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

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

2590-2075
Coenye, Tom
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Ahonen, Merja
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Anderson, Skip
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Cámara, Miguel
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Chundi, Parvathi
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Fields, Matthew
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Foidl, Ines
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Gnimpieba, Etienne Z
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Griffin, Kristen
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Hinks, Jamie
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Loka, Anup R
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Lushbough, Carol
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MacPhee, Cait
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Nater, Natasha
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Raval, Rasmita
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Slater-Jefferies, Jo
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Teo, Pauline
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Wilks, Sandra
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Yung, Maria
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Webb, Jeremy S
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Biofilm Priority Questions Exercise Participants
Coenye, Tom
de2d4149-c84c-4dbb-a7ae-c5da5dc29c7f
Ahonen, Merja
be723e98-619e-42c8-9776-7039f219514e
Anderson, Skip
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Cámara, Miguel
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Chundi, Parvathi
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Fields, Matthew
cb1b52b3-9adc-405f-b621-eaa1cc6d6cb0
Foidl, Ines
ae87b28a-25f6-4ad8-9291-407cdf02fc64
Gnimpieba, Etienne Z
d3770bd0-2089-4ccf-8519-a244ae21cd67
Griffin, Kristen
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Hinks, Jamie
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Loka, Anup R
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Lushbough, Carol
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MacPhee, Cait
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Nater, Natasha
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Raval, Rasmita
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Slater-Jefferies, Jo
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Teo, Pauline
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Wilks, Sandra
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Yung, Maria
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Webb, Jeremy S
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Biofilm Priority Questions Exercise Participants (2024) Global challenges and microbial biofilms: Identification of priority questions in biofilm research, innovation and policy. Biofilm, 8, [100210]. (doi:10.1016/j.bioflm.2024.100210).

Record type: Article

Abstract

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.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 2 July 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 July 2024
Published date: December 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 492200
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492200
ISSN: 2590-2075
PURE UUID: c798ba78-9251-4014-8601-1cad76bd000f
ORCID for Natasha Nater: ORCID iD orcid.org/0009-0007-4619-249X
ORCID for Jo Slater-Jefferies: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8325-1320
ORCID for Sandra Wilks: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4134-9415
ORCID for Jeremy S Webb: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2068-8589

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 22 Jul 2024 16:34
Last modified: 12 Sep 2024 01:48

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Contributors

Author: Tom Coenye
Author: Merja Ahonen
Author: Skip Anderson
Author: Miguel Cámara
Author: Parvathi Chundi
Author: Matthew Fields
Author: Ines Foidl
Author: Etienne Z Gnimpieba
Author: Kristen Griffin
Author: Jamie Hinks
Author: Anup R Loka
Author: Carol Lushbough
Author: Cait MacPhee
Author: Natasha Nater ORCID iD
Author: Rasmita Raval
Author: Pauline Teo
Author: Sandra Wilks ORCID iD
Author: Maria Yung
Author: Jeremy S Webb ORCID iD
Corporate Author: Biofilm Priority Questions Exercise Participants

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