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    Home » South Ural State University unveils immunity boosting berberine cheese
    Health

    South Ural State University unveils immunity boosting berberine cheese

    January 28, 2026
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    EuroWire, CHELYABINSK: Scientists at South Ural State University have developed a soft brined cheese recipe enriched with berberine, a plant-based bioactive compound the university says is intended to support immune function. The work was carried out at the university’s Higher School of Medical Biology, according to a university statement published in late January.

    South Ural State University unveils immunity boosting berberine cheese
    Russian food scientists develop soft brined cheese recipe using plant compound berberine.

    The university said the cheese is designed as a functional food, a category of products developed to deliver specific physiological benefits beyond basic nutrition. It said the new recipe incorporates berberine as an antioxidant component while maintaining the characteristics expected of soft brined cheeses, including texture, taste, and standard manufacturing steps.

    Berberine is an alkaloid found in barberry and some other plants and is widely used in research on bioactive compounds. The university and Russian media reports describing the project said the compound is associated with antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties, and that foods containing berberine are positioned as supportive for immune system functioning.

    A key technical challenge for the developers was keeping the compound stable during production. The university said its researchers created an emulsion-based approach to introduce berberine into the cheese mass so the ingredient remains protected and biologically active through processing, rather than degrading during mixing, heating, or storage stages typical in dairy production.

    Production method and testing

    The university said the recipe underwent nutritional and safety evaluation as part of the development work. It did not release a full technical dossier or clinical evidence demonstrating disease prevention or treatment outcomes, but framed the product as a fortified dairy option aimed at consumers interested in functional foods that include plant-derived bioactive components.

    The project was presented as part of the university’s research and development activities in food science and medical biology. The university’s description linked the innovation to the broader trend of adding targeted ingredients to everyday foods, using dairy products as a delivery vehicle because of their established production infrastructure and consumer familiarity.

    Russian media reports citing the university said the cheese is positioned as a domestic innovation with no direct equivalent reported locally in the same category. The reports described the product as a soft brined cheese formulation specifically developed to carry berberine through an engineered emulsion system while meeting standard requirements for taste and consumer acceptability.

    Functional foods in the dairy sector

    Functional dairy products have expanded globally in recent years, including yogurts and cheeses fortified with probiotics, vitamins, or plant compounds. In the Chelyabinsk project, the university’s emphasis was on the integration method, focusing on how the berberine additive is incorporated to preserve stability, which is a common hurdle when introducing sensitive bioactive substances into processed foods.

    South Ural State University said the development reflects ongoing work to bridge medical biology and food technology, with the stated goal of producing foods that align with consumer interest in wellness-oriented products. The university has not announced commercial distribution details in its public materials, focusing instead on the scientific and formulation aspects of the new cheese recipe.

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