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Dive into the research topics where Giacomo Zara is active.

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Featured researches published by Giacomo Zara.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2005

FLO11-Based Model for Air-Liquid Interfacial Biofilm Formation by Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Severino Zara; Alan T. Bakalinsky; Giacomo Zara; Giorgia Pirino; Maria Antonietta Demontis; Marilena Budroni

ABSTRACT Sardinian wine strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae used to make sherry-like wines form a biofilm at the air-liquid interface at the end of ethanolic fermentation, when grape sugar is depleted and further growth becomes dependent on access to oxygen. Here, we show that FLO11, which encodes a hydrophobic cell wall glycoprotein, is required for the air-liquid interfacial biofilm and that biofilm cells have a buoyant density greater than the suspending medium. We propose a model for biofilm formation based on an increase in cell surface hydrophobicity occurring at the diauxic shift. This increase leads to formation of multicellular aggregates that effectively entrap carbon dioxide, providing buoyancy. A visible biofilm appears when a sufficient number of hydrophobic cell aggregates are carried to and grow on the liquid surface.


Microbiology | 2009

FLO11 gene length and transcriptional level affect biofilm-forming ability of wild flor strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Giacomo Zara; Severino Zara; Claudia Pinna; Salvatore Marceddu; Marilena Budroni

In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, FLO11 encodes an adhesin that is associated with different phenotypes, such as adherence to solid surfaces, hydrophobicity, mat and air-liquid biofilm formation. In the present study, we analysed FLO11 allelic polymorphisms and FLO11-associated phenotypes of 20 flor strains. We identified 13 alleles of different lengths, varying from 3.0 to 6.1 kb, thus demonstrating that FLO11 is highly polymorphic. Two alleles of 3.1 and 5.0 kb were cloned into strain BY4742 to compare the FLO11-associated phenotypes in the same genetic background. We show that there is a significant correlation between biofilm-forming ability and FLO11 length both in different and in the same genetic backgrounds. Moreover, we propose a multiple regression model that allows prediction of air-liquid biofilm-forming ability on the basis of transcription levels and lengths of FLO11 alleles in a population of S. cerevisiae flor strains. Considering that transcriptional differences are only partially explained by the differences in the promoter sequences, our results are consistent with the hypothesis that FLO11 transcription levels are strongly influenced by genetic background and affect biofilm-forming ability.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2010

Ethanol-Independent Biofilm Formation by a Flor Wine Yeast Strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Severino Zara; Michael K. Gross; Giacomo Zara; Marilena Budroni; Alan T. Bakalinsky

ABSTRACT Flor strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae form a biofilm on the surface of wine at the end of fermentation, when sugar is depleted and growth on ethanol becomes dependent on oxygen. Here, we report greater biofilm formation on glycerol and ethyl acetate and inconsistent formation on succinic, lactic, and acetic acids.


Molecular Ecology | 2017

Genomic signatures of adaptation to wine biological ageing conditions in biofilm‐forming flor yeasts

Anna-Lisa Coi; Frédéric Bigey; Sandrine Mallet; Souhir Marsit; Giacomo Zara; Pierre Gladieux; Virginie Galeote; Marilena Budroni; Sylvie Dequin; Jean-Luc Legras

The molecular and evolutionary processes underlying fungal domestication remain largely unknown despite the importance of fungi to bioindustry and for comparative adaptation genomics in eukaryotes. Wine fermentation and biological ageing are performed by strains of S. cerevisiae with, respectively, pelagic fermentative growth on glucose and biofilm aerobic growth utilizing ethanol. Here, we use environmental samples of wine and flor yeasts to investigate the genomic basis of yeast adaptation to contrasted anthropogenic environments. Phylogenetic inference and population structure analysis based on single nucleotide polymorphisms revealed a group of flor yeasts separated from wine yeasts. A combination of methods revealed several highly differentiated regions between wine and flor yeasts, and analyses using codon‐substitution models for detecting molecular adaptation identified sites under positive selection in the high‐affinity transporter gene ZRT1. The cross‐population composite likelihood ratio revealed selective sweeps at three regions, including in the hexose transporter gene HXT7, the yapsin gene YPS6 and the membrane protein coding gene MTS27. Our analyses also revealed that the biological ageing environment has led to the accumulation of numerous mutations in proteins from several networks, including Flo11 regulation and divalent metal transport. Together, our findings suggest that the tuning of FLO11 expression and zinc transport networks are a distinctive feature of the genetic changes underlying the domestication of flor yeasts. Our study highlights the multiplicity of genomic changes underlying yeast adaptation to man‐made habitats and reveals that flor/wine yeast lineage can serve as a useful model for studying the genomics of adaptive divergence.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016

Flor Yeast: New Perspectives Beyond Wine Aging

Jean Luc Legras; Jaime Moreno-García; Severino Zara; Giacomo Zara; Teresa García-Martínez; Juan C. Mauricio; Ilaria Maria Mannazzu; Anna L. Coi; Marc Bou Zeidan; Sylvie Dequin; Juan Antonio Moreno; Marilena Budroni

The most important dogma in white-wine production is the preservation of the wine aroma and the limitation of the oxidative action of oxygen. In contrast, the aging of Sherry and Sherry-like wines is an aerobic process that depends on the oxidative activity of flor strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Under depletion of nitrogen and fermentable carbon sources, these yeast produce aggregates of floating cells and form an air–liquid biofilm on the wine surface, which is also known as velum or flor. This behavior is due to genetic and metabolic peculiarities that differentiate flor yeast from other wine yeast. This review will focus first on the most updated data obtained through the analysis of flor yeast with -omic tools. Comparative genomics, proteomics, and metabolomics of flor and wine yeast strains are shedding new light on several features of these special yeast, and in particular, they have revealed the extent of proteome remodeling imposed by the biofilm life-style. Finally, new insights in terms of promotion and inhibition of biofilm formation through small molecules, amino acids, and di/tri-peptides, and novel possibilities for the exploitation of biofilm immobilization within a fungal hyphae framework, will be discussed.


Fems Yeast Research | 2009

Oxygen is required to restore flor strain viability and lipid biosynthesis under fermentative conditions

Giacomo Zara; Daniele Angelozzi; Simona Belviso; Laura Bardi; Tiziana Lodi; Marilena Budroni; Ilaria Maria Mannazzu

To further elucidate the biosynthesis of lipids in flor strains under fermentative conditions, the transcription levels of the lipid biosynthetic genes ACS1, ACS2, ACC1, OLE1, ERG1, ERG11, ARE1 and ARE2, as well as the lipid composition and cell viability of a flor strain were compared with that of a non-flor strain during hypoxic and aerobic fermentations in the absence of lipid nutrients. While no significant differences in transcription levels or lipid compositions were observed between the two strains when oxygen was not limiting, significant differences were seen during hypoxic fermentation. In this last condition, the flor strain, in spite of higher levels of transcription of hypoxic genes, lost the abilities to desaturate fatty acids and complete ergosterol biosynthesis, and showed a dramatic loss of viability. In contrast, the non-flor strain, which showed lower transcription levels, was able to reach a balanced lipid composition and maintained a higher cell viability. One possible explanation is that the flor strain requires a higher amount of oxygen than the non-flor strain in order to carry out the oxygen-dependent steps of lipid biosynthesis under fermentative conditions.


Fems Yeast Research | 2012

FLO11 expression and lipid biosynthesis are required for air–liquid biofilm formation in a Saccharomyces cerevisiae flor strain

Giacomo Zara; Paola Goffrini; Tiziana Lodi; Severino Zara; Ilaria Maria Mannazzu; Marilena Budroni

Air-liquid biofilm formation is largely dependent on Flo11p and seems related to cell lipid content and composition. Here, it is shown that in the presence of cerulenin, a known inhibitor of the fatty acid synthase complex, biofilm formation is inhibited together with FLO11 transcription in a flor strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, while the administration of saturated fatty acids to cerulenin-containing medium restores biofilm formation and FLO11 transcription. It is also shown that, in biofilm cells, the FLO11 transcription is accompanied by the transcription of ACC1, ACS1 and INO1 key genes in lipid biosynthesis and that biofilm formation is affected by the lack of inositol in flor medium. These results are compatible with the hypothesis that the air-liquid biofilm formation depends on FLO11 transcription levels as well as on fatty acids biosynthesis.


Journal of Applied Microbiology | 2008

Correlation between cell lipid content, gene expression and fermentative behaviour of two Saccharomyces cerevisiae wine strains

Giacomo Zara; Luca Bardi; Simona Belviso; Giovanni Antonio Farris; Severino Zara; Marilena Budroni

Aim:  To verify a possible correlation between cell lipid composition, expression of key genes in lipid metabolism and fermentative behaviour of Saccharomyces cerevisiae wine strains.


Yeast | 2011

Air-liquid biofilm formation is dependent on ammonium depletion in a Saccharomyces cerevisiae flor strain

Giacomo Zara; Marilena Budroni; Ilaria Maria Mannazzu; Severino Zara

Air–liquid biofilm formation appears to be an adaptive mechanism that promotes foraging of Saccharomyces cerevisiae flor strains in response to nutrient starvation. The FLO11 gene plays a central role in this phenotype as its expression allows yeast cells to rise to the liquid surface. Here, we investigated the role of ammonium depletion in air–liquid biofilm formation and FLO11 expression in a S. cerevisiae flor strain. The data obtained show that increasing ammonium concentrations from 0 to 450 m m reduce air–liquid biofilm in terms of biomass and velum formation and correlate with a reduction of FLO11 expression. Rapamycin inhibition of the TOR pathway and deletion of RAS2 gene significantly reduced biofilm formation and FLO11 expression. Taken together, these data suggest that ammonium depletion is a key factor in the induction of air–liquid biofilm formation and FLO11 expression in S. cerevisiae flor strains. Copyright


Fungal Biology | 2012

Pichia fermentans dimorphic changes depend on the nitrogen source

Maria Lina Sanna; Severino Zara; Giacomo Zara; Quirico Migheli; Marilena Budroni; Ilaria Maria Mannazzu

Pichia fermentans DiSAABA 726 is a biofilm-forming yeast that undergoes dimorphic transition. Under yeast-like morphology it controls brown rot caused by Monilia spp. on apple fruit, while under pseudohyphal form, it shows pathogenic behaviour itself on peach fruit. The present study investigates the nutritional factors that induce and separate yeast-like and pseudohyphal morphologies under laboratory conditions. We show that P. fermentans DiSAABA 726 produces mainly yeast-like cells on media containing millimolar concentrations of urea and diammonium phosphate, and forms pseudohyphae at micromolar concentrations of these two salts. With ammonium sulphate, yeast-like or pseudohyphal morphology depends on the N concentration and the pH of the culture media. Amino acids such as methionine, valine, and phenylalanine invariably induce pseudohyphal morphology irrespective of the N concentration and the pH of the culture media. Methionol, 1-butanol, isobutanol, and isopropanol induce pseudohyphal growth, while phenylethanol and isoamyl alcohol fail to induce the formation of filaments. Thus, the morphogenesis of P. fermentans DiSAABA 726 depends more on the nitrogen source than on the N concentration, and is regulated by the quorum-sensing molecules that are generally produced from amino-acid assimilation under nitrogen starvation.

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Ilaria Maria Mannazzu

Marche Polytechnic University

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Jean-Luc Legras

University of Montpellier

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Sylvie Dequin

University of Montpellier

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Frédéric Bigey

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Pierre Gladieux

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Souhir Marsit

University of Montpellier

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Virginie Galeote

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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