Cambridge Healthtech Institute's 14th Annual

Advanced Purification and Recovery

Powerful Purification Platforms Serving Both Basic Research and Clinical Manufacturing

January 19 - 20, 2023 ALL TIMES PST

New and exciting therapeutic modalities continue to emerge at a very fast pace. New modalities require novel and innovative modes of separation, to rapidly, efficiently, and cost effectively, isolate highly pure material. The higher upstream titers being achieved currently, further create the need to improve the purification and recovery processes, both for basic research and especially in manufacturing. The Advanced Purification & Recovery program at Peptalk 2023 will cover topics like risk mitigation, and advanced technologies for optimization of downstream capture, purification, and recovery of challenging formats and emerging modalities, with a special focus session on purification of AAVs. Attend to hear case studies from industry and academia highlighting how highly effective, rapid, and high-throughput purification schemes are being developed for many formats.

Thursday, January 19

Registration and Morning Coffee (Indigo and Aqua Foyer)8:00 am

Organizer's Welcome Remarks8:30 am

ROOM LOCATION: Aqua Salon F

ADVANCED TECHNOLOGIES & APPROACHES

8:35 am

Chairperson's Opening Remarks

James Ware, Director, Purification Development & Tech Transfer, Pelican Expression Technology

8:40 am KEYNOTE PRESENTATION:

Advances in Multi-Specific Antibody Purification

John K. Kawooya, PhD, Director, Biologics Optimization and Therapeutic Discovery, Amgen, Inc.

During the last decade, major progress has been made in technical and scientific “know-how” of assembling biologically functional multi-specific antibodies (msAbs). However, many of these molecules have failed to reach patients due to a multitude of issues which include immunogenicity, toxicity, and manufacturability. In this presentation, I address the manufacturability issue and highlight current efforts being made to clear engineering side products from these molecules.

9:20 am

Challenges in Production of High Purity Marburg Recombinant Glycoprotein for ELISA 

Jocelyn Jakubik, Senior Director, Analytical Testing and Translational Immunology, Sabin Vaccine Institute

Sabin and IBT have successfully produced MARV rGP needed to support all clinical and non-clinical testing and the material is now being used in a fit-for-use assay for a Phase Ib human participants plasmapheresis clinical trial. Qualification and validation can begin for upcoming non-human primate and human sample testing from Sabin's Marburg Vaccine (Investigational Monovalent Chimpanzee Adenoviral Vectored Filovirus) studies to measure IgG levels and thereby identify Marburg GP IgG as a correlate of protection in order to demonstrate potential efficacy in humans. Funding under BARDA contract HHSN 75A50119C00055 is acknowledged.

9:50 am SMART Cycling and Advances in Protein A Chromatography Resins

Tony Thomas, Field Application Scientist, Purification, Bioprocessing, Purolite

Jetting technology is a scalable continuous emulsification technology by which all Praesto® chromatography resins are produced. This proprietary technology results in the production of chromatography resins with a narrow, almost uniform particle size distribution, with excellent mass transfer properties that may be leveraged for process intensification. Herein, we present SMART cycling using our latest bioprocess Praesto Jetted Protein A chromatography resins.

Coffee Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing (Indigo Ballroom)10:20 am

ADVANCED TECHNOLOGIES & APPROACHES

11:00 am

Developing a Novel Bioprocess for a PASylated Therapeutic Enzyme Expressed in a Microbial Host Utilizing Periplasmic Release & Affinity-Free Purification 

James Ware, Director, Purification Development & Tech Transfer, Pelican Expression Technology

Half-life extension of APIs has proven to be an effective way to treat patients using lower doses or less frequent dosing. Technologies to increase product half-life have evolved, introducing new challenges for traditional purification strategies. In this presentation, we share the effects of charge-shielding attributed to genetic fusion of a proline and alanine repeat polypeptide to a therapeutic enzyme, and the development of a non-traditional approach to a purification process.

11:30 am PANEL DISCUSSION:

Purification of AAVs

PANEL MODERATOR:

Nick Westaway, Global Product Manager, Viral Vector Purification, Cytiva

  • Chromatography as a Tool for the Purification of AAV Capsids​
  • Chromatographic Method Development for Enrichment of Full Capsids
  • Optimization of the AAV Purification Process to Accommodate Increased Upstream Yield 
  • Building Reliable Workflow to Accelerate AAV Full-Capsid Enrichment Development
PANELISTS:

Kathy Delaria, Director, Downstream Process Development, 4D Molecular Therapeutics

Daniel Hurwit, Senior Scientist, Gene Delivery Process and Analytical Development, Bristol Myers Squibb

Sylvain Cecchini, PhD, Core Director, Associate Professor, Microbiology and Physiological Systems, UMass Chan Medical School

Ashley Craddick, Senior Director, GMP Manufacturing, Forge Biologics

12:00 pm Increasing Process Flexibility through a Novel Single-Use AEX Technology

David Chau, PhD, Global Bioprocess Application Specialist, Separation and Purification Sciences Division, 3M

AEX chromatography is considered the industry standard to remove process and/or product related impurities. However, those based on traditional quaternary ammonium (Q) functionalized ligands, may have limitations due to the narrow range of processing conditions. In this study, we explored the use of a new AEX single-use technology to overcome the limitations of traditional Q-based technology. The results show this technology can be applied across multiple modalities, simplifying the developmental approach. 

Enjoy Lunch on Your Own12:30 pm

Ice Cream Break in the Exhibit Hall and Last Chance for Poster Viewing (Indigo Ballroom)1:10 pm

AFFINITY PURIFICATION & TAGS

2:00 pm

Chairperson's Remarks

David W. Wood, PhD, Professor, Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, The Ohio State University

2:05 pm

New Affinity Methods for Downstream GMP Processing: Custom Resins to Cleavable Tags

David W. Wood, PhD, Professor, Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, The Ohio State University

The success of Protein A affinity capture for mAbs has driven a search for similar methods for other proteins. The challenge has been designing affinity resins for arbitrary products with no common features. In this talk, I will compare and contrast three emerging solutions: custom affinity resins designed for single products, cleavable tags that rely on proteases, and self-removing tags that rely on inteins.

2:35 pm

Development of Affinity Purification Platforms

Sophia Hober, PhD, Professor, School of Biotechnology, KTH Royal Institute of Technology

Due to the costly and time-consuming production of biologicals, selective affinity purification methods are desirable. For efficient and selective purification, a number of criteria are to be met. One important feature is the durability and possibility to reuse the purification matrix. Another is the possibility to avoid harsh conditions during the purification scheme. Different strategies to address these issues when developing affinity purification systems will be presented.

Networking Refreshment Break (Aqua Foyer)3:05 pm

3:30 pm

Affinity Purification of Antibodies Using the Unconventional Nucleotide Binding Site

Basar Bilgicer, PhD, Professor, Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, University of Notre Dame

In search of the next-generation chromatographic technique for antibody purification, our team has developed an affinity chromatography method using the unconventional nucleotide binding site (NBS). By generating resins that display ligands that bind to the NBS that is conserved on all immunoglobulins, we achieve purity over 99% with >99% column efficiency, supporting that NBS method provides a stable, reusable, and inexpensive alternative for purification of humanized and chimeric antibodies.

4:00 pm

A New Vector for Expression of TwinStrep Maltose Binding Protein Tagged Proteins

Simon A. Messing, PhD, Scientist II, Frederick National Lab & Protein Expression Lab, Leidos Biomedical Research, Inc.

Immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC) is the workhorse of a majority of recombinant protein purification. However, one-third to one-half of all proteins are considered metalloproteins. This begs consideration that IMAC purification may cause problems. Therefore, we designed a new vector that replaces the His-tag with a streptavidin-based affinity tag, TwinStrep. We cloned into this vector, KRAS4b G-domain, PIK3ca RAS binding domain (RBD), and RAF1 RBD plus its cystine-rich domain (CRD). KRAS4b and PIK3ca were indistinguishable, but RAF1 showed significant improvement in folding suggesting that metal-free purification produced a protein conformation more similar to its native fold.

4:30 pm PANEL DISCUSSION:

Protein Tag Technologies

PANEL MODERATOR:

Richard Altman, MS, Field Application Scientist, Life Science Solutions, Thermo Fisher Scientific

Protein fusion tags are indispensable tools used to facilitate protein purification and detection, detect cellular localization of proteins, and improve protein solubility and stability. The following topics will serve as a foundation for an interactive discussion between the panelists and audience.​

  • How do you select an affinity tag?
  • Are there regulations (FDA, EMA) regarding cleaving affinity tags?
  • When does it make sense not to cleave the tag?  Are there complications?
  • Does the expression system impact the selection of a tag?
  • Is it possible to introduce a universal approach for protein production and purification?
PANELISTS:

Christa Cortesio, PhD, Senior Scientist and Group Lead, Protein Science, Protein Biochemistry & Analytics Core, Kite Pharma

Simon A. Messing, PhD, Scientist II, Frederick National Lab & Protein Expression Lab, Leidos Biomedical Research, Inc.

David W. Wood, PhD, Professor, Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, The Ohio State University

5:00 pm

Capture of Monoclonal Antibodies via Continuous Precipitation and Filtration Techniques

Gabriele Recanati, Researcher, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (BOKU)

A truly continuous biomanufacturing process will be presented. This is achieved by integration of a perfusion bioreactor with continuous precipitation and continuous filtration, replacing the state-of-the-art capture step for mAbs, protein A affinity chromatography. Surge tanks have been omitted in lieu of tubular reactors. Hereby, the residence time and the start-up/shut-down are very short, the residence time distribution very narrow. Yield, purity, and critical quality attributes are shown.

Close of Day5:30 pm

Friday, January 20

Registration (Indigo Foyer)7:30 am

ROOM LOCATION: Indigo and Aqua Foyer

BuzZ Sessions

8:00 amBuzZ Sessions with Continental Breakfast (IN-PERSON ONLY)

PepTalk’s BuzZ Sessions are focused, stimulating discussions in which delegates discuss important and interesting topics related to upstream protein expression and production through downstream scale-up and manufacturing. This is a moderated discussion with brainstorming and interactive problem-solving between scientists from diverse areas who share a common interest in the discussion topic.
Please continue to check the BuzZ Session page on our conference website for detailed discussion topics and moderators

BuzZ Table 1: Purification Workflows to Support Protein Engineering

Jeremy King, PhD, Senior Scientist, Amgen, Inc.

  • Miniaturization strategies are needed to explore large sequence space
  • Novel analytical techniques can distinguish good and bad molecules
  • High-throughput purification strategies are needed to isolate correct variants from mixtures 
  • High-throughput non-antibody molecule purification strategies are lagging behind antibody platforms​

BuzZ Table 2: Scalable Non-Protein A Affinity Purification Alternatives to Bridge Research and Manufacturing

David W. Wood, PhD, Professor, Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, The Ohio State University

  • Laboratory scale affinity methods are effective and diverse, but are not generally considered scalable
  • Development of new therapeutics might be streamlined by methods than can merge research and production
  • What laboratory affinity methods could be scaled for manufacturing, and under what conditions?
  • What are the primary hurdles for developing new non-Protein A affinity platforms clinical use?​

ROOM LOCATION: Aqua Salon AB

FLEXIBLE AND AGILE PROTEIN PURIFICATION AND CHARACTERIZATION WORKFLOWS

9:00 am

Chairperson's Remarks

Petra Fromme, PhD, Paul V. Galvin Professor, Chemistry & Biochemistry, Arizona State University

9:05 am

What Are the Key Considerations for Setting up and Maintaining an Effective Protein Production Laboratory?

Richard Altman, MS, Field Application Scientist, Life Science Solutions, Thermo Fisher Scientific

Protein production is more complex than just the act of expressing the protein. This presentation will review the end-to-end protein production workflow process and reflect on possibilities of how to increase the efficiency and productivity of a recombinant protein expression facility.

9:25 am

Large-Scale Protein Expression and Purification in Hundreds of Milligram Amounts for Time-Resolved Studies with X-Ray Free Electron Lasers

Petra Fromme, PhD, Paul V. Galvin Professor, Chemistry & Biochemistry, Arizona State University

X-ray free electron lasers probe protein structures with ultrashort x-ray pulses thereby enabling the determination of molecular movies of molecules “at work," but large quantities of proteins in the range of hundreds of milligrams are required. We will present strategies and procedures for large-scale cell culture and protein isolation for XFEL studies that include preparation of large photosynthetic membrane protein complexes, as well as preparation of proteins from SARS-CoV-2. 

9:45 am

Rapid Production of Highly Purified Tagless Proteins under a Simple Platform

David W. Wood, PhD, Professor, Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, The Ohio State University

High-throughput protein production relies on affinity tags to enable purification of new targets, where tags are often left in place during initial target characterization. The production of tagless targets is now possible via a self-removing tag that functions in simple buffer systems. We will describe the use of this system to purify a variety of targets to extremely high purity with a standard protocol on a universal affinity resin.

10:05 am

Reimagining Protein Production Workflows to Enable Next-Generation Biologics?

Daniel Yoo, Principal Scientist, Therapeutic Discovery, Amgen, Inc.

As biologic therapeutics continue to increase in complexity, innovative approaches to candidate screening, production, characterization, and development are more important than ever. Our advanced protein production workflows incorporate novel processes, intelligent high-throughput automation, and high-quality informatics to enable robust molecule screening, selection, and scale-up. These enhancements enable advances in the speed, quality, and productivity of our biologics development pipeline.

Networking Coffee Break (Aqua Foyer)10:35 am

11:00 am

Advancements in Protein Production Workflows to Support the Ever Increasing Demand & Complexity in Drug Discovery

Kanika Bajaj Pahuja, PhD, Scientific Manager, Protein Sciences, Genentech Inc.

Drug Discovery landscape is ever evolving and constantly demands revolutionary advancements in protein expression and production core laboratories. This presentation will focus on the evolution of our end-to-end automated high-throughput protein expression, purification workflows, and building creative solutions to support ever-increasing demands in today's world. It will emphasize the importance of collaboration and integration between different sub-groups including molecular biology, automation, and bioinformatics to provide more efficient processes. These multi-facet approaches have significantly alleviated some of the bottlenecks in protein production and accelerates the provision of key protein reagents to ambitious projects, particularly for challenging and undruggable targets.

11:20 am

Think Tank: Protein Purification & Characterization – What’s Next?

Mary Ann Brown, Executive Director, Conferences, Cambridge Healthtech Institute

Join a Think Tank discussion group to share and experience and hear what others have learned.
1) Workflow vs technology development?
2) What might address the future and what is needed?
3) Issues and challenges with end-to-end protein production?
4) Tearing down silos – how do you foster cross-functional collaborations to innovate and improve
5) Takeaways from PepTalk: The Protein Science and Production Week?

12:00 pmThink Tank Report Outs: Listen and Learn

During the Think Tank Table discussions, we shared our experiences and working solutions for protein purification and characterization workflows. Now as a collective community, let’s hear from the table facilitators as they share key discussion points, strategies, and provide a wrap-up of their table’s discussion. What can we take away and apply?

Close of PepTalk12:30 pm