About this Research Topic
Inhibition of multidrug efflux systems has been a fundamental therapeutic challenge both in cancer and infectious diseases. There are three generations of inhibitors in mammalian systems with moderate success in the clinic and virtually no evidence for successful clinical validation of efflux inhibitors in prokaryotes. The deployment and complementation of strategies involving the use for small molecule efflux inhibitors has been an active and rapidly expanding research discipline. Advances in understanding cell physiology have shed light on a series of pathways and phenotypes where the role of efflux systems is pivotal. This core information is a stepping stone in the challenge of highlighting an effective drug development path for efflux inhibition since the puzzle of clinical implementation remains unsolved. This Research Topic emphasizes in the description of a variery of efflux systems, summarizes current trends in the discovery of inhibitors, highligths distinct and overlapping roles of efflux systems in cell physiology, attempts to identify a translational path and discusses potential avenues for pharmacological inhibitor implementation and development. The restoration of antimicrobial and chemotherapeutic efficacy is definitely appealing but is not yet at a therapeutic stage. The challenge for the proposed topic is to underline the conceptual and methodological gaps barring clinical implementation for efflux inhibition.
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