Lucía Blasco
University of Santiago de Compostela
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Lucía Blasco.
International Microbiology | 2011
Lucía Blasco; Miquel Viñas; Tomás G. Villa
This review focuses on the role of proteins in the production and maintenance of foam in both sparkling wines and beer. The quality of the foam in beer but especially in sparkling wines depends, among other factors, on the presence of mannoproteins released from the yeast cell walls during autolysis. These proteins are hydrophobic, highly glycosylated, and their molecular masses range from 10 to 200 kDa--characteristics that allow mannoproteins to surround and thus stabilize the gas bubbles of the foam. Both the production and stabilization of foam also depend on other proteins. In wine, these include grape-derived proteins such as vacuolar invertase; in beer, barley-derived proteins, such as LTP1, protein Z, and hordein-derived polypeptides, are even more important in this respect than mannoproteins.
Recent Advances in DNA & Gene Sequences (Formerly Recent Patents on DNA & Gene Sequences) | 2014
Lucía Feijoo-Siota; Lucía Blasco; Jose Luis Rodriguez-Rama; Jorge Barros-Velázquez; Trinidad de Miguel; Angeles Sánchez-Pérez; Tomás G. Villa
This paper reviews the general characteristics of exo and endopeptidases of microbial origin currently used in the milk industry. It also includes recent patents developed either to potentiate the enzymatic activity or to improve the resulting milk derivatives. The main application of these proteases is in the cheese-making industry. Although this industry preferentially uses animal rennets, and in particular genetically engineered chymosins, it also utilizes milk coagulants of microbial origin. Enzymes derived from Rhizomucor miehei, Rhizomucor pusillus and Cryphonectria parasitica are currently used to replace the conventional milk-clotting enzymes. In addition, the dairy industry uses microbial endo and exoproteases for relatively new applications, such as debittering and flavor generation in cheese, accelerated cheese ripening, manufacture of protein hydrolysates with improved functional properties, and production of enzyme-modified cheeses. Lactic acid bacteria play an essential role in these processes, hence these bacteria and the proteases they produce are currently being investigated by the dairy industry and are the subject of many of their patent applications.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2012
Lucía Blasco; Patricia Veiga-Crespo; Angeles Sánchez-Pérez; Tomás G. Villa
Foam production is an essential characteristic of beer, generated mainly from the proteins present in the malt and, to a minor extent, from the mannoproteins in brewers yeast cell walls. Here, we describe the isolation and characterization of the novel fermentation gene CFG1 (Carlsbergensis foaming gene) from Saccharomyces pastorianus. CFG1 encodes the cell wall protein Cfg1p, a 105 kDa protein highly homologous to Saccharomyces cerevisiae cell wall mannoproteins, particularly those involved in foam formation, such as Awa1p and Fpg1p. Further characterization of Cfg1p revealed that this novel protein is responsible for beer foam stabilization. This report represents the first time that a brewing yeast foaming gene has been cloned and its action fully characterized.
Yeast | 2011
Lucía Blasco; Patricia Veiga-Crespo; Tomás G. Villa
Foam formation in fermentations conducted by Saccharomyces cerevisiae, either at the beginning of the fermentation process or at the end in the case of sparkling wines, is due, to a large extent, to cell wall mannoproteins, which provide hydrophobicity to the yeast cells and favour their floating index as well as stabilization of the foam. The foam may be an undesirable by‐product if it accumulates on top of the fermentation tanks, but its formation is a good property in either beer or sparkling wines. It is therefore important to know the yeast genes involved in foam formation, in order to suppress or potentiate their expression according to the end product to be obtained. The present study identified and characterized, for the first time in an oenological S. cerevisiae strain, a gene involved in foam formation, named FPG1 (foam‐promoting gene). The protein encoded by FPG1 is a mannoprotein precursor present in the cell wall and somewhat homologous to Awa1p, a foaming protein described in a sake S. cerevisiae strain. A foamless strain was prepared by FPG1 deletion, and a foam hyper‐producing strain was also constructed, thus allowing the conclusion that Fpg1p is a mannoprotein involved in yeast frothing. Copyright
International Microbiology | 2011
Lucía Blasco; Patricia Veiga-Crespo; Miquel Viñas; Tomás G. Villa
Yeasts are responsible for several traits in fermented beverages, including wine and beer, and their genetic manipulation is often necessary to improve the quality of the fermentation product. Improvement of wild-type strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Saccharomyces pastorianus is difficult due to their homothallic character and variable ploidy level. Homothallism is determined by the HO gene in S. cerevisiae and the Sc-HO gene in S. pastorianus. In this work, we describe the construction of an HO disruption vector (pDHO) containing an HO disruption cassette and discuss its use in generating heterothallic yeast strains from homothallic Saccharomyces species.
International Microbiology | 2005
Patricia Veiga-Crespo; Lucía Blasco; Fernando Rosa dos Santos; Margarita Poza; Tomás G. Villa
International Microbiology | 2007
Patricia Veiga Crespo; Lucía Blasco; Margarita Poza; Tomás G. Villa
International Microbiology | 2008
Lucía Blasco; Lucía Feijoo-Siota; Patricia Veiga-Crespo; Tomás G. Villa
World Journal of Microbiology & Biotechnology | 2006
Lucía Blasco; Patricia Veiga-Crespo; Margarita Poza; Tomás G. Villa
International Microbiology | 2005
Patricia Veiga-Crespo; Lucía Blasco; Fernando Rosa dos Santos; Margarita Poza; Tomás G. Villa