Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/131448
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Type: Journal article
Title: Impact of Lachancea thermotolerans strain and lactic acid concentration on Oenococcus oeni and malolactic fermentation in wine
Author: Snyder, E.C.
Jiranek, V.
Hranilovic, A.
Citation: OENO One, 2021; 55(2):365-380
Publisher: International Viticulture and Enology Society - IVES
Issue Date: 2021
ISSN: 2494-1271
2494-1271
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Emma C. Snyder, Vladimir Jiranek, Ana Hranilovic
Abstract: The yeast Lachancea thermotolerans can produce lactic acid during alcoholic fermentation (AF) and thereby acidify wines with insufficient acidity. However, little is known about the impact of L. thermotolerans on Oenococcus oeni, the primary lactic acid bacterium used in malolactic fermentation (MLF). This study explored the impact of sequential cultures of L. thermotolerans and Saccharomyces cerevisiae on MLF performance in white and red wines. Four L. thermotolerans strains were tested in Sauvignon blanc with sequential S. cerevisiae inoculation, compared to an S. cerevisiae control and the initially un-inoculated treatments. The L. thermotolerans wines showed large differences in acidification, and progression of MLF depended on lactic acid production, even at controlled pH. The highest and lowest lactic acid producing strains were tested further in Merlot fermentations with both co-inoculated and sequentially inoculated O. oeni. The low lactic acid producing strain enabled successful MLF, even when this failed in the S. cerevisiae treatment, with dramatically quicker malic acid depletion in O. oeni co-inoculation than in sequential inoculation. In contrast, a high lactic acid producing strain inhibited MLF irrespective of the O. oeni inoculation strategy. In a follow-up experiment, increasing concentrations of exogenously added lactic acid slowed MLF and reduced O. oeni growth across different matrices, with 6 g/L of lactic acid completely inhibiting MLF. The results confirm the inhibitory effect of lactic acid on O. oeni while highlighting the potential of some L. thermotolerans strains to promote MLF and the others to inhibit it.
Keywords: Lachancea thermotolerans; lactic acid; wine acidification; Oenococcus oeni; malolactic fermentation
Rights: © 2021 International Viticulture and Enology Society - IVES. This article is published under the Creative Commons licence (CC BY 4.0). Use of all or part of the content of this article must mention the authors, the year of publication, the title, the name of the journal, the volume, the pages and the DOI in compliance with the information given above.
DOI: 10.20870/oeno-one.2021.55.2.4657
Grant ID: http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/IC170100008
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.20870/oeno-one.2021.55.2.4657
Appears in Collections:Agriculture, Food and Wine publications
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