Harvesting baker's yeast for aging-related therapeutics

In line with the growing number of seniors, the number of people living with age-related diseases such as dementia, including Alzheimer’s Disease and Parkinson’s Disease is also expected to increase exponentially. These age-related diseases are an emerging impediment to healthy and functional aging.

A class of medicine used in the treatment of neuro-cognitive diseases and other neurological ailments (migraines, headaches, etc) are currently obtained from extracts of the ergot fungus. However, continued cultivation of the ergot fungus for medicine is not sustainable as industrial agriculture is one of the largest contributors to carbon emissions worldwide.

To meet the global demand for such medication, between 10-15 tons of D-lysergic acid (DLA), an ingredient used in producing the medicine, are produced each year. The ergot fungi are parasites to cereal crops such as rye, and their cultivation entails growing them on top of fields of such crops that could otherwise be used for food production. In order to reduce the use of arable land to produce such medicine, a group of researchers from the Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine at the National University of Singapore (NUS Medicine) and Imperial College London have trialled an alternative way of producing DLA.

Using yeast commonly known to make bread, and synthetic biology techniques, the team introduced the enzymes from the ergot fungus into baker’s yeast, which also happens to be another fungus. Through a process known as fermentation, the modified yeast was then grown using sugar to produce DLA. Natural fermentation has been used throughout human history for food production, most notably in the production of bread and beer. Just like how baker’s yeast has been used to produce the alcohol and flavours in beer, fermentation using the modified yeast can now produce DLA.

The study was published in Nature Communications on 7 Feb 2022.

“It is possible to produce up to five tons of DLA annually using the current yeast strain; and with further optimisation, commercial production levels could be attainable,” explained Associate Professor Yew Wen Shan from the Department of Biochemistry at NUS Medicine and the co-lead Principal Investigator of the study. “This research builds upon the growing body of work that use microbes such as yeast for the sustainable production of medicine and functional food ingredients.”

Professor Paul Freemont, from the Department of Infectious Disease at Imperial College London, said: “Yeast has been a key part of human civilization for thousands of years, helping us to make bread and brew beer. But our relationship with this familiar microbe is evolving. Through this exciting collaboration we have been able to harness fungal cells to act as miniature factories to produce raw compounds for medicines. This is an example of how something seemingly small and inconsequential has the potential to change human lives, providing the drugs which will enable us to age better and reduce the environmental impact of industrial drug production.”

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