Cambridge Healthtech Institute's 3rd Annual

Intelligent Antibody Discovery – Part 1

Tools and Technologies for Improving the Pace and Predictability of Discovery Stage Screening

January 16 - 17, 2024 ALL TIMES PST

Peptalk’s two-part Intelligent Antibody Discovery conference explores the tools, technologies, and strategies supporting goals of improving the quality and precision of biotherapeutic discovery and selections. Part 1 examines the assays and technologies being employed for the early-stage prediction of pharmaceutical properties, target binding, modalities, immune cell engagement, and others — and then the best practices for using these outputs in training next-generation AI/ML models for lead/candidate selection and optimization. Part 2 then builds on this foundation to consider the progress in developing viable current and near-term applications of machine learning in biotherapeutic design and optimization, with an emphasis on experimental validation.

Tuesday, January 16

Conference Registration and Morning Coffee7:00 am

Organizer's Welcome Remarks8:55 am

Kent Simmons, Senior Conference Director, Cambridge Healthtech Institute

9:00 am

Chairperson's Remarks 

Paul Parren, PhD, CSO, Gyes; Professor, Molecular Immunology, Leiden University Medical Center

9:05 am

KEYNOTE PRESENTATION: Predicting Antibody Developability at the Discovery Stage

Peter M. Tessier, PhD, Albert M. Mattocks Professor, Pharmaceutical Sciences & Chemical Engineering, University of Michigan

The development, delivery, and efficacy of therapeutic antibodies are strongly influenced by three types of molecular interactions mediated by their variable regions, namely, affinity, off-target, and self-interactions. Here we report interpretable machine learning models for identifying high-affinity mAbs at the discovery stage with optimal combinations of low off-target binding and low self-association, and demonstrate that these co-optimal antibodies display drug-like in vitro (formulation) and in vivo (pharmacokinetic) properties.

9:50 am

Keynote Chat

Peter M. Tessier, PhD, Albert M. Mattocks Professor, Pharmaceutical Sciences & Chemical Engineering, University of Michigan

Interviewed By:

Paul Parren, PhD, CSO, Gyes; Professor, Molecular Immunology, Leiden University Medical Center

Networking Coffee Break10:35 am

NEXT-GENERATION FUNCTIONAL SCREENING

10:55 am

Chairperson’s Remarks

Adrian Grzybowski, PhD, Principal Scientist, Antibody Engineering, Triplebar Bio

11:00 am

Moving Functional Assays Higher in the Screening Cascade

Elizabeth England, Associate Director, Biologics Engineering, AstraZeneca

Targets for biologic drugs, and drug modalities themselves, are becoming more and more complex. In addition, increasing focus is being placed on drug mechanism-of-action. Due to this advancement in biologic drug technology, it has become critical to include assays measuring complex functional activity higher in the screening cascade. I will describe how we have been developing and implementing these high-throughput functional assays to screen for complex biology.

11:30 am

Function-First Microfluidic Screening for Immune Engagers

Adrian Grzybowski, PhD, Principal Scientist, Antibody Engineering, Triplebar Bio

We evaluated agonist antibody discovery rates in binding-biased and unbiased libraries using Triplebar's Hyper-Throughput Screening system (HyTS). Employing a microfluidics-based paracrine discovery platform, we sorted antibody-secreting cells based on immune cell responses. Our investigation focused on identifying functional Abs and exploring the benefits of unbiased searches for novel agonists.

Session Break and Transition to Luncheon Presentation12:00 pm

12:10 pm LUNCHEON PRESENTATION I:Opening the Barn Door to Nkp46: Kinetic and Epitope Diversity of Optimized Immune Repertoires from Diverse Species

Yasmina Abdiche, Vice President, Exploratory Research, Antibody Discovery, OmniAb

Unlike traditional approaches for generating therapeutic antibodies, transgenic animals bypass the need for extensive ex-vivo engineering, including humanization, affinity maturation, and developability optimization. Divergent species like chickens further extend the epitope coverage of human targets, which is often restricted by self-tolerance in mammals. We use a model human target to compare the kinetic, affinity, and epitope diversity produced by immunizing various transgenic animals with optimized antibody repertoires on different scaffolds.

12:40 pm LUNCHEON PRESENTATION II:Cutting Through the Hype: Real-World Applications of AI in Antibody Discovery and Engineering

Yi (Alex) Li, VP of Antibody Discovery, Ailux Biologics /XtalPi

Ailux has pioneered an innovative integrated platform that combines the best of wet lab and AI. We will explore multiple case studies that exemplify the practical applications of our AI-driven approach, from tackling GPCR targets to engineering challenging molecules, from training large language models to utilizing generative AI. Our focus is to provide a realistic and evidence-based perspective on how AI is redefining best practices for the industry.

Session Break1:10 pm

NOVEL DISCOVERY PLATFORMS WITH ML INTEGRATION

1:30 pm

Chairperson’s Remarks

Brandon DeKosky, PhD, Phillip and Susan Ragon Career Development Professor of Chemical Engineering, MIT Core Member, The Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT, and Harvard University

1:35 pm

Combining Active Learning with a Rapid Synthetic Biology Platform to Design and Optimize Therapeutic Antibodies

Peyton Greenside, PhD, Co-Founder & CSO, BigHat Biosciences

BigHat Biosciences has developed novel machine learning (ML) approaches that leverage our high-speed, automated wet lab in order to rapidly and iteratively design hundreds of next-generation therapeutic antibodies each week. BigHat’s algorithmic approach pairs with our unique wet lab to guide the search for better molecules by learning from each cycle of characterization across multi-objective affinity, function, and developability measures of each antibody. We’ll discuss several methodological developments in multi-parameter optimization, active learning (Bayesian Optimization), and generative humanization, and highlight the functional and in vivo validation of our designs.

2:05 pm

Computational Design of a Deimmunized Protease with Extended Activity in vivo for Degrading Immunoglobulin G

Erik Procko, PhD, Director, Discovery, Cyrus Biotechnology; Adjunct Professor, University of Illinois, Urbana

IdeS from Streptococcus pyogenes cleaves human IgG subclasses, severing the antigen binding domains from the Fc that mediates immune effector functions. IdeS is used clinically for desensitization of kidney transplant recipients and may have applications in autoimmunity and gene therapy, but immunogenicity prevents repeat dosing. Using computational algorithms, antigenic epitopes for CD4+ T cells and B cells were removed, while achieving high IgG proteolytic activity and specificity with improved pharmacokinetics.

2:35 pm A Simple Way of De-ADCC/ADCP of Antibody Drugs with Good Drug Developability

Le Sun, PhD, CTO, Abmax BioPharmaceuticals Co., Ltd.

In our presentation, we will give examples: de-ADCC and/or De-ADCP of Atezolizumab, Ipilimumab, Certolizumab, Keytruda and Avastin; better drug developability with higher expression levels, or thermostabilities; same or better in vivo tumor inhibitions.

Presentation to be Announced2:50 pm

BuzZ Sessions

3:05 pmFind Your Table and Meet the BuzZ Sessions Moderator
3:15 pmBuzZ Sessions with Refreshments

BuzZ Sessions are informal, moderated discussions, allowing participants to exchange ideas and experiences and develop future collaborations around a focused topic. Each discussion will be led by a facilitator who keeps the discussion on track and the group engaged. To get the most out of this format, please come prepared to share examples from your work, be a part of a collective, problem-solving session, and participate in active idea sharing. Please visit the BuzZ Sessions page on the conference website for a complete listing of topics and descriptions.

IN-PERSON ONLY BUZZ SESSION: Challenges Faced with Screening Biologics for Function

Elizabeth England, Associate Director, Biologics Engineering, AstraZeneca

  • Types of assays used for functional screening
  • Biochemical function versus cell-based function
  • Sample types and modalities
  • Use of disease relevant cells​

IN-PERSON ONLY BUZZ SESSION: When will Computationally Designed Proteins Become Common in the Clinic? 

Erik Procko, PhD, Director, Discovery, Cyrus Biotechnology; Adjunct Professor, University of Illinois, Urbana

  • Current status: high yields, high stability, fast development, complex functionality 
  • Stumbling blocks: immunogenicity prediction. need better ex vivo assays to assess immunogenicity before going into humans 
  • Can de novo protein binders compete with monoclonal antibodies?​

IN-PERSON ONLY BUZZ SESSION: T Cell Receptors as an Emerging Modality

Govinda Sharma, PhD, Founder, Immfinity Biotechnologies

  • What's the difference? Differing design principles between cell-based and soluble TCR therapeutics
  • Can TCR-T cell therapies fill in the gaps that CAR-T cell therapies are struggling to address?
  • Target selection for TCR development. Choosing the best HLA allele, finding the right peptides.
  • Manufacturing in soluble and cell-based TCR therapeutics. 
  • Can we learn from antibody and CAR-T manufacturing by analogy?Improving predictive ML/AI tools for modeling TCR interactions. What are the current limitations?​

OPTIMIZING DISCOVERY SCREENING RESOLUTION AND THROUGHPUT

4:15 pm

Strategies for Assay Miniaturization and Increased Throughput

Brandon DeKosky, PhD, Phillip and Susan Ragon Career Development Professor of Chemical Engineering, MIT Core Member, The Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT, and Harvard University

Antibody discovery has made rapid progress against simple targets like soluble ectodomains, but discovery remains difficult against challenging targets like expanded viral families and membrane proteins. Here, we will share recent case studies and unpublished data for miniaturized antibody high-throughput screening against difficult targets, including to discover functional antibodies against infectious disease antigens, and against membrane proteins.

4:45 pm

Establishing a High-Throughput Integrated Computational-Experimental Workflow Multispecific Antibody (MsAb) Characterization

Daniel Keri, PhD, Research Scientist, Protein Engineering and Design, Gilead Sciences

Historically, biologics discovery has primarily been an experimentally-driven enterprise. Yet, the past decade has seen remarkable progress in computational protein design, structure prediction, and machine learning methods. We leverage these technologies to accelerate the biologics discovery process, as well as to design the next-generation multispecific antibodies to enable new biologies.

5:15 pm

Profiling T Cell Receptor Cross-Reactivity via Tope-Seq: A Functional High-Throughput Screening Platform for T Cell Antigen Discovery

Govinda Sharma, PhD, Founder, Immfinity Biotechnologies

T-cell epitope sequencing (or Tope-seq) is a high-throughput screening platform enabling rapid, in vitro function-based assessment of T cell receptors (TCRs) against up to a million DNA-coded peptide sequences simultaneously. Using the Tope-seq pipeline, along with our proprietary human whole proteome-coding minigene library and engineered effector/target chassis systems, we are currently applying our platform of technologies towards interrogating potential autoimmune cross-reactivities in candidate TCR therapeutics, de-risking their future clinical development.

Grand Opening Welcome Reception in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing5:45 pm

PEPTALK PLAZA: YOUNG SCIENTIST MEET UP

6:45 pm

Young Scientist Meet Up

Emma Altman, Senior Research Associate, Protein Sciences, Kite Pharma

Kavya Ganapathy, PhD, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Genentech

Alexandros Karyolaimos, PhD, Researcher, Department of Biochemistry & Biophysics, Stockholm University

Sean Yamada-Hunter, PhD, Postdoctoral Research, Mackall Lab, Stanford Cancer Institute, Stanford University

This young scientist meet up is an opportunity to get to know and network with mentors of the PepTalk community. This session aims to inspire the next-generation of young scientists by giving direct access to established leaders in the field.

  • Get to know fellow peers and colleagues
  • Make connections and network with other institutions
  • Discuss the role of mentors and peers role models in the workplace​​

Close of Day7:00 pm

Wednesday, January 17

Conference Registration & Morning Coffee8:30 am

PLENARY FIRESIDE CHAT

9:00 am

Plenary Session Organizer's Remarks

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

PLENARY FIRESIDE CHAT: Supporting and Driving Biotech: Past, Present, and Future

PANEL MODERATOR:

Jennifer Giottonini Cayer, CBO, Pulmocide; Board of Directors, UCSD Moores Cancer Center and Biocom California

Innovation can refer to something new, such as an invention, or the development and introduction of new practices. Progress and challenges frequently act as the driving force behind this innovation, propelling us toward original ways of thinking and doing. The outcome can materialize as a novel product, yet it extends to novel methodologies, procedures, or modes of thought. This Fireside Chat convenes long-term supporters of PepTalk: The Protein Science and Production Week who explore the following:

  • Innovations and technology development in the last 5 years 
  • Collaborations and strategic partnerships – advice to early-stage/small companies ​
  • Is there a trend toward diversification of scientists’ roles, skill sets and responsibilities? Why?
  • What is an unexpected market trend you are seeing?
  • What excites you/what keeps you working in this industry?​​​
PANELISTS:

Carter A. Mitchell, PhD, CSO, Purification & Expression, Kemp Proteins, LLC

Eric Vajda, PhD, Vice President, Preclinical R&D, OmniAb

Deborah Moore-Lai, PhD, Vice President, Protein Development Platform, Abcam

PEPTALK PLAZA: MEET THE FIRESIDE CHAT PLENARY SPEAKERS

10:15 amMeet the Fireside Chat Plenary Speakers

Stop by the PepTalk Plaza to continue the discussion and ask questions.

Coffee Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing10:15 am

TARGET AND MODALITY-BASED SCREENING

11:00 am

Chairperson’s Remarks

Govinda Sharma, PhD, Founder, Immfinity Biotechnologies

11:05 am

Rapid Engineering of Soluble T Cell Receptors for Enhanced Affinity via a High-Throughput Yeast-Based Platform

Garrett Rappazzo, PhD, Scientist, Platform Technologies, Adimab

Peptide-HLA (pHLA)-targeting therapeutics can drive T cell killing of target cells based on altered intracellular protein expression. Among pHLA-targeting modalities, soluble T cell receptors (TCRs) have evolutionarily engrained advantages in peptide specificity yet require affinity maturation for therapeutic efficacy. To overcome this barrier, we developed a novel yeast-based platform that rapidly generates high-affinity TCR variants that elicit potent T cell activity in vitro, accelerating the development of soluble TCR-based therapeutics.

11:35 am

Brain Delivery of Therapeutic Proteins Using Novel Fc-Based Transport Vehicles

Padma Akkapeddi, PhD, Scientist, Antibody Discovery & Protein Engineering, Denali Therapeutics, Inc.

The blood-brain barrier (BBB) restricts the transport of large molecules between the blood and brain tissue, posing a challenge for the delivery of therapeutics to the brain. Fc-based transport vehicles (TVs) are a novel approach to brain delivery that exploit receptor-mediated transcytosis to transport biotherapeutics across the BBB. In this presentation, we will discuss the development of TVs and their potential for brain delivery of therapeutic proteins.

12:05 pm Versatile AlivaMab® Platforms Enabling Discovery and Engineering Biologics for Complex Targets and Modalities

Ankita Srivastava, Ph.D., Vice President, Antibody Engineering and Protein Sciences, AlivaMab Biologics

Jane Seagal, Ph.D., Vice President, Antibody Discovery, AlivaMab Biologics

In biologics drug discovery and engineering, success for challenging targets and advanced modalities requires experienced integration of versatile platforms and processes. This presentation will showcase AlivaMab Biologics’ ‘fit-for-purpose’ philosophy, enabling the discovery of TCRm, human VHH, and common light chain BiSAbs, and engineering for next-generation modalities, illustrating the agility and adaptability of our comprehensive approach.

Session Break and Transition to Luncheon Presentation12:35 pm

12:45 pm LUNCHEON PRESENTATION I:A New Era in Automated Plasmid Maxi-prep: AmMag™ Quatro Solution

Rouba Najjar, MBA, Head of Product Marketing, Product Division, GenScript USA Inc

Plasmid DNA (pDNA) is an essential component of molecular biotechnology applications, such as protein expression and gene therapy. Large scale plasmid purification (maxi-prep) is labor-intensive, time consuming, and often creates a process bottleneck. GenScript has developed a new automated, large-scale, high throughput plasmid purification solution, the AmMag™ Quatro. Its scalable modular design provides scientists with an automated streamlined route to purify high-quality, transfection-grade plasmids.

Session Break1:45 pm

EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN TO SUPPORT ROBUST ML TRAINING DATASETS

2:00 pm

Chairperson’s Remarks

Alissa Hummer, PhD Student, Charlotte Deane Lab, Oxford Protein Informatics Group, Department of Statistics, University of Oxford

2:05 pm

Lab-in-the-Loop ML for Accelerating Antibody Discovery, Optimization, and de novo Design

Nathan Frey, PhD, Senior Machine Learning Scientist, Prescient Design, a Genentech Company

Prescient Design, a Genentech accelerator, is developing novel computational tools for optimizing antibody affinity and multiple developability parameters by combining ideas from machine learning and structural biology. In this talk, I will give an overview of our lab-in-the-loop framework that consists of our novel generative modeling approaches, combined with multi-objective optimization, and active learning framework.

2:35 pm

Iterative Active Learning Process for Rapid Generation of Robust Training Datasets

Leonard Wossnig, PhD, CTO, LabGenius Ltd.

The emergence of ML-enabled technology platforms that aim to enhance molecule performance have the potential to revolutionize the way we approach drug discovery. However, without a purpose-built tech stack that puts data quality at the heart, many are destined to fail. This talk will focus on the deep integration of predictive assays, data generation, data capturing, and data pre-processing needed to enable iterative active learning cycles for lead optimization.

3:05 pm Mosaic Biosciences: Engineering Proteins and Antibodies to Make Successful Drugs

Eric Furfine, Chief Executive and Scientific Officer, Mosaic Biosciences

Mosaic Biosciences is your Discovery Partner in Protein and Antibody Therapeutics. Based in the US, our dedicated teams of drug hunters and scientists redefine partnerships in discovery-stage outsourcing. Advancing programs from concept to development candidate, we go beyond simply giving you compounds - we discover drugs.

Refreshment Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing3:35 pm

4:15 pm

Investigating the Volume and Diversity of Data Needed for Generalizable Antibody-Antigen ∆∆G Prediction

Alissa Hummer, PhD Student, Charlotte Deane Lab, Oxford Protein Informatics Group, Department of Statistics, University of Oxford

Antibodies are an important class of medicines whose efficacy is driven by specific target binding. Given the therapeutic relevance, there have been multiple attempts to computationally predict how mutations affect binding affinity. Using experimental and synthetic data, we demonstrate that there is currently not enough experimental data available—by orders of magnitude—for accurate, generalizable prediction. We also investigate the role of diversity and suggest guidelines for robust machine learning model development.

4:45 pm

Integrated Microfluidics and Machine Learning for High-Throughput Immunotherapeutic Drug Discovery: Deciphering Molecular Design Principles

Alon Wellner, Vice President, Biology, Co-Founder, Aureka Biotechnologies

We present an innovative system integrating microfluidics and machine learning for high-throughput immunotherapeutic drug discovery. Our approach aims to decipher molecular design principles by effectively screening and analyzing large libraries of immunotherapeutic candidates directly for their end function (e.g., T cell activation). The system combines a cutting-edge microfluidic platform for rapid and precise experimentation with machine learning algorithms to predict and optimize candidate performance. This integrated approach holds great promise for accelerating the development of effective immunotherapeutic drugs.

5:15 pm

Towards Physics-Based Antibody Dimer Optimization—Productionizing the Associative Memory, Water-Mediated, Structure, and Energy Model

Vincent A. Alessi, Lead, Product, AI, Deep Origin

The AWSEM (Associative memory, Water-mediated, Structure, and Energy Model) coarse-grained molecular dynamics model is an advanced computational tool that has found utility in several use cases characterizing the molecular dynamics of proteins, including the prediction of  binding interfaces of select homodimers and heterodimers (Zheng et al. 2012), intrinsically disordered proteins (Wu et al. 2018), and high-throughput TCR-pMHC repertoire characterization (Lin et al. 2021). We are energized at the prospect of modernizing and building on this rich body of technology innovation. Here we describe our work at Deep Origin in productionizing this powerful model towards the application in dimeric protein engineering use cases including antibody development, including its internal deployment in our development organization.

Close of Intelligent Antibody Discovery - Part 1 Conference5:45 pm