An untargeted UPLC-qTOF-MS analysis of the wines collected at the endpoint of the alcoholic fermentation was performed in order to investigate the influence held by both biotin and thiamine on the S. cerevisiae metabolome.
The retrieved features were filtered to only retain those existing in at least two of the three biological replicates of all modalities, to ensure significance in their presence in the final wines. Subsequently to those treatments, 3870 features have been detected in both positive and negative ionization modes and analyzed using both PCA at a significance level of α = 0.05 and one-way ANOVA at a significance level of α = 0.01.
No clear discrimination between groups appeared here, and especially no differentiation could be found between the intermediary and lowest vitamin doses. As such, for all further metabolomic investigations, the wines obtained from S. cerevisiae grown in 3 µg/L of biotin (“high biotin”) were separated from those grown in both 0.5 and 0 µg/L of biotin (“low biotin”), for which data were taken into account together, as one unique condition. Similarly, wine resulting from alcoholic fermentation in 250 µg/L of thiamine (“high thiamine”) was considered separately from those obtained in both 50 and 0 µg/L of thiamine (“low thiamine”).
3.4.1. Biotin Influence on the Wine Metabolome
ANOVA performed on the extracted features allowed for the isolation of 208 compounds that presented significant differences (
p < 0.01) between both high and low biotin conditions, therefore accounting for less than 10% of the extracted features. Putative annotations were assigned to all significant extracted features according to the KEGG, Metlin, and Oligonet online databases and tools [
27]. Consequently, out of those 208 notable features, 164 were assigned a possible chemical formula, and therefore annotated at level 4 [
57]; as such, those annotated features were the sole ones to be considered in all further investigations of the impact of biotin on the
S. cerevisiae metabolome.
Amongst those, a remarkably higher proportion of features appeared to be significantly more intense in high biotin than in low biotin, since 133 of those appeared significant (
p < 0.01) in wines obtained from 3 µg/L of biotin, against 31 resulting from those associated with the lower doses of the vitamin. Hierarchical clustering of those features led to a clear distinction between wines obtained from higher and lower initial contents of the vitamin, although two low biotin samples appeared less properly discriminated from the high biotin ones (
Figure 3B), which strongly highlights the impact of biotin on the yeast metabolism.
To further assess the nature of this influence, Van Krevelen diagrams were plotted on the features’ O/C and H/C ratios for both biotin conditions, and the elemental compositions of them were investigated (
Figure 4). Notable differences in the chemical composition of wines appeared between the features associated with each biotin condition; as such, while high biotin-resulting wines displayed a dominance of CHON-based features, the predominating ones in low biotin wines were the phosphorus-containing features (CHOP, CHONP, and CHONPS). It is, however, relevant to note that those predominant features are, in either biotin condition, found in the lipid (O/C < 0.6 and H/C > 1.3) and polyphenol (O/C < 1.2 and H/C < 1.3) regions of the Van Krevelen diagram, consistent with their predicted chemical families [
58]. In addition, an interesting influence exerted by biotin on the proportion in the CHONS features appeared here, since they dropped from 11.3% in high biotin to 6.5% in low biotin.
Subsequently to the features’ nature assumption, hypothetical annotations were assigned using the MassTRIX application [
26] (Helmholtz Zentrum München, München, Germany), and its associated databases, such as KEGG [
27], as accessed on 11 November 2022.
A limited number of the specific biomarkers were successfully annotated in the databases, since less than 10% of those were matched, reflecting the high complexity and current low understanding of the wine composition [
59,
60]. Those annotations have allowed to identify the metabolic pathways associated with the changes in the exometabolome changes observed as a result of the initial biotin in the medium (
Supplementary Materials Table S2, Figure S1). Unsurprisingly, a higher number of pathways were impacted by a high initial biotin, although the number of associated biomarkers to each of those pathways remains limited, as a consequence of the low number of annotated features overall. No pathway appeared here, as such, to be notably more affected than others; however, it appears relevant to note that the impacted metabolic pathways here are reliant on major pathways, such as central carbon metabolism, amino acid metabolism, and lipid metabolism. While its influence on the CCM might be a reflection of the biotin-dependent enzymes Acc1/Hfa1 and Pyc1/2 [
42], its influence on amino acids appears less clear, although they might be an indirect result of these biotin-dependent reactions, and notably the Pyc1/2 conversion of pyruvate towards oxaloacetate [
42]. The absence of any more significance in the effect of high biotin on the lipid metabolism appeared, however, highly surprising, notably in regard to the essential role held by the vitamin in the first steps of the synthesis of fatty acids [
48,
49,
50]. A similar impact on carbon metabolism was found in the low biotin wines, through the fructose and mannose metabolism. Surprisingly, low biotin was also found to impact riboflavin metabolism.
All in all, the untargeted approach allows to conclude, for the first time, on the actual influence of the initial biotin on the yeast exometabolome during alcoholic fermentation.
3.4.2. Impact of Thiamine on the Wine Metabolome
In order to determine the extent of the influence of thiamine on the yeast exometabolome, an ANOVA was performed on the 3870 extracted features, and resulted in the isolation of 515 that were associated with significant differences (p < 0.01) in regard to the initial concentration of the vitamin, therefore accounting for nearly 15% of the extracted features. However, only 378 of those specific features were assigned possible chemical formulas through putative annotations in online databases, in a similar fashion to what was performed on biotin-associated features, and these were the sole ones to be considered for their significant influence in the S. cerevisiae thiamine-dependent metabolome. It is also relevant to note that the number of features associated with thiamine here was significantly higher than those associated with biotin, since it more than doubled its amount, also suggesting a greater influence of thiamine on the yeast metabolism.
Similar to what was observed in the assessment of the influence of biotin on the yeast exometabolome, a high proportion of those features were significantly more intense in high thiamine, amounting to 378, while only 69 features appeared significantly more intense (
p < 0.01) in low thiamine wines. Such a differentiation also appeared quite clearly through hierarchical clustering of these 515 total biomarkers, since it resulted in a distinct discrimination between high and low thiamine wines (
Figure 3D), strongly testifying on the influence exerted by the vitamin on the wine exometabolome.
An investigation of the chemical composition of the thiamine-affected features was led, in order to find the precise nature of the effect exercised by the vitamin on the yeast metabolism during fermentation. As such, Van Krevelen diagrams were drawn based on the O/C and H/C atomic ratios of the specific features for both the low and high thiamine conditions, and their elemental composition was investigated in an effort to define their chemical identities. Surprisingly, as opposed to what was observed for biotin, there was no clear difference between the elemental composition proportions of the high and low thiamine features (
Figure 5), although there was a slight increase in the percentage of CHO markers in high biotin, amounting to 11.7% of the features, against 7.2% in low thiamine, as well as a slight increase in phosphorus-containing ones in low thiamine, reaching 39.1% of the features, against 33.0% in high thiamine.
Interestingly, however, these CHO features in high thiamine conditions appeared to be amongst the most intense ones, found mostly where the amino sugars (O/C > 0.6 and H/C > 1.5) and carbohydrates (O/C > 0.8, 1.6 < H/C < 2.7) were expected on the Van Krevelen diagrams. Plus, it appears relevant to note that the strongly represented CHON biomarkers, not significantly varying in proportion between both thiamine conditions, also appeared to display similar behaviors in regard to their intensities and nature, whether obtained from low or high thiamine wines. They are, indeed, associated with a number of high intensities, as observed on Van Krevelen diagrams, and both were found in the area in which polyphenols were expected (O/C < 1.2 and H/C < 1.3), consistent with the high proportion of polyphenol compounds that were predicted [
58]. Thiamine did not appear, consequently, to interfere in any way with the frequency of formation of neither polyphenols nor lipids; however, the high thiamine exometabolome did display increases in the proportion of carbohydrates and amino sugars formed during alcoholic fermentation, while low thiamine appeared to induce noticeable increases in the proportion of synthetized proteins.
A limited number of biomarkers for both thiamine conditions was annotated at level 3 [
57] in online databases, since less than 5% of those were matched with an identification. However, this further annotation process has led to the identification of the pathways in which those biomarkers are involved, and therefore, associated with the exometabolome changes that were observed here (
Supplementary Table S3, Figure S1). In contrast to the low number of pathways affected by the initial biotin, there was, here, a thorough influence of high thiamine on numerous metabolic pathways, since 46 named pathways were matched through KEGG [
27] for its associated biomarkers, while a far lesser number of metabolic pathways were influenced by low thiamine. Interestingly, high thiamine seems to exert a strong influence on both amino acid and carbon metabolisms, since they displayed the highest number of total annotated biomarkers (53 and 51, respectively), distributed in numerous, more specified pathways.
Thiamine, as such, appears to be a relevant actor in amino acid synthesis, matching with 10 biomarkers, as well as being strongly involved in phenylalanine, valine, leucine, isoleucine, tyrosine, and lysine metabolisms, more specifically. The overall effect of the vitamin on amino acid metabolism might reflect, overall, its role as a cofactor involved in the Ehrlich pathway, with TPP being essential to the decarboxylation step; however, it might also reflect, indirectly, the relevance of pyridoxine in the transamination of the Ehrlich pathway as well, which can proceed to the conversion of an amino acid towards its associated α-ketoacid, and inversely [
42,
61]. Since thiamine biosynthesis relies on pyridoxine in case of thiamine deficiencies, in a mechanism that takes priority over all other pyridoxine-dependent reactions [
34], it is not impossible that this effect on amino acid synthesis also reflects the indirect influence of pyridoxine. Plus, such an influence of thiamine on both phenylalanine and tyrosine, more specifically, appears consistent with the role held by the vitamin in the pentose phosphate pathway through TPP-dependent transketolases Tkl1/2 [
42], from which prephenate is derived, itself a precursor in the biosynthesis of both aromatic amino acids [
62]. Similarly, the differences observed regarding both valine and leucine metabolism might reflect the thiamine-dependent character of acetolactate synthase Ilv2 [
42], which is involved in the synthesis of both branched-chain amino acids [
63]. All in all, such an influence held by thiamine on the amino acid pathways in the
S. cerevisiae exometabolome appears consistent with our previous observations regarding the wine volatile compounds, which highlighted a similar effect.
The strong influence exerted by high thiamine on carbon metabolism, similarly, affects a large number of pathways involved in the CCM, and highlights, notably, a remarkable effect on keto acids, such as 2-oxocarboxylic acids, C5-branched dibasic acids, and pyruvate, which might reflect the TPP-dependency of the Ehrlich decarboxylation reaction of α-keto acids towards their associated aldehydes [
42,
61], as well as the conversion of pyruvate towards S-acetolactate through TPP-dependent Ilv2 [
42]. The observed influence of thiamine on both the propanoate metabolism and the TCA cycle biomarkers, similarly, might be a reflection of the cofactor role played by TPP in the conversion of α-ketoglutarate to succinyl-CoA by Kgd1 [
42], which is further derived towards propanoyl-CoA [
64]. This leads to, overall, more evidence of the involvement of thiamine in the CCM, consistent with previous conclusions evaluating its relevance in the volatile compounds that were produced, as well as remarkable compounds, such as acetic acid or glycerol.
In addition, high thiamine appears to affect other notable metabolic pathways, such as those of lipids, as well as having a striking involvement in the synthesis of other cofactors and vitamins, and notably in the metabolism of vitamin B3 through its apparent connection with the nicotinate and nicotinamide metabolism, strongly suggesting the possibility for synergistic effects of vitamins in the yeast metabolism. Interestingly, however, low thiamine seemed to have a similar effect on S. cerevisiae metabolic pathways to that of low biotin, likewise impacting riboflavin metabolism in a fashion that still remains unclear.
Thiamine, overall, appeared here as a striking actor in the yeast metabolism, intervening in numerous metabolic pathways, and proving its strong influence on the wine metabolome during alcoholic fermentation. This investigation, on a larger scale, is the first evidence of the impact held by both biotin and thiamine on the wine exometabolome during the alcoholic fermentation by S. cerevisiae.