For thousands of years brewers made beer using specialised strains of the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
The historical origins of brewer's yeast are not well understood, however, as brewing predates the discovery of microbes.
A new study published in the open-access journal PLOS Biology, led by Justin Fay at the University of Rochester, showed that modern brewing strains were derived from a mixture of European grape wine and Asian rice wine strains.
Researchers said this finding pointed to the emergence of beer yeast from a historical East-West transfer of fermentation technology, similar to the transfer of domesticated plants and animals by way of the Silk Route.
The historical origins of any domesticated organism are often clouded by recent migration, gene flow and mixing with other groups.