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Visualizing Metabolism in Biotechnologically Important Yeasts with dDNP NMR Reveals Evolutionary Strategies and Glycolytic Logic.

Sebastian MeierKe-Chuan WangFrancesca SannelliJakob Blæsbjerg HoofJürgen WendlandPernille Rose Jensen
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2024)
Saccharomyces cerevisiae has long been a pillar of biotechnological production and basic research. More recently, strides to exploit the functional repertoire of nonconventional yeasts for biotechnological production have been made. Genomes and genetic tools for these yeasts are not always available, and yeast genomics alone may be insufficient to determine the functional features in yeast metabolism. Hence, functional assays of metabolism, ideally in the living cell, are best suited to characterize the cellular biochemistry of such yeasts. Advanced in cell NMR methods can allow the direct observation of carbohydrate influx into central metabolism on a seconds time scale: dDNP NMR spectroscopy temporarily enhances the nuclear spin polarization of substrates by more than 4 orders of magnitude prior to functional assays probing central metabolism. We use various dDNP enhanced carbohydrates for in-cell NMR to compare the metabolism of S. cerevisiae and nonconventional yeasts, with an emphasis on the wine yeast Hanseniaspora uvarum . In-cell observations indicated more rapid exhaustion of free cytosolic NAD + in H. uvarum and alternative routes for pyruvate conversion, in particular, rapid amination to alanine. In-cell observations indicated that S. cerevisiae outcompetes other biotechnologically relevant yeasts by rapid ethanol formation due to the efficient adaptation of cofactor pools and the removal of competing reactions from the cytosol. By contrast, other yeasts were better poised to use redox neutral processes that avoided CO 2 -emission. Beyond visualizing the different cellular strategies for arriving at redox neutral end points, in-cell dDNP NMR probing showed that glycolytic logic is more conserved: nontoxic precursors of cellular building blocks formed high-population intermediates in the influx of glucose into the central metabolism of eight different biotechnologically important yeasts. Unsupervised clustering validated that the observation of rapid intracellular chemistry is a viable means to functionally classify biotechnologically important organisms.
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