About this Research Topic
The urgent necessity for new and improved antimicrobial drugs implicates the need for new targets and novel molecular structures to overcome cross-resistance. The aim of this Research Topic is to collect the recent advances in the investigation of potential enzymatic targets, involved not only in essential metabolic pathways (i.e., central metabolism, cell division machinery, cell wall synthesis, etc.), but also in pathways fundamental in establishing and maintaining the infection (i.e., virulence factors, quorum sensing, biofilm synthesis, etc.).
The issue of AMR leads to the need of developing novel antimicrobials possibly against new targets. For this reason, it is necessary not only to move towards a common objective of the appropriate use, but also to promote the research for the development of new antimicrobials against novel targets, or the use of alternative strategies such as anti-virulence approaches, which prevent microbial pathogenesis without killing an infectious agent.
This Research Topic invites original research as well as review articles concerning all aspects of investigation of enzymatic targets for novel antimicrobials. We are particularly interested in research exploring:
- Antimicrobial resistance
- Drug discovery and development
- Drug design and in-silico approaches
- Anti-microbial targets
- Anti-virulence targets
- Target-based high-throughput screening
Keywords: antimicrobials, antimicrobial resistance, enzymes, enzymatic targets, antimicrobial targets
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.