Research Topic · Peer-Reviewed

Fungal Biochemistry

Fungal Biochemistry is the study of the chemical components and processes of fungi, which are important in natural ecosystems and are also used in industrial applications. Fungi are important because they play an important role in decomposition, nutrient cycling, and energy flow in natural ecosystems. They are also …

📚 0 peer-reviewed articles cited 🔖 ISSN 2766-869X 🗓 Reviewed July 2026

Overview

Fungal Biochemistry is the study of the chemical components and processes of fungi, which are important in natural ecosystems and are also used in industrial applications. Fungi are important because they play an important role in decomposition, nutrient cycling, and energy flow in natural ecosystems. They are also used in a variety of industrial processes, including the production of antibiotics, food additives, and fermentation products. Fungal biochemistry involves the identification and characterization of enzymes, metabolites and other compounds produced by or affecting fungal growth, as well as the study of how these compounds are regulated and how they interact with the environment. This research enables us to develop new products and processes, as well as to understand the impacts of fungal-based processes on the environment.

Research published in this journal

No peer-reviewed research on this exact topic has been published in Fungal Diversity yet. Browse the journal →

Editorial oversight

Curated from peer-reviewed research published in Fungal Diversity (ISSN 2766-869X).

Journal editorial board
Sudha Chaturvedi · United States

This page summarises published research for orientation; it is not medical or professional advice.