The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is an important model organism for biological study, particularly for genetics and molecular biology. The entire genome of this species has been base sequenced and it is used to do research on the basic cellular mechanics of genetic replication, DNA recombination, cell division and metabolism. This type of yeast reproduces by budding.

S. cerevisiae is also economically important in the food industry. It is used to ferment grain sugars to make beer and as baker's yeast for baking bread or making other food which requires rising by gas bubbles of carbon dioxide. It is also sometimes taken as a dietary supplement for protein, the B vitamins, and folic acid.


Some or all of the information in this writeup was taken from the science dictionary at http://biotech.icmb.utexas.edu/; I oversaw the development of the dictionary (the website was mothballed in 1998) and believe I wrote the entry this writeup is partly or wholly based upon.