Andrew MacIntosh (1),
Bruno Barazania (2), Ted Hubbard (2), Stephan Warnat (2); (1) Dalhousie
University Process Engineering and Applied Science department, Halifax,
NS, Canada; (2) Dalhousie University, Mechanical Engineering
Department, Halifax, NS, Canada
Yeast, Fermentation, and Microbiology
Poster
The mechanical properties of individual yeast cells were
characterized using micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS). Samples
were taken throughout two controlled fermentations conducted as per ASBC
Yeast-14, one utilizing ale yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), while the other utilized a lager strain (Saccharomyces pastorianus). Samples of cell populations were collected at the beginning, middle, and end of fermentation and diluted to ~1 × 106
cells/mL. Approximately 4 µL of each cell suspension was added to the
MEMS microchip and then diluted with filtered water. Individual cells
were moved and placed between the MEMS actuator and a reference spring
by micropipette aspiration. At least 5 cells of each fermentation stage
(beginning, middle, and end) and species (ale and lager) were tested.
Cell compression was induced and measurements of displacement were made
using optical microphotographs with a FFT-based image analysis algorithm
(with a precision of ~10 nm). The entire procedure was recorded for
each cell as a series of 30 images taken over ~40 sec; these were used
to create videos of the cell rupture. The failure of each cell was
similar: the cell would undergo minor deformation until a visible burst
occurred, followed by significant cell shrinkage. Using the actuator and
reference spring displacements, the rupture force and stiffness of each
cell were determined. Ale cells were found to rupture under an average
force of 0.28 ± 0.05 µN across all fermentation stages, while lager
cells burst at 0.47 ± 0.10 µN. The average stiffness at the midpoint of
fermentation was found to be 4.8 ± 1.0 N/m and 5.3 ± 0.9 N/m for ale and
lager samples, respectively. The post-rupture stiffness was also
determined and found to be ~5× lower than the pre-ruptured stiffness for
both species and all three different fermentation stages. The results
showed in this study can be used to better select process parameters in
order to increase brewing fermentation efficiency and assist in the
design of novel yeast handling technologies.
Andrew MacIntosh is an assistant professor with the Department of
Process Engineering and Applied Science at Dalhousie University,
Halifax, Canada. Between core chemical engineering courses, Andrew
teaches advanced brewing science as a chemical engineering technical
elective and conducts fermentation-related research, much of which is
published in the JASBC. The reported work is a collaboration
between Andrew and Dr. Ted Hubbard of the Dalhousie Mechanical
Engineering Department, where the mechanical engineering graduate
student Bruno Barazani has spent many hours learning to isolate and
crush individual yeast cells.