About this Research Topic
However, green chemistry has not fully embraced the area of drug discovery. Petroleum continues to be the primary source of all organic chemicals. Despite resistance to altering already developed processes, appreciation of the profits that greener methods can offer may encourage progress in this direction. Thus, as the need for environmentally benign methods increases; research in this area has yet a lot to offer. Since drug discovery improves the quality of life globally, green chemistry is a valuable tool of growing importance. Therefore, a Research Topic that would focus on all chemical aspects of developing bioactive compounds based on green chemistry principles would be a worthwhile guide for researchers in this field.
This Research Topic's scope is the latest research advances of green synthesis applications to discover drugs and cover promising, recent, and novel trends. On this basis, novel approaches towards known drugs or pharmacophoric scaffolds, new techniques and reagents, are only some of the subjects we welcome, in the form of Original Research, Perspectives and Review articles. Examples of themes to be covered include, but not limited to, are:
• Synthetic routes to develop bioactive compounds, key-intermediates or pharmacophoric scaffolds with good atom economy and low carbon footprint
• Transformations in green solvents or no solvents
• Ultrasound for drug synthesis
• Flow chemistry for the synthesis of pharmacophoric scaffolds or pharmaceutical ingredients
• Novel green chemistry practices in the pharmaceutical industry
• Recyclable or degradable reagents for safe transformations
• Computational approaches to improve green synthesis
Keywords: Green chemistry, Drug discovery, Synthetic approaches, Green solvents, Green reagents, Enzymes for the synthesis of pharmacophoric bioactive compounds
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.