The Asian Age

‘ New algorithm may help improve taste of beer’

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London: Scientists have created a machine learning algorithm that may help brewers to have greater control over the flavour of beer, and also yield personalis­ed treatments for metabolic disorders in future.

The algorithm developed by scientists at the Francis Crick Institute in the UK can predict yeast metabolism from its protein content. Metabolism is the process by which organisms convert nutrients into energy and essential molecules, via a series of chemical reactions.

When yeast metabolise­s sugar in the absence of oxygen, it ‘ ferments’ to produce alcohol, acids and gases, including flavour compounds, that make bread, wine and beer taste good. Within a cell, metabolism produces hundreds of small molecules, called metabolite­s.

Although yeast is evolutiona­rily very distant to humans, many of these metabolite­s are identical, and are made in a similar way. Until now, however, the mechanisms controllin­g metabolism have not been fully understood.

The study, published in the journal Cell Systems, shows that to a large extent, the metabolism of brewer’s yeast ( S cerevisiae) is predictabl­e by machine learning algorithms, if they are provided with large amounts of protein expression informatio­n.

“Thanks to machine learning, we now have a better understand­ing of what controls metabolism, which is good news for brewers looking to create the perfect pint, or for biotechnol­ogists that use yeast to produce vaccines and other proteins that are medically important,” said Aleksej Zelezniak, a researcher at Francis Crick Institute.

“Until now, scientists have been divided over whether metabolism is self- regulating or controlled by gene expression changes; partly because existing methods have failed to detect any strong correlatio­n between the read- out of genes — proteins — and metabolite­s,” Zelezniak said.

Scientists quantified enzyme expression in 97 different strains of S cerevisiae, known to show difference­s in metabolism, linking it to changes in metabolite concentrat­ions measured.

They developed machine learning algorithms that could pick up complex relationsh­ips between changes in gene expression and metabolite­s produced. They found that metabolism was controlled by lots of enzymes acting in concert — with no single enzyme having a major effect by itself. The team is hoping to transfer their findings in yeast cells to the clinic in the next few years to help patients with metabolic diseases.

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