Mie Kristensen
Associate Professor
ACADEMIC DEGREES
May 2015: PhD in Pharmaceutics, University of Copenhagen
May 2010: MSc in Biochemistry, University of Copenhagen
APPOINTMENTS
2022-: Associate Professor, CNS Drug Delivery & Barrier Modelling , Department of Pharmacy, University of Copenhagen (interim group leader as of October 2021)
2016-2021: Tenure Track Assistant Professor, CNS Drug Delivery & Barrier Modelling, Department of Pharmacy, University of Copenhagen (group leader: Professor Birger Brodin)
2015-2016: Postdoc, Peptide and Protein Drug Delivery, Department of Pharmacy, University of Copenhagen (mentor: Professor Hanne Mørck Nielsen)
2011-2015: PhD student, Biologics, Department of Pharmacy, University of Copenhagen (8 months maternity leave) (Supervisor: Professor Hanne Mørck Nielsen)
2011-2013: Visiting PhD student, The Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Protein Research, Copenhagen (Supervisor: Associate Professor Jens Berthelsen)
2010-2011: Scientific Assistant, Developmental Neurobiology, Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine, Berlin (mentor: Fritz G. Rathjen)
TEACHING
2020-present: Farmaci I. 2019-present: Drug Delivery to the Central Nervous System. 2018-present: Pharmaceutics & Drug Delivery. 2017-present: Farmaci II. 2017-present: Research Project in Pharmaceutics and Drug Delivery. 2016: Biopharmaceuticals: Formulation of Peptides and Proteins. 2016: Lægemiddelformulering. 2012: In vitro techniques in biochemistry and pharmacology. 2012: Basic Pharmaceutics.
Education
PhD, MSc (Biochemistry)
ID: 38132377
Most downloads
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1401
downloads
Characterization of PTH-CPP fusion peptides for oral delivery
Research output: Contribution to conference › Conference abstract for conference › Research › peer-review
Published -
558
downloads
Parathyroid hormone coupled to cell-penetrating peptides for oral delivery
Research output: Contribution to conference › Conference abstract for conference › Research › peer-review
Published -
83
downloads
Highly cationic cell-penetrating peptides affect the barrier integrity and facilitates mannitol permeation in a human stem cell-based blood-brain barrier model
Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › peer-review
Published