Kluyveromyces marxianus is an aerobic yeast capable of respiro-fermentative metabolism that consists of simultaneously generating energy from both respiration via the TCA cycle and
ethanol fermentation. The balance between respiration and fermentation metabolisms is strain specific. This species also ferments inulin, glucose, raffinose, sucrose and lactose into ethanol.
K. marxianus is widely used in industry because of its ability to use
lactose. Two genes,
LAC12 and
LAC4, allow
K. marxianus to absorb and use lactose as a carbon source. This species is considered to be a "
crabtree negative fungus", meaning it is unable to convert sugars into ethanol as effectively as crabtree positive taxa such as
S. cerevisiae. Studies, however, deem it to be crabtree positive which is likely due to strain differences since
K. marxianus possesses the necessary genes to be crabtree positive.
K. marxianus is highly thermotolerant and able to withstand temperatures up to .
K. marxianus is also able to use multiple carbon substrata at the same time making it highly suited to industrial use. When glucose concentrations become depleted to 6 g/L, the lactose co-transport initiates. The formation of the ascospores occurs through the conjugation of the haploid cells preceding the formation of the ascus. Alternatively, ascosporogensis can arise directly from diploid cells. Each
ascus contains 1–4 ascospores. The
ploidy of
K. marxianus was originally thought to be a haploid but recent research has shown that many strains used in research and industry are diploid. These conflicting findings suggest that
K. marxianus can exist in vegetative form either as a haploid and a diploid. ==Habitat and ecology==