About this Research Topic
This Research Topic aims at opening new avenues to fight cancer and/or infectious diseases by becoming the reference point for studies on phytochemicals and natural peptides with the ability to display in vitro/in vivo activity against tumor cells and/or microbial pathogens, either when used alone or in combination with traditional drugs. However, limitations for preclinical and clinical development of such molecules as new pharmacological tools lie with their cytotoxicity, low solubility, low bioavailability, and limited diffusion through biological barriers before reaching the target site. Hence, this Research Topic will also show how the employment of computational techniques, efficient synthetic tools, and nanotechnology approaches can help overcome such drawbacks and assist the production of proper drug-delivery systems.
We welcome Original Research, Review, and Mini review articles, on themes including, but not limited to:
• Design, synthesis and optimization of lead compounds (secondary metabolites and peptides) to prevent uncontrolled growth and spread of abnormal cells and/or to treat and control microbial resistant infections that represent a serious threat to human health
• Experimental evidence of succesful nanotechnology-based approaches to enhance solubility, stability, bioavailability and delivery of such selected compounds while minimizing their cytotoxicity, for the development of new anticancer/anti-infective therapies.
A multidisciplinary approach encompassing synthetic and computational chemistry, chemical biology, as well as medicinal and pharmaceutical chemistry, is highly encouraged.
Cover image in part made with BioRender.com
Keywords: natural products, secondary metabolites, antimicrobial peptides, cancer, antibiotic-resistance, infectious diseases
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.