It's just the name of the organism he is studying. Yeast is a microorganism with tiny microscopic cells. Like other living organisms, it contains DNA. According to Google Translate, "yeast" is "hefe" in German and дрожжи in Russian.
Its most familiar use is as leavening in bread. Traditional breadmaking uses yeast. Bread dough with yeast "rises." The microorganisms produce carbon dioxide, forming tiny bubbles. The bubbles give the bread its light, spongy texture. The wonderful smell of bread baking is the smell of yeast. Depending on conditions, yeast also produces alcohol. Beer is made with yeast, which produces both the bubbles and the alcohol.
Yeast is one of many traditional "model" organisms used for biological studies, each for one kind of study for one specialized reason--like fruit flies, or guinea pigs, or white mice.