Bronze Age Chinese cheese found next to mummies is world's most ancient at 3,600 years old

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Kefir cheese discovered on the Tarim mummies CREDIT Yimin Yang
Kefir cheese discovered on the Tarim mummies CREDIT Yimin Yang

Chinese scientists say they've found the world's oldest cheese alongside the Tarim Basin mummies in Northwestern China, dating back approximately 3,600 years. The team extracted and analysed DNA from the ancient cheese, and found cow and goat DNA, as well as the DNA of microorganisms that are still used today to produce a cheese called kefir, Lactobacillus kefiranofaciens. The microorganism DNA allowed them to track the evolution of the bugs used to make kefir, finding the ancient L. kefiranofaciens in the sample is most closely related to strains from Tibet. This suggests that previous assumptions about kefir originating in Russia are likely to be wrong, they say, as it looks like kefir-making has been maintained in China since the Bronze Age.

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From: Cell Press

World’s oldest cheese reveals origins of kefir

For the first time, scientists successfully extracted and analyzed DNA from ancient cheese samples found alongside the Tarim Basin mummies in China, dating back approximately 3,600 years. The research, published September 25 in the Cell Press journal Cell, suggests a new origin for kefir cheese and sheds light on the evolution of probiotic bacteria.

“This is the oldest known cheese sample ever discovered in the world,” says Qiaomei Fu, the paper’s corresponding author at the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, Chinese Academy of Sciences. “Food items like cheese are extremely difficult to preserve over thousands of years, making this a rare and valuable opportunity. Studying the ancient cheese in great detail can help us better understand our ancestors’ diet and culture.”

About two decades ago, a team of archeologists discovered mysterious white substances smeared on the heads and necks of several mummies found in the Xiaohe cemetery in Northwestern China’s Tarim Basin. These mummies dated back to about 3,300 to 3,600 years ago, from the Bronze Age. At the time, scientists thought these substances might be a type of fermented dairy product, but they couldn’t identify exactly what kind.

After more than a decade of advancements in ancient DNA analysis, a team led by Fu has unraveled the mystery.

The researchers successfully extracted mitochondrial DNA from samples found in three different tombs at the cemetery. They identified cow and goat DNA in the cheese samples. Interestingly, the ancient Xiaohe people used different types of animal milk in separated batches, a practice differing from the mixing of milk types common in Middle Eastern and Greek cheesemaking.

Most importantly, Fu and her colleagues managed to recover the DNA of microorganisms from the dairy samples and confirmed that the white substances were in fact kefir cheese. They discovered that the samples contained bacterial and fungal species, including Lactobacillus kefiranofaciens and Pichia kudriavzevii, both commonly found in present-day kefir grains.

Kefir grains are symbiotic cultures containing multiple species of probiotic bacteria and yeast, which ferment milk into kefir cheese, much like a sourdough starter.

Being able to sequence the bacterial genes in the ancient kefir cheese gave the team an opportunity to track how probiotic bacteria evolved over the past 3,600 years. Specifically, they compared the ancient Lactobacillus kefiranofaciens from the ancient kefir cheese with the modern-day species.

Today, there are two major groups of the Lactobacillus bacteria—one originating Russia and another from Tibet. The Russian type is the most widely used globally, including in the US, Japan, and European countries, for making yogurt and cheese.

The team found that the Lactobacillus kefiranofaciens in the samples was more closely related to the Tibetan group, challenging a long-held belief that kefir originated solely in the North Caucasus mountain region of modern-day Russia.

“Our observation suggests kefir culture has been maintained in Northwestern China’s Xinjiang region since the Bronze Age,” Fu says.

The study also revealed how Lactobacillus kefiranofaciens exchanged genetic material with related strains, improving its genetic stability and milk fermentation capabilities over time. Compared with ancient Lactobacillus, modern-day bacteria are less likely to trigger an immune response in the human intestine. This suggests that the genetic exchanges also helped Lactobacillus become more adapted to human hosts over thousands of years of interaction.

“This is an unprecedented study, allowing us to observe how a bacterium evolved over the past 3,000 years. Moreover, by examining dairy products, we’ve gained a clearer picture of ancient human life and their interactions with the world,” says Fu. “This is just the beginning, and with this technology, we hope to explore other previously unknown artifacts.”

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Tarim mummies from the present-day Xinjiang region of Northwestern China
Tarim mummies from the present-day Xinjiang region of Northwestern China
Kefir cheese discovered on the Tarim mummies
Kefir cheese discovered on the Tarim mummies

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Cell
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Organisation/s: Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Funder: This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China, the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), the Feng Foundation of Biomedical Research, and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities.
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