Proteins influencing foam formation in wine and beer: the role of yeast

Publication date

2014-06-16T12:07:46Z

2014-06-16T12:07:46Z

2011-06

2014-06-16T12:07:46Z

Abstract

This review focuses on the role of proteins in the production and maintenance of foam in both sparkling wines and beer. The quality of the foam in beer but especially in sparkling wines depends, among other factors, on the presence of mannoproteins released from the yeast cell walls during autolysis. These proteins are hydrophobic, highly glycosylated, and their molecular masses range from 10 to 200 kDa characteristics that allow mannoproteins to surround and thus stabilize the gas bubbles of the foam. Both the production and stabilization of foam also depend on other proteins. In wine, these include grape-derived proteins such as vacuolar invertase; in beer, barley-derived proteins, such as LTP1, protein Z, and hordein-derived polypeptides, are even more important in this respect than mannoproteins

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Spanish Society for Microbiology (SEM) and Viguera Editores SL

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: http://dx.doi.org/10.2436/20.1501.01.136

International Microbiology, 2011, vol. 14, num. 2, p. 61-71

http://dx.doi.org/10.2436/20.1501.01.136

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Rights

cc-by-nc-sa (c) Spanish Society for Microbiology (SEM) and Viguera Editores SL, 2011

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/es

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