A form of mold
Penicillium.
penicillin
No. Penicillin is a chemical substance. It does not reproduce.
The antibiotic penicillin is produced by the fungus Penicillium.
Penicillin is a group of antibiotics derived from Penicillium, a fungi.
A fungus used to make an antibiotic is Penicillium.
During World War 2, penicillin was first mass-produced and saved millions of lives.
Bread mold does not turn into penicillin. Bread mold makes penicillin as aby-product of its metabolic processes. Penicillin is manufactured by growing bread mould in a nutrient and stripping off the produced penicillin in the same manner that alcohol is made by yeast and the alcohol recovered.
Penicillin is an antibiotic drug that is used to treat bacterial infections. It works by interfering with the growth of bacteria in the body and is effective against a wide range of bacterial strains.
Penicillin is produced by the mold Penicillium notatum. The penicillin-producing cells are specialized structures called conidiophores, found in the mycelium of the mold. These cells are responsible for producing and releasing penicillin into the environment.
Penicillin is produced by the microorganism Penicillium chrysogenum. It secretes the antibiotic penicillin as a defense mechanism against other microorganisms in its environment.
No, penicillin is not an imperfect fungus. Penicillin is an antibiotic produced by the fungus Penicillium. Imperfect fungi are a group of fungi that have only asexual reproductive structures and do not fit neatly into the traditional fungal classification system.