Penicillium glaucum is a mold that is used in the making of some types of blue cheese, including Bleu de Gex, Rochebaron, and some varieties of Bleu d'Auvergne and Gorgonzola. (Other blue cheeses, including Bleu de Bresse, Bleu du Vercors-Sassenage, Brebiblu, Cambozola, Cashel Blue, Danish blue, Fourme d'Ambert, Fourme de Montbrison, Lanark Blue, Roquefort, Shropshire Blue, and Stilton use Penicillium roqueforti.)

Penicillium glaucum
Gorgonzola, an Italian cheese containing "veins" of Penicillium glaucum
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Eurotiomycetes
Order: Eurotiales
Family: Aspergillaceae
Genus: Penicillium
Species:
P. glaucum
Binomial name
Penicillium glaucum

In 1874, Sir William Roberts, a physician from Manchester, noted that cultures of the mold did not display bacterial contamination.[citation needed] Louis Pasteur would build on this discovery[citation needed], noting that Bacillus anthracis would not grow in the presence of the related mold Penicillium notatum. Its antibiotic powers were independently discovered and tested on animals by French physician Ernest Duchesne,[1] but his thesis in 1897 was ignored by the Pasteur Institute.

P. glaucum was found by Pasteur to feed on only one enantiomer of tartaric acid,[2] L-( )-tartaric acid, which makes its use the earliest example of kinetic resolution.

References

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  1. ^ Duchesne 1897, Antagonism between molds and bacteria. An English translation by Michael Witty. Fort Myers, 2013. ASIN B00E0KRZ0E and B00DZVXPIK.
  2. ^ Pasteur, L. (1922). "Recherches sur la dissymétrie moléculaire des produits organiques naturels". In Pasteur-Vallery-Radot, L. (ed.). OEuvres de Pasteur, Vol. 1. Paris: Masson et Cie. pp. 342–343. ISBN 978-0-35-379058-2.