Global challenges and microbial biofilms: identification of priority questions in biofilm research, innovation and policy

Priority question exercises are increasingly used to frame and set future research, innovation and development agendas. They can provide an important bridge between the discoveries, data and outputs generated by researchers, and the information required by policy makers and funders. Microbial biofil...

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Main Authors: Coenye, Tom, Ahonen, Merja, Anderson, Skip, Cámara, Miguel, Chundi, Parvathi, Fields, Matthew, Foidl, Ines, Gnimpieba, Etienne Z., Griffin, Kristen, Hinks, Jamie, Loka, Anup R., Lushbough, Carol, MacPhee, Cait, Nater, Natasha, Raval, Rasmita, Slater-Jefferies, Jo, Teo, Pauline, Wilks, Sandra, Yung, Maria, Webb, Jeremy S.
Other Authors: Singapore Centre for Environmental Life Sciences and Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/181343
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1813432024-11-26T02:35:58Z Global challenges and microbial biofilms: identification of priority questions in biofilm research, innovation and policy Coenye, Tom Ahonen, Merja Anderson, Skip Cámara, Miguel Chundi, Parvathi Fields, Matthew Foidl, Ines Gnimpieba, Etienne Z. Griffin, Kristen Hinks, Jamie Loka, Anup R. Lushbough, Carol MacPhee, Cait Nater, Natasha Raval, Rasmita Slater-Jefferies, Jo Teo, Pauline Wilks, Sandra Yung, Maria Webb, Jeremy S. Singapore Centre for Environmental Life Sciences and Engineering Engineering Microbial biofilms Global challenges Priority question exercises are increasingly used to frame and set future research, innovation and development agendas. They can provide an important bridge between the discoveries, data and outputs generated by researchers, and the information required by policy makers and funders. Microbial biofilms present huge scientific, societal and economic opportunities and challenges. In order to identify key priorities that will help to advance the field, here we review questions from a pool submitted by the international biofilm research community and from practitioners working across industry, the environment and medicine. To avoid bias we used computational approaches to group questions and manage a voting and selection process. The outcome of the exercise is a set of 78 unique questions, categorized in six themes: (i) Biofilm control, disruption, prevention, management, treatment (13 questions); (ii) Resistance, persistence, tolerance, role of aggregation, immune interaction, relevance to infection (10 questions); (iii) Model systems, standards, regulatory, policy education, interdisciplinary approaches (15 questions); (iv) Polymicrobial, interactions, ecology, microbiome, phage (13 questions); (v) Clinical focus, chronic infection, detection, diagnostics (13 questions); and (vi) Matrix, lipids, capsule, metabolism, development, physiology, ecology, evolution environment, microbiome, community engineering (14 questions). The questions presented are intended to highlight opportunities, stimulate discussion and provide focus for researchers, funders and policy makers, informing future research, innovation and development strategy for biofilms and microbial communities. Published version MC, IF, CM, NN, RR, JSJ and JSW acknowledge support received from the BBSRC and Innovate UK, and funding from the National Biofilms Innovation Centre (BB/X002950/1). We acknowledge the continued support from the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases (ESCMID) for the activities of the ESCMID Study Group on Biofilms. TC acknowledges support received from Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek – Vlaanderen (grant G066523 N) and ESCMID (ESCMID Study Group Grant). MA acknowledges funding support from NextGenerationEU (Biofilm management in water systems using hydrodynamic cavitation technology) and the Ministry of Education and Culture in Finland (HEAL: Healthier life with the comprehensive indoor hygiene concept; OKM/119/523/2021). EZG and CL were supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF OIA-1920954) and the National Institutes of Health (5P20GM103443-20). 2024-11-26T02:35:58Z 2024-11-26T02:35:58Z 2024 Journal Article Coenye, T., Ahonen, M., Anderson, S., Cámara, M., Chundi, P., Fields, M., Foidl, I., Gnimpieba, E. Z., Griffin, K., Hinks, J., Loka, A. R., Lushbough, C., MacPhee, C., Nater, N., Raval, R., Slater-Jefferies, J., Teo, P., Wilks, S., Yung, M. & Webb, J. S. (2024). Global challenges and microbial biofilms: identification of priority questions in biofilm research, innovation and policy. Biofilm, 8, 100210-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bioflm.2024.100210 2590-2075 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/181343 10.1016/j.bioflm.2024.100210 39221168 2-s2.0-85198499659 8 100210 en Biofilm © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering
Microbial biofilms
Global challenges
spellingShingle Engineering
Microbial biofilms
Global challenges
Coenye, Tom
Ahonen, Merja
Anderson, Skip
Cámara, Miguel
Chundi, Parvathi
Fields, Matthew
Foidl, Ines
Gnimpieba, Etienne Z.
Griffin, Kristen
Hinks, Jamie
Loka, Anup R.
Lushbough, Carol
MacPhee, Cait
Nater, Natasha
Raval, Rasmita
Slater-Jefferies, Jo
Teo, Pauline
Wilks, Sandra
Yung, Maria
Webb, Jeremy S.
Global challenges and microbial biofilms: identification of priority questions in biofilm research, innovation and policy
description Priority question exercises are increasingly used to frame and set future research, innovation and development agendas. They can provide an important bridge between the discoveries, data and outputs generated by researchers, and the information required by policy makers and funders. Microbial biofilms present huge scientific, societal and economic opportunities and challenges. In order to identify key priorities that will help to advance the field, here we review questions from a pool submitted by the international biofilm research community and from practitioners working across industry, the environment and medicine. To avoid bias we used computational approaches to group questions and manage a voting and selection process. The outcome of the exercise is a set of 78 unique questions, categorized in six themes: (i) Biofilm control, disruption, prevention, management, treatment (13 questions); (ii) Resistance, persistence, tolerance, role of aggregation, immune interaction, relevance to infection (10 questions); (iii) Model systems, standards, regulatory, policy education, interdisciplinary approaches (15 questions); (iv) Polymicrobial, interactions, ecology, microbiome, phage (13 questions); (v) Clinical focus, chronic infection, detection, diagnostics (13 questions); and (vi) Matrix, lipids, capsule, metabolism, development, physiology, ecology, evolution environment, microbiome, community engineering (14 questions). The questions presented are intended to highlight opportunities, stimulate discussion and provide focus for researchers, funders and policy makers, informing future research, innovation and development strategy for biofilms and microbial communities.
author2 Singapore Centre for Environmental Life Sciences and Engineering
author_facet Singapore Centre for Environmental Life Sciences and Engineering
Coenye, Tom
Ahonen, Merja
Anderson, Skip
Cámara, Miguel
Chundi, Parvathi
Fields, Matthew
Foidl, Ines
Gnimpieba, Etienne Z.
Griffin, Kristen
Hinks, Jamie
Loka, Anup R.
Lushbough, Carol
MacPhee, Cait
Nater, Natasha
Raval, Rasmita
Slater-Jefferies, Jo
Teo, Pauline
Wilks, Sandra
Yung, Maria
Webb, Jeremy S.
format Article
author Coenye, Tom
Ahonen, Merja
Anderson, Skip
Cámara, Miguel
Chundi, Parvathi
Fields, Matthew
Foidl, Ines
Gnimpieba, Etienne Z.
Griffin, Kristen
Hinks, Jamie
Loka, Anup R.
Lushbough, Carol
MacPhee, Cait
Nater, Natasha
Raval, Rasmita
Slater-Jefferies, Jo
Teo, Pauline
Wilks, Sandra
Yung, Maria
Webb, Jeremy S.
author_sort Coenye, Tom
title Global challenges and microbial biofilms: identification of priority questions in biofilm research, innovation and policy
title_short Global challenges and microbial biofilms: identification of priority questions in biofilm research, innovation and policy
title_full Global challenges and microbial biofilms: identification of priority questions in biofilm research, innovation and policy
title_fullStr Global challenges and microbial biofilms: identification of priority questions in biofilm research, innovation and policy
title_full_unstemmed Global challenges and microbial biofilms: identification of priority questions in biofilm research, innovation and policy
title_sort global challenges and microbial biofilms: identification of priority questions in biofilm research, innovation and policy
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/181343
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