Mie Kristensen

Mie Kristensen

Associate Professor

Member of:

    Primary fields of research

    Various biological barriers act as gatekeepers for successful drug delivery to the brain; e.g. the blood-brain barrier, the nose-to-brain barrier, and the blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier.

    I study strategies to overcome these barriers for brain drug delivery purposes using state-of-the-art cell culture models, to improve understanding of cellular pathways involved, as well as animals for pharmacokinetic- and pharmacodynamics profiling. Ultimately, this knowledge will be beneficial in the making of new drugs for the treatment of brain diseases.   

    Running projects include:

    • Drug delivery across the blood-brain barrier using shuttle peptides. The shuttle peptides include cell-penetrating- and tight junction-modulating peptides. Subprojects count i) studies on the mechanism of barrier permeation at the cellular level, ii) effects of applying various labels to the shuttle peptide for detection and visualization purposes, and iii) pharmacokinetic evaluation in rodents including safety assessment.
    • Nose-to-brain as pathway for pharmacological treatment of stroke-triggered brain tissue damage. Subprojects count i) setting up and characterization of a state-of-the-art primary nasal epithelial cell culture model, ii) evaluate the potential of shuttle peptides to improve brain drug delivery in vitro and in vivo, and iii) understand the mechanism of barrier permeation.

    ID: 38132377