Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Vol.58, No.4, 503-510, 2002
Production of volatile compounds by cheese-ripening yeasts: requirement for a methanethiol donor for S-methyl thioacetate synthesis by Kluyveromyces lactis
Five cheese-ripening yeasts (Geotrichum candidum, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Kluyveromyces lactis, Yarrowia lipolytica and Debaryomyces hansenii) were compared with respect to their ability to generate volatile aroma compounds. K. lactis produced a variety of esters - ethylacetate (EA) being the major one - and relatively limited amounts of volatile sulphur compounds (VSCs). Conversely, G. candidum produced significant amounts of VSCs [with the thioester S-methyl thioacetate (MTA) being the most prevalent] and lower quantities of non-sulphur volatile compounds than K. lactis. We suspect that K. lactis is able to produce and/or accumulate acetyl CoA - a common precursor of MTA and EA - but that it produces limited amounts of methanethiol (MTL); both acetyl CoA and MTL are precursors for MTA synthesis. When supplemented with exogenous MTL, MTA production greatly increased in K. lactic cultures whereas it was unchanged in G. candidum cultures, suggesting that MTL is a limiting factor for MTA synthesis in K. lactis but not in G. candidium. Our results are discussed with respect to L-methionine catabolism.