is the two molecular methods to ID yeast species?

phenotype based analysis and molecular methods

10
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What does the molecular methods to ID identify?

species, NOT differentiating strains

11
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How does molecular methods to ID yeast occur?

through sequencing DID2 loop of 26s rRNA gene

12
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Why is DID2 loop used for molecular identification?

conserved among strains of the same species, variable between different species

13
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What is utilized to bind to the D1D2 loop?

NL1 and NL4 primers for PCR amplification

14
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What does yeast respiration yield?

CO2 and O2

15
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What are the two mode of metabolism that yeast can be divided into?

obligate aerobes and facultative anaerobes

16
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What is the features of obligate aerobic yeast?

no fermentation of glucose, no anaerobic growth

17
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What is the feature of facultative anaerobic yeast?

able to utilize glucose both aerobically and anaerobically

18
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What are the two classes of yeast carbon metabolism?

ferment in presence of oxygen and can ferment but mostly respire with oxygen

19
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What are two main species of yeast found in food/beverage?

ascomycota and basidiomycota

20
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How does yeast transport glucose into the cell?

facilitated diffusion with hexose transporters

21
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What is the metabolism for majority of Basidiomycetes?

obligate aerobes

22
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What is the branch point of the yeast metabolism? Where is it?

pyruvate, cytoplasm

23
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For the fermentation pathway of yeast, what occurs with pyruvate?

becomes ethanol and CO2 with PDC

24
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For the respiration pathway of yeast, what occurs with pyruvate?

becomes Acetyl CoA

25
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What is the purpose of the fermentation pathway for yeast?

NAD+ regeneration for glycolysis

26
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Under what conditions is the fermentation pathways used over the respiratory pathway for yeast?

oxygen is low/absent, glucose levels are very high even with oxygen

27
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What is the first step of yeast fermentation?

glucose converted into 2 pyruvate, 2 ATP produced

28
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What is the second step of yeast fermentation?

2 pyruvate is converted to 2 Acetaldehyde and 2 CO2

29
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What is the third step of yeast fermentation?

Acetaldehyde is converted to ethanol and 2 NAD+ regenerated

30
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What are the two types of regulation in the glycolytic pathway of yeast?

flux of glycolysis must be coordinated to prevent ATP consumption/production + regenerate NAD+ and coordinate transport to prevent glucose toxicity

31
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What can glucose toxicity be a problem?

glucose is reactive moiety

32
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What is Pfk activated by?

AMP, speeds up glycolysis

33
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What is Pfk inactivated by?

ATP, slows down glycolysis

34
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What is Pyk1 regulated by?

activated by Fructose-1,6P2

35
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How many hexose transporters found in S. cerevisiae genome?

18, 7 major players

36
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How do hexose transport operate by?

facilitated transport

37
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What is PDC? What is its function?

pyruvate decarboxylase, converted pyruvate into acetaldehyde

38
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What is PDH? What is its function?

pyruvate dehydrogenase, converts pyruvate into acetyl coA

39
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Between PDC and PDH, which has the higher affinity?

PDC

40
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What does PDC work in? Which pathway?

anaerobic conditions, fermentation for ethanol

41
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What does PDH work in?

aerobic conditions, respiration acetyl coA

42
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What is the Pasteur effect?

slowing of glycolysis and fermentation in the presence of oxygen, switch to respiration

43
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Pasteur Effect:

Why does it occur?

there is different affinities between PDC and PDH

44
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Pasteur Effect:

Why does PDC and PDH's affinity affect the metabolism?

ETC requires oxygen and can regenerate NAD+ and ATP efficiently

45
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What is the Crabtree effect?

fermentation is preferred with high glucose levels even in the presence of oxygen

46
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What is the feature of the Crabtree effect?

only found in ethanol producers like brettanomyces

47
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Why is respiration not favored when there is a lot of glucose?

pyruvate and NADH buildup, need to rid pyruvate and regenerate NAD+

48
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Why does ethanol pathway regenerate NAD+?

acetaldehyde converted to ethanol creates 2 NAD+

49
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What is Custer's effect?

oxygen increases fermentation and sugar use, niche dominance in AAB to regenerate NAD+ through production of ethanol

50
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What is the basis of Custer's effect with fermentation?

stalled fermentation due to NADH accumulation, ethanol production is stalled

51
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What organisms can perform Custer's effect?

only acetic acid producers, obligately hetero-fermentative LAB

52
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What is the result of Custer's effect?

acetaldehyde is converted to ethanol and acetic acid for the regeneration of NAD+

53
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Custer's Effect:

What converts acetaldehyde into ethanol?

ADH, alcohol dehydrogenase

54
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Is there ATP production in custer effect?

No

55
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Custer's Effect:

What converts acetaldehyde into acetic acid?

AD, aldehyde dehydrogenase

56
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Which enzyme is up-regulated for the Custer's effect?

aldehyde dehydrogenase

57
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Where is the Custer's effect found in?

acetic acid producers

58
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Why is producing ethanol not enough in Custer's effect?

isn't enough to regenerate NAD+

59
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Why does oxygen stimulate Custer's effect?

oxygen is a terminal electron acceptor

60
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What can acetic acid producer (i.e Brettanomyces) use as an alternative?

reduce and decarboxylate phenolic compounds to regenerate NAD+

61
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What are the features of Phylum Basidomycta?

generalist, 48-70% GC content

62
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What is the asexual form of Phylum Basidomycta?

anamorphic basidomycetes

63
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What are examples of yeast in Phylum Basidomycta? Where are they found?

crypotococcus and rhodotouria, incidental in wine fermentation

64
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What is used to stain Phylum Basidomycta and Ascomycota?

diazonium blue b

65
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What are the features of Phylum Ascomycota?

specialist, 25-50% GC content

66
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What is the sexual form of Phylum Ascomycota?

ascospores

67
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What is the asexual form of Phylum Ascomycota?

anamorphic ascomytes

68
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What are the features of Ale beer?

top fermenting yeast, fermented warm

69
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What strain is used for Ale beer production?

saccharomyces cerevisiae, pure strain

70
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What are the features of lager beers?

bottom fermenting yeast, fermented cold

71
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What strain is used for lager beer?

saccharomyces pastorianus, hybrid strain

72
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What is flocculation?

aggregation of yeast cells into clumps, settle out of beer

73
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When is flocculation wanted?

end of fermentation

74
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What are the two main components of beer flocculation?

mannose residue on the surface and flocculin proteins that binds to the mannose

75
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What is feature of wild brewing/lambic style?

open top fermentation, utilizes wild yeast

76
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Beer Processing:

What is the purpose of germination?

activate enzymes like amylase and protease from barley

77
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Beer Processing:

What occurs during the germination step?

barley incubations in cool and humid conditions, generates rootlets and induces hydrolase

78
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Beer Processing:

What is the purpose of drying/kilning?

dry and preserve barley to maintain enzymatic activity, moisture drops from 45% to 15%

79
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What are the three layers of barley?

husk, aleurone, endosperm

80
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What is in the aleurone layer of barley?

enzymes, activated during malting

81
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What are the main starch degrading enzymes? Where are they found?

alpha and beta amylase, endosperm

82
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What is the final step of mashing? What is the purpose?

raising the temperature to 75C, to inhibit enzymes and cause precipitation

83
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What does the precipitant from the mashing step include?

fermentable sugar in wort

84
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What is wort?

soluble fraction, contain 75% fermentable sugar that is consumed by yeast to make ethanol and CO2

85
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What does the rest of the wort contain?

non fermentable nitrogen and nitrogen containing compoundsa

86
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Why do hops produce a bitter flavor?

alpha acid

87
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What does the beer fermentation utilize?

crabtree effect

88
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What are the undesirable compounds of beer fermentation?

THP and diacetyl

89
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What microbe is used in beer fermentation after saccharomyces? What are its features?

brettanomyces, non spore forming

90
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What are beer spoilages of LAB?

acidification, EPS, diacetyl

91
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What contributes to hop resistance in LAB? What are its features?

iso alpha and beta acids, proton ionophores, provide bitterness flavor and antimicrobial

92
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What do the proton ionophores do?

collapse proton gradient by dragging H+ across the membrane to drain ATP and removes Mn2+

93
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What are two common beer spoilage LABs?

pediococcus damosus and lactobacillus brevis

94
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How can pediococcus damosus and lactobacillus brevis retain hop resistance?

pump out iso-alpha-acids, maintain PMF, replenish Mn2+

95
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What is the feature of cacao fermentation?

occurs outside of the bean, germination is stopped by acid and OH

96
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What are sweatings?

liquid that drains out of fermenting cocao beans and pulp

97
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What are the cacao beans surrounded by? Why is it important?

mucilage, broken down by yeast and LAB for heat, ethanol, and acids

98
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How do the yeast break down mucilage? What is the product?

anaerobically, ethanol and CO2

99
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How do the LAB break down mucilage? What is the product?

aerobically, lactic acid

100
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Where do sweatings come from?

breakdown of mucilage