Differences in yeast behaviour during ageing of sparkling wines made with Charmat and Traditional methods

Food Microbiol. 2023 Apr:110:104171. doi: 10.1016/j.fm.2022.104171. Epub 2022 Oct 25.

Abstract

In this study, we followed the yeast and wine behaviour during the second fermentation and subsequent lees ageing of sparkling wines produced by Traditional and Charmat methods at an industrial scale. During this period, we conducted physicochemical, microbiological, gene expression, and marker analyses of characteristics related to wine ageing. Our results show that the yeast behaviour during the fermentation is similar in both methods. However, after fermentation, there is a faster decrease in yeast vitality and viability in the Charmat method, together with an increase in the expression of autophagy-related genes (AMS1, APE1, and ATG8). We relate these factors to ageing with the continuous homogenization of the liquid practised in the Charmat method, and static ageing with the lees concentrated at the bottom of the bottle performed in the Traditional method. Despite the variation in yeast viability during ageing, there are no differences in soluble proteins, free amino nitrogen, total phenols, antioxidant activity, and colour evolution between the wines produced by the two methods, assuming few differences over the time that monitoring was conducted.

Keywords: Autophagy; Cell death; Continuous homogenization; Gene expression; Lifespan.

MeSH terms

  • Autophagy
  • Fermentation
  • Saccharomyces cerevisiae / genetics
  • Wine*