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Screening and In Silico Analyses of the Yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae Σ1278b Bank Mutants Using Citral as a Natural Antimicrobial

Academic Article
Publication Date:
2024
Short description:
Screening and In Silico Analyses of the Yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae Σ1278b Bank Mutants Using Citral as a Natural Antimicrobial / El Harati, R., Fancello, F., Multineddu, C., Zara, G., Zara, S.. - In: FOODS. - ISSN 2304-8158. - 13:10(2024). [10.3390/foods13101457]
abstract:
The antimicrobial function of citral, one of the main compounds of the essential oils (EO) of the Citrus genus, and widely used by the food industry toward spoilage yeast, was previously proven. In this study, the possible mode of action of citral against yeast cells was evaluated by using a global deletome approach. Firstly, the suitability of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Sigma 1278b to serve as model yeast was assessed by determining its sensitivity to citral (MIC = 0.5 mu L/mL). Subsequently, the complete library of Sigma 1278b haploid mutants deleted in 4019 non-essential genes was screened to identify potential molecular targets of citral. Finally, the deleted genes in the 590 mutants showing increased citral resistance was analyzed with an in-silico approach (Gene Ontology). The significantly enriched GO Terms were "cytoplasm", "vacuole", and "mitochondrion" (cellular components); "catalytic activity" (molecular function); "pseudohyphal growth" (biological process). For molecular function, resistant mutants were grouped into thiosulfate sulfur transferase activity, transferase activity, and oxidoreductase activity; for cellular components, resistant mutants were grouped as: cytoplasm, intracellular organelle, membrane-bounded organelle, mitochondrion, organelle membrane, and vacuole; and finally, with regard to biological process, deleted genes were grouped as: pseudohyphal growth, mitochondrion organization, lipid metabolic process, DNA recombination and repair, and proteolysis. Interestingly, many identified genes were associated with the cellular response to oxidative stress and ROS scavenging. These findings have important implications for the development of citral-based antimicrobials and the elucidation of its mechanism of action.
Iris type:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
S. cerevisiae gene bank; antimicrobial function; antimicrobials; deletome; reactive oxygen species
List of contributors:
El Harati, Rolla; Fancello, Francesco; Multineddu, Chiara; Zara, Giacomo; Zara, Severino
Authors of the University:
FANCELLO Francesco
ZARA Giacomo
ZARA Severino
Handle:
https://iris.uniss.it/handle/11388/335889
Published in:
FOODS
Journal
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