Neurospora intermedia from a Traditional Fermented Food Enables Waste-to-Food Conversion
- Author: mycolabadmin
- 2024-08-29
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Summary
Background
Fungal fermentation of food and agricultural by-products holds promise for improving food sustainability and security, but the molecular basis of fungal waste-to-food upcycling remains poorly understood. Minimizing food waste is important for improving the resiliency and sustainability of the food system, as approximately one-third of food is wasted in industrialized countries and food waste accounts for about half of total greenhouse gas emissions from the global food system.
Objective
To characterize oncom, a fermented food traditionally produced from soymilk by-products in Java, Indonesia, using a multi-omics approach to understand the molecular mechanisms of fungal waste-to-food conversion and identify strains, enzymes and processes that could enable by-product upcycling.
Results
Conclusion
- Published in:Nature Microbiology,
- Study Type:Multi-omics Research Study,
- Source: 10.1038/s41564-024-01799-3