Flickr/Tim Parkinson
Flickr/Tim Parkinson

Soil bacteria plays a role in wine quality

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Vineyards producing high-quality 'classic' wines may owe their success to the local bacteria rather than soil chemistry, argue the authors of new US-led research. The scientists compared microbes growing on grapevines and in the soil of Merlot vineyards in New York, Californian and Bordeaux, and found the same types of beneficial bacteria in all three locations - suggesting that it is not so much the chemical makeup of soil that affects wine quality, but the bacteria in vineyards.

Journal/conference: mBio

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In the first study of an entire wine grapevine's microbiome, researchers have found that the microbes associated with the grapes, leaves and flowers are largely derived from the soil microbes found around the plant's roots. The findings, published in mBio the online open-access journal of the American Society for Microbiology, could help dissect how microbes affect a wine's properties and pave the way for biotechnological advances for producing hardier crops.

"Growers have been sub-selecting the best regions to grow grapes over thousands of years, but the science of that is poorly understood," says Jack Gilbert, a microbial ecologist at the Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois. "Just the same as the human biome plays a role in health, bacteria have intricate associations with plants that affect disease resistance, stress tolerance and productivity."

Besides making tasty wine, Merlot grapes, Gilbert explains, are a really well controlled, understood crop system. He and his colleagues wanted to understand how different bacteria colonize these plants and also how those microbes might ultimately contribute to the wine's sensory properties. In other words, they wanted to find out if there is a microbiological component of terroir--the wine's properties that are imparted by the ground its grapes are grown in.

The team of researchers, which included winemaker Gilles Martin, looked at four closely related Merlot plants growing in five different vineyards across a 2-mile stretch of the North Fork region of Long Island, New York. For each location, they sampled the soil, roots, leaves, flowers and grapes throughout a growing season. Then, the team used shotgun metagenomic sequencing to characterize all the bacterial species found on each part of the grapevine. The team found that it's all about location, location, location.

"Where you grow that particular grapevine is the most important characteristic shaping which bacteria will colonize the plant," says Gilbert. The majority of bacterial species found in the plant were also present in the soil it was growing in. A few rare species found in the soil, were enriched in the aboveground grapes and leaves. This indicates that the soil acts as a reservoir for most of the bacteria that are colonizing the plants' structures.

Next, the team compared the New York grapes' microbiome to those associated with Merlot grapes from Bordeaux, France, and crushed Merlot grapes from California. All three hosted similar bacteria species. "No matter where you are in the world, the types of bacteria growing on or in Merlot grapes are quite similar," says Gilbert.

There is immense commercial interest in finding specific bacteria that would add benefits to crops, such as drought and pest resistance. But the findings may also point to new, bacterial ways to massage a wine's outcome.

"From the wine industry's perspective, terroir comes from the plant's physiology, the chemical nature of the grapes, and the yeast that do the fermenting work," says Gilbert. From this study, Gilbert argues that the microbes present in the soil, rather than the soil's physical characteristics, might play a bigger role in influencing terroir.

"We don't have evidence that bacteria are specifically contributing to terroir, but our next step is to figure out how those bacteria are affecting the chemistry of the plant."

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Expert Reaction

These comments have been collated by the Science Media Centre to provide a variety of expert perspectives on this issue. Feel free to use these quotes in your stories. Views expressed are the personal opinions of the experts named. They do not represent the views of the SMC or any other organisation unless specifically stated.

Dr Paul Chambers is Research Manager in Biosciences at The Australian Wine Research Institute in South Australia

Microbiome is a word that we are going to hear a great deal more about in the near future. It is the full complement of microorganisms – microscopic life forms such as bacteria – that inhabit a particular environment. For example, the human microbiome comprises all of the microorganisms that live on and in our bodies, and it is huge. There are 10-fold more bacterial cells in the human microbiome than there are human cells in our bodies. And from recent research we are learning that its composition is critical for good health; in fact some scientists now regard the human microbiome as an organ of our bodies. It may have roles in conditions such as diabetes, obesity, multiple sclerosis, and many other diseases.

With this in mind it is not surprising to learn that scientists are exploring microbiomes associated with many organisms and environments, particularly in agricultural research. An international team led by Jack Gilbert of the University of Chicago is exploring the microbiomes of many habitats in a project called the Earth Microbiome. As part of this the team has looked at grapevines and the soils they grow in.

Their research shows that different parts of the grapevine have different bacterial communities. Interestingly, while these communities differ from each other they each reflect what is in the soil that the plant is growing in. Gilbert and colleagues propose that the soil is a reservoir of bacteria for these different microbial communities. They also found that this reservoir varied with soil chemical composition leading to the suggestion that a soil microbiome can be managed; different soil treatments will lead to different microbiome composition.

The scientists propose that perhaps the microbiome of soil in a vineyard is what determines terroir of a wine. Terroir is described as the interaction of, amongst other things, climate, geology and geography of a vineyard, and the genetics of a grapevine that come together to shape the sensory properties of a wine. This is one explanation for why a Shiraz from Barossa is different to a Shiraz from McLaren Vale.

The proposition that microbiome composition determines terroir deserves further research. If a viticulturist can shape the style of wine in a controlled manner by managing the microbiome of her or his vineyard in a targeted way, it opens the way for winemakers to more effectively shape their wines to meet market demands.

Last updated: 03 Nov 2016 3:58pm

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