Discrimination by Heat and Proteinase Treatments between Flocculent Phenotypes Conferred on Saccharomyces cerevisiae by the Genes FLO1 and FLO5

Abstract
The effects of elevated temperature and of digestion with a variety of proteinases on the floc-forming ability of flocculent strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, both genetically defined (FLO1 and FLO5) laboratory and genetically undefined brewing strains, have been determined. This has permitted classification of the flocculent phenotypes of these strains according to criteria other than quantitative grading of flocculence. The flocculent phenotypes conferred by both the FLO1 and the FLO5 gene were irreversibly lost upon treatment with pronase, proteinase K, trypsin or 2-mercaptoethanol treatments. However, the floc-forming ability of cells of the FLO1 strain ABXL-1D was destroyed by chymotrypsin digestion and was stable to incubation at 70.degree. C, whereas the floc-forming ability of cells of the FLO5 strain ABXR-11A was resistant to the action of chymotrypsin and was heat labile. Tetrad analysis of a cross of these FLO1 and FLO5 strains indicated that the chymotrypsin and heat sensitivity phenotypes were FLO-gene determined. It appears that expression of the FLO1 and FLO5 genes leads to the production of different and characteristic cell-wall proteins underlying their respective flocculent phenotypes.