Saccharomyces pastorianus (ASM1102231v1)

Saccharomyces pastorianus Assembly and Gene Annotation

About Saccharomyces pastorianus (GCA_011022315.1)

Wikipedia{#wiki_icon}

Saccharomyces pastorianus is a yeast used industrially for the production of lager beer, and was named in honour of Louis Pasteur by the German Max Reess in 1870. This yeast's complicated genome appears to be the result of hybridisation between two pure species in the Saccharomyces species complex, a factor that led to difficulty in establishing a proper taxonomy of the species. The now-defunct synonym Saccharomyces carlsbergensis was and continues to be used in scientific literature, but is invalid, as the name Saccharomyces pastorianus (Reess 1870) has taxonomic precedence. The name S. carlsbergensis is typically attributed to Emil Christian Hansen from the era when he worked for the Danish brewery Carlsberg in 1883, but in actuality it was not officially described by Hansen as a distinct species until 1908, along with another synonym, Saccharomyces monacensis. The type strains of both synonyms are currently stored in yeast banks under the taxonomic name S. pastorianus.

(Text from Wikipedia

Assembly

The assembly presented has been imported from INSDC and has the assembly accession GCA_011022315.1.

Annotation

The annotation presented is derived from annotation submitted to INSDC with the assembly accession [GCA_011022315.1] (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/ena/data/view/GCA_011022315.1), with additional non-coding genes from Rfam. For more details, please visit INSDC annotation import.

More information

General information about this species can be found in Wikipedia.

Statistics

Summary

AssemblyASM1102231v1, INSDC Assembly GCA_011022315.1,
Database version111.1
Golden Path Length23,034,570
Genebuild byDelft University of Technology
Genebuild methodImport
Data sourceDelft University of Technology

Gene counts

Coding genes10,760
Non coding genes552
Small non coding genes552
Gene transcripts11,312