Chemical Transfers Occurring Through Oenococcus oeni Biofilm in Different Enological Conditions

Chardonnay wine malolactic fermentations were carried out to evaluate the chemical transfers occurring at the wood/wine interface in the presence of two different bacterial lifestyles. To do this, Oenococcus oeni was inoculated into must and wine in its planktonic and biofilm lifestyles, whether adh...

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Published in:Frontiers in Nutrition
Main Authors: Christian Coelho, Régis D. Gougeon, Luc Perepelkine, Hervé Alexandre, Jean Guzzo, Stéphanie Weidmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-06-01
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnut.2019.00095/full
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author Christian Coelho
Régis D. Gougeon
Luc Perepelkine
Hervé Alexandre
Jean Guzzo
Stéphanie Weidmann
author_facet Christian Coelho
Régis D. Gougeon
Luc Perepelkine
Hervé Alexandre
Jean Guzzo
Stéphanie Weidmann
author_sort Christian Coelho
collection DOAJ
container_title Frontiers in Nutrition
description Chardonnay wine malolactic fermentations were carried out to evaluate the chemical transfers occurring at the wood/wine interface in the presence of two different bacterial lifestyles. To do this, Oenococcus oeni was inoculated into must and wine in its planktonic and biofilm lifestyles, whether adhering or not to oak chips, leading to three distinct enological conditions: (i) post-alcoholic fermentation inoculation in wine in the absence of oak chips, (ii) post-alcoholic fermentation inoculation in wine in the presence of oak chips, and (iii) co-inoculation of both Saccharomyces cerevisiae and O. oeni directly in Chardonnay musts in the presence of oak chips. Classical microbiological and physico-chemical parameters analyzed during the fermentation processes confirmed that alcoholic fermentation was completed identically regardless of the enological conditions, and that once O. oeni had acquired a biofilm lifestyle in the presence or absence of oak, malolactic fermentation occurred faster and with better reproducibility compared to planktonic lifestyles. Analyses of volatile components (higher alcohols and wood aromas) and non-volatile components (Chardonnay grape polyphenols) carried out in the resulting wines revealed chemical differences, particularly when bacterial biofilms were present at the wood interface. This study revealed the non-specific trapping activity of biofilm networks in the presence of wood and grape compounds regardless of the enological conditions. Changes of concentrations in higher alcohols reflected the fermentation bioactivity of bacterial biofilms on wood surfaces. These chemical transfers were statistically validated by an untargeted approach using Excitation Emission Matrices of Fluorescence combined with multivariate analysis to discriminate innovative enological practices during winemaking and to provide winemakers with an optical tool for validating the biological and chemical differentiations occurring in wine that result from their decisions.
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spelling doaj-art-4e85bdbfcda44b32bf1a32375f6829952025-08-19T19:35:15ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Nutrition2296-861X2019-06-01610.3389/fnut.2019.00095449756Chemical Transfers Occurring Through Oenococcus oeni Biofilm in Different Enological ConditionsChristian Coelho0Régis D. Gougeon1Luc Perepelkine2Hervé Alexandre3Jean Guzzo4Stéphanie Weidmann5UMR A 02.102 PAM Laboratoire PCAV AgroSup Dijon, Université de Bourgogne, Institut Universitaire de la Vigne et du Vin Jules Guyot, Dijon, FranceUMR A 02.102 PAM Laboratoire PCAV AgroSup Dijon, Université de Bourgogne, Institut Universitaire de la Vigne et du Vin Jules Guyot, Dijon, FranceSAAT Sayens, Maison Régionale de l'Innovation, Dijon, FranceUMR A 02.102 PAM Laboratoire VAlMiS AgroSup Dijon, Université de Bourgogne, Institut Universitaire de la Vigne et du Vin Jules Guyot, Dijon, FranceUMR A 02.102 PAM Laboratoire VAlMiS AgroSup Dijon, Université de Bourgogne, Institut Universitaire de la Vigne et du Vin Jules Guyot, Dijon, FranceUMR A 02.102 PAM Laboratoire VAlMiS AgroSup Dijon, Université de Bourgogne, Institut Universitaire de la Vigne et du Vin Jules Guyot, Dijon, FranceChardonnay wine malolactic fermentations were carried out to evaluate the chemical transfers occurring at the wood/wine interface in the presence of two different bacterial lifestyles. To do this, Oenococcus oeni was inoculated into must and wine in its planktonic and biofilm lifestyles, whether adhering or not to oak chips, leading to three distinct enological conditions: (i) post-alcoholic fermentation inoculation in wine in the absence of oak chips, (ii) post-alcoholic fermentation inoculation in wine in the presence of oak chips, and (iii) co-inoculation of both Saccharomyces cerevisiae and O. oeni directly in Chardonnay musts in the presence of oak chips. Classical microbiological and physico-chemical parameters analyzed during the fermentation processes confirmed that alcoholic fermentation was completed identically regardless of the enological conditions, and that once O. oeni had acquired a biofilm lifestyle in the presence or absence of oak, malolactic fermentation occurred faster and with better reproducibility compared to planktonic lifestyles. Analyses of volatile components (higher alcohols and wood aromas) and non-volatile components (Chardonnay grape polyphenols) carried out in the resulting wines revealed chemical differences, particularly when bacterial biofilms were present at the wood interface. This study revealed the non-specific trapping activity of biofilm networks in the presence of wood and grape compounds regardless of the enological conditions. Changes of concentrations in higher alcohols reflected the fermentation bioactivity of bacterial biofilms on wood surfaces. These chemical transfers were statistically validated by an untargeted approach using Excitation Emission Matrices of Fluorescence combined with multivariate analysis to discriminate innovative enological practices during winemaking and to provide winemakers with an optical tool for validating the biological and chemical differentiations occurring in wine that result from their decisions.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnut.2019.00095/fullmalolactic fermentationchemical transferswoodO. oenibiofilmplanktonic
spellingShingle Christian Coelho
Régis D. Gougeon
Luc Perepelkine
Hervé Alexandre
Jean Guzzo
Stéphanie Weidmann
Chemical Transfers Occurring Through Oenococcus oeni Biofilm in Different Enological Conditions
malolactic fermentation
chemical transfers
wood
O. oeni
biofilm
planktonic
title Chemical Transfers Occurring Through Oenococcus oeni Biofilm in Different Enological Conditions
title_full Chemical Transfers Occurring Through Oenococcus oeni Biofilm in Different Enological Conditions
title_fullStr Chemical Transfers Occurring Through Oenococcus oeni Biofilm in Different Enological Conditions
title_full_unstemmed Chemical Transfers Occurring Through Oenococcus oeni Biofilm in Different Enological Conditions
title_short Chemical Transfers Occurring Through Oenococcus oeni Biofilm in Different Enological Conditions
title_sort chemical transfers occurring through oenococcus oeni biofilm in different enological conditions
topic malolactic fermentation
chemical transfers
wood
O. oeni
biofilm
planktonic
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnut.2019.00095/full
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AT lucperepelkine chemicaltransfersoccurringthroughoenococcusoenibiofilmindifferentenologicalconditions
AT hervealexandre chemicaltransfersoccurringthroughoenococcusoenibiofilmindifferentenologicalconditions
AT jeanguzzo chemicaltransfersoccurringthroughoenococcusoenibiofilmindifferentenologicalconditions
AT stephanieweidmann chemicaltransfersoccurringthroughoenococcusoenibiofilmindifferentenologicalconditions