Bruna Henriques, Bruna Brito, Catarina Barreiros, Guilherme Galvão, João Coito, Sofia Lourinho, Teresa Mil-Homens, Verónica Maciel, Afonso Queijinho, Beatriz Cardoso, Leonor Maria, Mariyana Vatova, Rodrigo Bastos, Sara Carrera Prata, Lígia O Martins, Renata Ramalho, Ana Silva, Elisabete Brigadeiro, Maria João Leão, Pedro Matos Pereira, Paulo Durão
{"title":"MicroMundo@Oeiras:公民科学促进抗生素管理,发现新的抗菌剂和监测土壤耐药性。","authors":"Bruna Henriques, Bruna Brito, Catarina Barreiros, Guilherme Galvão, João Coito, Sofia Lourinho, Teresa Mil-Homens, Verónica Maciel, Afonso Queijinho, Beatriz Cardoso, Leonor Maria, Mariyana Vatova, Rodrigo Bastos, Sara Carrera Prata, Lígia O Martins, Renata Ramalho, Ana Silva, Elisabete Brigadeiro, Maria João Leão, Pedro Matos Pereira, Paulo Durão","doi":"10.1093/femsle/fnaf061","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>The alarming rise of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is an emerging public health challenge to our society. Although resistance is an inevitable evolutionary process, finding new antimicrobials, mapping antimicrobial resistance, and raising community awareness leading to better hygiene attitudes and more responsible antibiotic consumption, when treatment is really required, is a cost-effective route to slow down the pace of resistance propagation. In MicroMundo@Oeiras, a citizen science project implemented at the ITQB NOVA research institute, we have successfully expanded to the Oeiras Municipality in the Lisbon metropolitan area (Portugal) the service-learning MicroMundo project based on the Tiny Earth / Small World Initiative, aimed to explore soil microbial biodiversity in search for novel antibiotics and simultaneously educating a fraction of the community at the university, and junior and high school level about antimicrobial resistance. Moreover, we have successfully extended the MicroMundo protocols to characterize the frequency of resistant soil bacteria to the antibiotics' amoxicillin, tetracycline, and ciprofloxacin. Our preliminary results using this coupled analysis suggest that AMR soil bacteria are likely to be more prevalent than antibiotic producing bacteria, creating a stimulating experimental outcome for the enrolled citizen scientists, and broadening the scope of possible scientific questions. We have also created a public database where all AMR frequency found in the isolated soil bacteria will be regularly updated, creating a novel AMR data source with information from unconventional monitoring sites.</p>","PeriodicalId":12214,"journal":{"name":"Fems Microbiology Letters","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.2000,"publicationDate":"2025-06-13","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"MicroMundo@Oeiras: Citizen Science promoting antibiotic stewardship, discovery of new antimicrobials and monitoring of soil resistance.\",\"authors\":\"Bruna Henriques, Bruna Brito, Catarina Barreiros, Guilherme Galvão, João Coito, Sofia Lourinho, Teresa Mil-Homens, Verónica Maciel, Afonso Queijinho, Beatriz Cardoso, Leonor Maria, Mariyana Vatova, Rodrigo Bastos, Sara Carrera Prata, Lígia O Martins, Renata Ramalho, Ana Silva, Elisabete Brigadeiro, Maria João Leão, Pedro Matos Pereira, Paulo Durão\",\"doi\":\"10.1093/femsle/fnaf061\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>The alarming rise of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is an emerging public health challenge to our society. 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MicroMundo@Oeiras: Citizen Science promoting antibiotic stewardship, discovery of new antimicrobials and monitoring of soil resistance.
The alarming rise of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is an emerging public health challenge to our society. Although resistance is an inevitable evolutionary process, finding new antimicrobials, mapping antimicrobial resistance, and raising community awareness leading to better hygiene attitudes and more responsible antibiotic consumption, when treatment is really required, is a cost-effective route to slow down the pace of resistance propagation. In MicroMundo@Oeiras, a citizen science project implemented at the ITQB NOVA research institute, we have successfully expanded to the Oeiras Municipality in the Lisbon metropolitan area (Portugal) the service-learning MicroMundo project based on the Tiny Earth / Small World Initiative, aimed to explore soil microbial biodiversity in search for novel antibiotics and simultaneously educating a fraction of the community at the university, and junior and high school level about antimicrobial resistance. Moreover, we have successfully extended the MicroMundo protocols to characterize the frequency of resistant soil bacteria to the antibiotics' amoxicillin, tetracycline, and ciprofloxacin. Our preliminary results using this coupled analysis suggest that AMR soil bacteria are likely to be more prevalent than antibiotic producing bacteria, creating a stimulating experimental outcome for the enrolled citizen scientists, and broadening the scope of possible scientific questions. We have also created a public database where all AMR frequency found in the isolated soil bacteria will be regularly updated, creating a novel AMR data source with information from unconventional monitoring sites.
期刊介绍:
FEMS Microbiology Letters gives priority to concise papers that merit rapid publication by virtue of their originality, general interest and contribution to new developments in microbiology. All aspects of microbiology, including virology, are covered.
2019 Impact Factor: 1.987, Journal Citation Reports (Source Clarivate, 2020)
Ranking: 98/135 (Microbiology)
The journal is divided into eight Sections:
Physiology and Biochemistry (including genetics, molecular biology and ‘omic’ studies)
Food Microbiology (from food production and biotechnology to spoilage and food borne pathogens)
Biotechnology and Synthetic Biology
Pathogens and Pathogenicity (including medical, veterinary, plant and insect pathogens – particularly those relating to food security – with the exception of viruses)
Environmental Microbiology (including ecophysiology, ecogenomics and meta-omic studies)
Virology (viruses infecting any organism, including Bacteria and Archaea)
Taxonomy and Systematics (for publication of novel taxa, taxonomic reclassifications and reviews of a taxonomic nature)
Professional Development (including education, training, CPD, research assessment frameworks, research and publication metrics, best-practice, careers and history of microbiology)
If you are unsure which Section is most appropriate for your manuscript, for example in the case of transdisciplinary studies, we recommend that you contact the Editor-In-Chief by email prior to submission. Our scope includes any type of microorganism - all members of the Bacteria and the Archaea and microbial members of the Eukarya (yeasts, filamentous fungi, microbial algae, protozoa, oomycetes, myxomycetes, etc.) as well as all viruses.