Gil-Serna Jessica, Antunes Patricia, Campoy Susana, Cid Ángeles, Cobo-Molinos Antonio, Durão Paulo, Fajardo Carmen, Fouz Belén, Freitas Ana R, Grosso Filipa, de Groot Piet W J, de Miguel Trinidad, Zorn Bruno González, Hinojosa Belén, Leão Maria João, Llagostera Montserrat, de Llanos Rosa, Lucía Ainhoa, Maicas Sergi, Marín Irma, Martínez-Cañamero Magdalena, Miranda Carla, Molina-Guijarro José Manuel, Moreno Diego A, de Los Llanos Palop María, Pérez-Álvarez María José, Pereira Pedro M, Pérez-Gracia María Teresa, Quinteira Sandra, Rioboo Carmen, Robredo Beatriz, Rodríguez-Calleja José María, de la Haba Rafael R, Sánchez Sandra, Angulo Manuel Sánchez, Sánchez-Porro Cristina, Sangari Félix J, Santos Beatriz, Silveira Eduarda, Vicedo Begonya, Cid Víctor J
Department of Genetics, Physiology and Microbiology, Faculty of Biological Sciences, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Madrid, Spain.
School of Nutrition and Food Sciences, Universidade do Porto, Porto, Portugal.
Microb Biotechnol. 2025 Mar;18(3):e70123. doi: 10.1111/1751-7915.70123.
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) poses a global threat to human, animal and environmental health. Among the multidisciplinary tasks aimed at collectively tackling the AMR crisis, surveillance, research and education stand as major priorities. Based on a crowdsourcing research strategy, the MicroMundo project, a partner of the Tiny Earth initiative in Spain and Portugal, has been developed and consolidated with success in the academic environment. The objectives are focused on promoting research and, especially, on bringing knowledge of One Health and microbiology concepts, as well as AMR awareness to the community. Following a service-learning approach, MicroMundo integrates university and secondary/high school students in a citizen science-based research project to collectively isolate microorganisms with the potential to produce new antibiotics from soil environments. Over the last 7 years, 32 MicroMundo hubs operating across 31 different Portuguese and Spanish universities have recruited thousands of teenagers in this quest. Here we review the outcome of this unprecedented effort from a scientific and an educational perspective.
抗菌耐药性(AMR)对人类、动物和环境健康构成全球威胁。在旨在共同应对AMR危机的多学科任务中,监测、研究和教育是主要优先事项。基于众包研究策略,西班牙和葡萄牙的Tiny Earth倡议的合作伙伴MicroMundo项目已在学术环境中成功开发并巩固。其目标集中在促进研究,特别是将“同一健康”和微生物学概念的知识以及AMR意识带给社区。遵循服务学习方法,MicroMundo将大学生和中学生纳入一个基于公民科学的研究项目,共同从土壤环境中分离具有产生新抗生素潜力的微生物。在过去7年里,分布在葡萄牙和西班牙31所不同大学的32个MicroMundo中心在这项探索中招募了数千名青少年。在此,我们从科学和教育角度回顾这一史无前例努力的成果。