Publications by authors named "Sonja Kinna"

Introduction: Oxyntomodulin (Oxm) hormone peptide has a number of beneficial effects on nutrition and metabolism including increased energy expenditure and reduced body weight gain. Despite its many advantages as a potential therapeutic agent, Oxm is subjected to rapid renal clearance and protease degradation limiting its clinical application. Previously, we have shown that subcutaneous administration of a fibrillar Oxm formulation can significantly prolong its bioactivity from a few hours to a few days.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The human peptide hormone Oxyntomodulin (Oxm) is known to induce satiety, increase energy expenditure, and control blood glucose in humans, making it a promising candidate for treatment of obesity and/or type 2 diabetes mellitus. However, a pharmaceutical exploitation has thus far been impeded by fast in vivo clearance and the molecule's sensitivity to half-life extending structural modifications. We recently showed that Oxm self-assembles into amyloid-like nanofibrils that continuously release active, soluble Oxm in a peptide-deprived environment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) remains a major challenge to global health, made worse by the spread of multi-drug resistance. Currently, the efficacy and safety of treatment is limited by difficulties in achieving and sustaining adequate tissue antibiotic concentrations while limiting systemic drug exposure to tolerable levels. Here we show that nanoparticles generated from a polymer-antibiotic conjugate ('nanobiotics') deliver sustained release of active drug upon hydrolysis in acidic environments, found within Mtb-infected macrophages and granulomas, and can, by encapsulation of a second antibiotic, provide a mechanism of synchronous drug delivery.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The use of peptides as therapeutic agents is undergoing a renaissance with the expectation of new drugs with enhanced levels of efficacy and safety. Their clinical potential will be only fully realised once their physicochemical and pharmacokinetic properties have been precisely controlled. Here we demonstrate a reversible peptide self-assembly strategy to control and prolong the bioactivity of a native peptide hormone in vivo.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF