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Brewing hoppy beer without the hops
phys.org ^ | March 20, 2018 | University of California - Berkeley

Posted on 03/20/2018 11:19:39 AM PDT by Red Badger

A more sustainable pint of craft beer possibly coming to a pub near you +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Hoppy beer is all the rage among craft brewers and beer lovers, and now UC Berkeley biologists have come up with a way to create these unique flavors and aromas without using hops.

The researchers created strains of brewer's yeast that not only ferment the beer but also provide two of the prominent flavor notes provided by hops. In double-blind taste tests, employees of Lagunitas Brewing Company in Petaluma, California, characterized beer made from the engineered strains as more hoppy than a control beer made with regular yeast and Cascade hops.

Bryan Donaldson, innovations manager at Lagunitas, detected notes of "fruit-loops" and "orange blossom" with no off flavors.

Why would brewers want to use yeast instead of hops to impart flavor and aroma? According to Charles Denby, one of two first authors of a paper appearing this week in the journal Nature Communications, growing hops uses lots of water, not to mention fertilizer and energy to transport the crop, all of which could be avoided by using yeast to make a hop-forward brew. A pint of craft beer can require 50 pints of water merely to grow the hops, which are the dried flowers of a climbing plant.

"My hope is that if we can use the technology to make great beer that is produced with a more sustainable process, people will embrace that," Denby said.

Hops' flavorful components, or essential oils, are also highly variable from year to year and plot to plot, so using a standardized yeast would allow uniformity of flavor. And hops are expensive.

A former UC Berkeley postdoctoral fellow, Denby has launched a startup called Berkeley Brewing Science with Rachel Li, the second first author and a UC Berkeley doctoral candidate. They hope to market hoppy yeasts to brewers, including strains that contain more of the natural hop flavor components, and create other strains that incorporate novel plant flavors not typical of beer brewed from the canonical ingredients: water, barley, hops and yeast.

Using DNA scissors

The engineered yeast strains were altered using CRISPR-Cas9, a simple and inexpensive gene-editing tool invented at UC Berkeley. Denby and Li inserted four new genes plus the promoters that regulate the genes into industrial brewer's yeast. Two of the genes - linalool synthase and geraniol synthase - code for enzymes that produce flavor components common to many plants. In this instance, the genes came from mint and basil, respectively. Genes from other plants that were reported to have linalool synthase activity, such as olive and strawberry, were not as easy to work with.

The two other genes were from yeast and boosted the production of precursor molecules needed to make linalool and geraniol, the hoppy flavor components. All of the genetic components - the Cas9 gene, four yeast, mint and basil genes and promoters - were inserted into yeast on a tiny circular DNA plasmid. The yeast cells then translated the Cas9 gene into the Cas9 proteins, which cut the yeast DNA at specific points. Yeast repair enzymes then spliced in the four genes plus promoters.

The researchers used a specially designed software program to get just the right mix of promoters to produce linalool and geraniol in proportions similar to the proportions in commercial beers produced by Sierra Nevada Brewing Company, which operates a tap room not far from the startup.

They then asked Charles Bamforth, a malting and brewing authority at UC Davis, to brew a beer from three of the most promising strains, using hops only in the initial stage of brewing - the wort - to get the bitterness without the hoppy flavor. Hop flavor was supplied only by the new yeast strains. Bamforth also brewed a beer with standard yeast and hops, and asked a former student, Lagunitas's Donaldson, to conduct a blind comparison taste test with 27 brewery employees.

"This was one of our very first sensory tests, so being rated as hoppier than the two beers that were actually dry-hopped at conventional hopping rates was very encouraging," Li said.

From sustainable fuels to sustainable beer

Denby came to UC Berkeley to work on sustainable transportation fuels with Jay Keasling, a pioneer in the field of synthetic biology and a professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering. The strategy developed by Keasling is to make microbes, primarily bacteria and yeast, ramp up their production of complex molecules called terpenes, and then insert genes that turn these terpenes into commercial products. These microbes can make such chemicals as the antimalarial drug, artemisinin, fuels such as butanol, and aromas and flavors used in the cosmetic industry.

But the brewing project "found me," Denby said

"I started home brewing out of curiosity with a group of friends while I was starting out in Jay's lab, in part because I enjoy beer and in part because I was interested in fermentation processes," he said. "I found out that the molecules that give hops their hoppy flavor are terpene molecules, and it wouldn't be too big of a stretch to think we could develop strains that make terpenes at the same concentrations that you get when you make beer and add hops to them."

The final hook was that a hoppy strain of yeast would make the brewing process more sustainable than using agriculturally produced hops, which is a very natural resource-intensive product, he said.

"We started our work on engineering microbes to produce isoprenoids - like flavors, fragrances and artemisinin - about 20 years ago," said Keasling. "At the same time, we were building tools to accurately control metabolism. With this project, we are able to use some of the tools others and we developed to accurately control metabolism to produce just the right amount of hops flavors for beer."

Denby and Li first had to overcome some hurdles, such as learning how to genetically engineer commercial brewer's yeast. Unlike the yeast used in research labs, which have one set of chromosomes, brewer's yeast has four sets of chromosomes. They found out that they needed to add the same four genes plus promoters to each set of chromosomes to obtain a stable strain of yeast; if not, as the yeast propagated they lost the added genes.

They also had to find out, through computational analytics performed by Zak Costello, which promoters would produce the amounts of linalool and geraniol at the right times to approximate the concentrations in a hoppy beer, and then scale up fermentation by a factor of about 100 from test tube quantities to 40-liter kettles.

In the end, they were able to drink their research project, and continue to do so at their startup as they ferment batches of beer to test new strains of yeast.

"Charles and Rachel have shown that using the appropriate tools to control production of these flavors can result in a beer with a more consistent hoppy flavor, even better than what nature can do itself," Keasling said.

Explore further: A brewer's tale of proteins and beer

More information: Industrial brewing yeast engineered for the production of primary flavor determinants in hopped beer, Nature Communications (2018). nature.com/articles/doi:10.1038/s41467-018-03293-x

Journal reference: Nature Communications

Provided by: University of California - Berkeley


TOPICS: Agriculture; Food; History; Science
KEYWORDS: beer; brewery; craft; dna; drink; hops; yeast
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1 posted on 03/20/2018 11:19:40 AM PDT by Red Badger
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To: Red Badger

I brewed my own beer back in the 70s. I dumped hops into the beer. Made it taste good. Hope are relatively cheap weeds. What’s the issue with using hops?


2 posted on 03/20/2018 11:23:46 AM PDT by Vaquero (Don't pick a fight with an old guy. If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you)
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To: Red Badger

So much for Lil Sumpin Sumpin and Hoptimus Maximum....

I ain’t drinking a genetically engineered beer Lagunitas.

CRISPR’d beer?

Really?


3 posted on 03/20/2018 11:23:51 AM PDT by 1_Inch_Group (Country Before Party)
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To: Red Badger

I was feeling kind of worried lately about the amount of water hop farms use. I’m relieved a compound invented in a lab can replace that wholesome natural ingredient with it’s centuries long track record. /s


4 posted on 03/20/2018 11:24:50 AM PDT by DesertRhino (Dog is man's best friend, and moslems hate dogs. Add that up. ....)
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To: Red Badger

Hops is also a known natural preservative. this was the original reason for adding hops.


5 posted on 03/20/2018 11:25:36 AM PDT by BipolarBob (If you're not hungry for God, you're probably full of yourself.)
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To: Vaquero
What’s the issue with using hops?

Too much water to grow. Cali is using up their water supply and Hops require far more than they return. So, they are looking to utilize the land for better crops.

6 posted on 03/20/2018 11:26:09 AM PDT by rjsimmon (The Tree of Liberty Thirsts)
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To: Vaquero

Hops is getting expensive an its farming uses lots of water.
Last year, or maybe it was the year before, there was a worldwide hops shortage due to bad weather in places where it is grown [globull warming].

This would cut the price of production and time.................


7 posted on 03/20/2018 11:27:25 AM PDT by Red Badger (The people who call Trump a tyrant are the same people who want the president to confiscate weapons.)
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To: 1_Inch_Group

GMO brew not welcome here, either.

No thanks.

Nuh uh.


8 posted on 03/20/2018 11:29:54 AM PDT by Zarro (It is time to end the Mueller Witch Hunt. End it now.)
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To: Red Badger

If anyone is ever here in Northern California, Lagunitas has a very nice ‘beer sanctuary’. The sampling flights are incredible, they always have some weird experimental stuff to try. But there are a bunch of excellent breweries about, lots of knowledge from wine industry people.


9 posted on 03/20/2018 11:30:07 AM PDT by RedStateRocker (Nuke Mecca, deport all illegals, abolish the DEA, IRS and ATF.)
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To: Red Badger

Sounds goot, but I don’t trvst anything the eggheads are for!
Used to brew. Now I just blend (mix). Mostly GOOD IPA/DIPA.
Goose IPA is about it around here...only once have I found HopSlan available, and never BroBen!

A Touch O’ Honey and maybe a small trickle of SoComfort/Rum added! That’s as good as it gets.
Best To Ya!
GunnyG@PlanetWTF?
TRUMP.45 IF? We Can Keep Him?
********************************


10 posted on 03/20/2018 11:33:10 AM PDT by gunnyg ("A Constitution changed from Freedom, can never be restored; Liberty, once lost, is lost forever...)
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To: Red Badger

Frankenbier

Do not want! You can pry my hops from my cold, dead hands.


11 posted on 03/20/2018 11:34:33 AM PDT by bk1000 (I stand with Trump)
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To: Zarro

A few years back Hop$ went outta sight...The Ethanol craze did it...The hop farmers all over started growing corn insteada hops.
I started growing hops here in Central Fla. Worked OK.
*************
Dick G
*********


12 posted on 03/20/2018 11:37:10 AM PDT by gunnyg ("A Constitution changed from Freedom, can never be restored; Liberty, once lost, is lost forever...)
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To: rjsimmon

Perhaps hops should be farmed in areas where the natural climate is conducive to growing hops.

Growing hops in California makes about as much sense as growing agave in Siberia.


13 posted on 03/20/2018 11:37:41 AM PDT by WayneS (An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last. - Winston Churchill.)
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To: gunnyg

Yep, I have a buddy who grows his own, as well. He’s a lib, so I wonder if he’d admit that he’s killing the planet with the little buggers? I don’t care for IPA’s and Pale Ales much, so I wouldn’t be missing them much. :-)


14 posted on 03/20/2018 11:40:11 AM PDT by Zarro (It is time to end the Mueller Witch Hunt. End it now.)
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To: rjsimmon
To quote Sam Kineson:

live where the FOOD IS! YOU LIVE IN A DESERT!! UNDERSTAND THAT? YOU LIVE IN A F***ING DESERT!! NOTHING GROWS HERE! NOTHING'S GONNA GROW HERE! Come here, you see this? This is sand. You know what it's gonna be 100 years from now? IT'S GONNA BE SAND!! YOU LIVE IN A F***ING DESERT!

15 posted on 03/20/2018 11:40:41 AM PDT by Vaquero (Don't pick a fight with an old guy. If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you)
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To: Red Badger

See 15


16 posted on 03/20/2018 11:42:12 AM PDT by Vaquero (Don't pick a fight with an old guy. If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you)
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To: Red Badger
"My hope is that if we can use the technology to make great beer that is produced with a more sustainable process, people will embrace that," Denby said.

Sustainability and GMO don't go together well from a marketing perspective

17 posted on 03/20/2018 11:42:31 AM PDT by frogjerk (We are conservatives. Not libertarians, not "fiscal conservatives", not moderates)
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To: Vaquero

I miss Sam...................


18 posted on 03/20/2018 11:44:19 AM PDT by Red Badger (The people who call Trump a tyrant are the same people who want the president to confiscate weapons.)
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To: WayneS
Perhaps hops should be farmed in areas where the natural climate is conducive to growing hops. Growing hops in California makes about as much sense as growing agave in Siberia.

Not Really...


19 posted on 03/20/2018 11:45:56 AM PDT by frogjerk (We are conservatives. Not libertarians, not "fiscal conservatives", not moderates)
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To: Vaquero

I miss Sam. He should have been our UN representative...


20 posted on 03/20/2018 11:47:29 AM PDT by rjsimmon (The Tree of Liberty Thirsts)
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