2019
DOI: 10.1128/mbio.00388-19
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Isolation and Characterization of Live Yeast Cells from Ancient Vessels as a Tool in Bio-Archaeology

Abstract: Ancient fermented food has been studied based on recipes, residue analysis, and ancient-DNA techniques and reconstructed using modern domesticated yeast. Here, we present a novel approach based on our hypothesis that enriched yeast populations in fermented beverages could have become the dominant species in storage vessels and their descendants could be isolated and studied today. We developed a pipeline of yeast isolation from clay vessels and screened for yeast cells in beverage-related and non-beverage-rela… Show more

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Cited by 36 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…By comparison of the yeast cells isolated from these bottles with their parental strains, we were able to demonstrate that GASP does indeed appear in eukaryotic LTSP cultures. We have recently shown (Aouizerat et al., 2019) that yeast can survive for thousands of years as micro-colonies in the nanopores of ancient pottery. The GASP mechanism shown here could significantly contribute to such survival.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By comparison of the yeast cells isolated from these bottles with their parental strains, we were able to demonstrate that GASP does indeed appear in eukaryotic LTSP cultures. We have recently shown (Aouizerat et al., 2019) that yeast can survive for thousands of years as micro-colonies in the nanopores of ancient pottery. The GASP mechanism shown here could significantly contribute to such survival.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The generation times of some subseafloor sediment bacteria has been estimated to be thousands of centuries (Parkes et al, 2000). More relevant are spores that are viable but have been dormant for thousands of years (Christner et al, 2000;Aouizerat et al, 2019). The currently held, although highly controversial, record for the longest time spent in suspended animation belongs to the spores of the species of Bacillus sealed in a salt crystal that formed 250 Mya ago (Vreeland et al, 2000).…”
Section: 5mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Experimenting with novel yeasts, they realized that there is still a hidden treasure to be found not only from a product point of view, but also from a marketing perspective since doing business "with a story" is becoming more and more popular. Selling a beer brewed with a 5,000-year-old yeast (Aouizerat et al, 2019) is a marketing consultant's dream. Therefore, it is an intriguing idea to go out and isolate novel yeasts and use them for brewing purposes.…”
Section: Toward More Yeast Diversity In Beer Brewingmentioning
confidence: 99%