Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s Inaugural

RNA and Genomic-Based Therapeutics

Development, Delivery, and Manufacturing of mRNA, RNAi, LNPs, Cell and Gene Therapies, and Beyond

August 17 - 18, 2022 ALL TIMES EDT

Last year was a breakthrough for mRNA-based technology with the approval of the first mRNA-based vaccines for COVID-19. CHI’s inaugural RNA and Genomic-Based Therapeutics conference will explore the technical challenges facing the formulation, development, delivery manufacturing, and supply of next-generation mRNA vaccines, mRNA gene therapies, RNAi, gene therapies, and cell therapies. Experts from pharma, biotech, academia, and government labs will convene in Boston in-person and virtually to deep dive into the challenges associated with successfully developing and delivering these next-generation genomic therapeutics.

Wednesday, August 17

7:30 am Registration and Morning Coffee (Grand Ballroom Foyer)

ROOM LOCATION: Gardener

7:55 am

Chairperson's Opening Remarks

Christina Schier, PhD, Senior Scientist, Merck & Co., Inc.
8:00 am

Dysregulated RNA Processing – A New Senotherapeutic Target

Lorna Harries, PhD, Professor, Molecular Genetics, University of Exeter Medical School
  • Dysregulated RNA processing is emerging as a new hallmark of aging. 
  • Correcting aberrant regulation of splicing regulators is capable of rescuing multiple features of cellular senescence in human primary cells of multiple cell types.
  • Restoration of splicing homeostasis may therefore underpin promising novel anti-degenerative therapies in the future.
8:30 am KEYNOTE PRESENTATION:

Living in the World of RNA Therapeutics Enabled by Lipid Nanoparticles

Mano Manoharan, PhD, Distinguished Scientist & Senior Vice President, Innovation Chemistry, Alnylam Pharmaceuticals
  • Chemistry of Lipid Nanoparticles 
  • Ionizable Lipids vs Cationic Lipids 
  •  Mechanism of endosomolytic release by LNPs 
  •  Historical approval of ONPATTRO 
  •  LNP-mediated delivery, starting from siRNAs to mRNAs
John Taylor, Process Development Scientist, MilliporeSigma

Production of pDNA suffers from the low productivity of microbial fermentation and the purification process remains challenging. This presentation describes an end-to-end platform where each of the steps will be explored, along with strategies to optimize and streamline the purification workflow. In addition, considerations for an mRNA template process are discussed.

10:00 am Coffee Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing (Grand Ballroom)

ANALYTICAL GUIDANCE AND TOOLS FOR mRNA THERAPIES

10:40 am

Analytical Procedures to Support mRNA Vaccine Quality: Draft USP Guidelines

Diane McCarthy, PhD, Senior Director, Science & Standards, Global Biologics, US Pharmacopeia

The development and approval of mRNA-based vaccines for COVID-19 revealed the potential of this platform for both preventative and therapeutic purposes. A standard set of analytical methods to assess mRNA quality would support product developers, manufacturers, regulators, and control laboratories worldwide. In collaboration with vaccine experts, USP has developed draft guidelines with analytical procedures for quality assessment of mRNA products. Results of this work and stakeholder input will be shared.

11:10 am

High-Throughput Definition and Characterization of a Cell-Based Assays for mRNA-LNP Vaccine Potency

Christina Schier, PhD, Senior Scientist, Merck & Co., Inc.

mRNA-lipid nanoparticle vaccines provide many advantages inclusive of antigen specificity and rapid vaccine development. Characterization of this platform is relatively novel, yet requisite for vaccine production and licensing. Therefore, a cell-based assay was developed to quantify transgene protein expression efficiency and product potency in this platform. Appropriate assay factors were characterized, inclusive of monolayer morphology and mRNA-cassette protein expression kinetics, and effects of lipid nanoparticle properties were evaluated.

11:40 am PANEL DISCUSSION:

Advances in Characterization Approaches and Analytical Tools for mRNA-Based Therapies

Panel Moderator:
Christina Schier, PhD, Senior Scientist, Merck & Co., Inc.
Panelists:
Mano Manoharan, PhD, Distinguished Scientist & Senior Vice President, Innovation Chemistry, Alnylam Pharmaceuticals
Khaled Yamout, Senior Director, Manufacturing and Quality Control, TriLink BioTechnologies
Amy Glekas, PhD, Global Head, Innovation & Product Characterization, MilliporeSigma
12:10 pm Luncheon Presentation (Sponsorship Opportunity Available) or Enjoy Lunch on Your Own
12:40 pm Refreshment Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing (Grand Ballroom)

EMERGING APPLICATIONS AND INDICATIONS

1:30 pm

Quality Attributes to Support the Development of mRNA

Khaled Yamout, Senior Director, Manufacturing and Quality Control, TriLink BioTechnologies
2:00 pm

Silencing mRNA by RNA Interference: Skin Delivery of RNAi-Based Therapeutics for the Treatment of Autoimmune Skin Diseases

Qi Tang, PhD, Postdoctoral Associate, Department of Dermatology & RNA Therapeutics Institute, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School

siRNAs are a new class of therapeutic moieties that harness endogenous RNAi process to enable specific and sustained silencing of mRNAs, thus reducing the protein synthesis of a disease target. RNAi allows rapid drug discovery due to the ease of sequence-based design and the ability to target disease genes previously considered as "undraggable." We chemically engineer siRNAs for various therapeutic applications, and here we present the preclinical development of fully chemically-modified siRNAs targeting IFN-gamma pathway to establish a path toward the treatment of autoimmune skin diseases.

Kurt Svihla, Senior Application Engineer, Ansys

In the present study, three-dimensional steady-state CFD simulations for varying sparge rates and impeller agitation rates are used to develop a reduced-order model of bioreactor performance.  This model is coupled to a zero-dimension transient model representing various cellular metabolic processes.  A coupled system-level control model is then developed using Ansys TwinBuilder and exported as a digital twin.  

3:00 pm Refreshment Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing (Grand Ballroom)

ROOM LOCATION: Constitution A&B

PLENARY KEYNOTE: LEADING TO TOMORROW'S ADVANCES

3:50 pm

Plenary Introduction

Nathalie Clément, PhD, CEO, Unicorn Consultations, LLC
4:00 pm

New Therapeutic Modalities and Moore’s Law in Biomanufacturing

Hari Pujar, PhD, Operating Partner, Flagship Pioneering; COO, Tessera Therapeutics

These last two decades have seen the emergence of new therapeutic modalities beyond the traditional ones of small molecules and recombinant proteins. These new modalities, including recombinant proteins, have been essential in the rescuing of what seemed like an unsustainable investment path of our industry. Manufacturing technology advances have enabled the widespread distribution of small molecule medicines at very low cost, and biologics are following suit. As we have embarked on newer, more complex modalities, biomanufacturing has appeared to stumble. Viral vectors and cell therapy have been at the tip of the spear of this challenge. Low productivity, limited capacity, and complex operations came in the way of fully realizing the full biological potential of these modalities. Separately, we have seen the immense success of mRNA vaccines, enabled by unprecedented biomanufacturing feats, resulting in the distribution of billions of doses from a zero start. The talk will chronicle the advancements in biomanufacturing of different therapeutic modalities, drawing parallels to semiconductor chip manufacturing, and establishing the rightful and bright future of biomanufacturing.

4:30 pm

Cell and Gene Therapy (R)evolution

Mercedes Segura Gally, PhD, Vice President, Process Development, ElevateBio

The concept of gene therapy arose nearly half a century ago. Turning that concept into a therapeutic reality required years of scientific discovery, technological advances, and pioneering efforts, culminating in several regulatory approvals over the last decade. These success stories paved the road for a second wave of advanced therapies that leverage new technologies more recently made available in the cell and gene therapy toolbox. Compared with traditional biologics, cell and gene therapy products pose unique product characterization and manufacturing challenges. This presentation aims to summarize the progress made on cell and gene therapy drug development in recent years.

5:00 pm Networking Reception in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing (Grand Ballroom)
6:00 pm Close of Day

Thursday, August 18

7:30 am Registration and Morning Coffee (Grand Ballroom Foyer)

ROOM LOCATION: Constitution B

OPTIMIZING THE PROCESS FOR CELL & GENOMIC THERAPIES

7:55 am

Chairperson's Remarks

Michael Mercaldi, PhD, Vice President, Head of CMC, Purification and Drug Product Sciences, Oxford Biomedica Solutions
8:00 am

A Robust and Scalable Platform Process for GMP Manufacturing of Lentiviral Vectors

Bojiao Yin, PhD, Director, Vector Process Development & Manufacturing, ElevateBio

We describe here a well-established platform process for LV production based on transient transfection of serum-free cells grown in suspension. Both upstream and downstream processes are highly optimized to achieve optimal vector yields and significant decrease in the impurities (host cell protein/DNA, plasmid DNA). The compatibility of this platform process has been evaluated with multiple CAR/TCR genes while the robustness is demonstrated in reproducible runs at pilot scale.

8:30 am

Manufacturing Lentiviral Vectors for in vivo CAR T Cell Therapy

Sarah Gould, PhD, Associate Director, Manufacturing Science & Technology, Umoja Biopharma

Umoja aims to transform cancer care by creating an off-the-shelf, direct injection lentiviral vector (LVV) drug product for in vivo CAR T cell generation and expansion. We will present our approach to reproducible and scalable manufacturing of high-quality LVV, with special focus on expediting process development with risk-based quality documentation and impurity clearance at key process unit operations to meet ambitious final specifications.

9:00 am Coffee Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing (Grand Ballroom)
9:15 am Poster Award Presented in the Exhibit Hall
9:30 am

Scaling-Up of a Suspension Packaging Cell Line for Lentiviral Vector Production: Upstream and Downstream Strategies

Aziza Manceur, PhD, Research Officer, National Research Council Canada

To streamline lentiviral vector (LV) manufacturing, we propose to use packaging cell lines in suspension cultures. The cells were designed using molecular switches to control the production of LV cytotoxic proteins. They can be used to generate LV through a one-plasmid transfection corresponding to the gene of interest, or to generate stable producer cell lines. Given the labile nature of the vector, we are evaluating the advantages of producing in perfusion mode, and the possibility of purifying in a semi-continuous way.

10:00 am

Overcoming the Bottlenecks in the Manufacturing of Viral Vector-Based Therapies

Saurabh Gautam, PhD, Principal Scientist and Lab Head, Bioprocess Development, Viral Vectors, and Vaccines, ViraTherapeutics, Boehringer Ingelheim

The traditional tools used for protein-based therapeutics often come short in case of viruses. This is particularly the case when the virus is to be used for oncolytic purposes rather than as a vaccine wherein the administered dosages are several-fold lower. Another major gap with viral vectors is in our knowledge of the biology and morphology of the therapeutic. The work presented will focus on our efforts in development of novel chromatographic purification techniques complimented with extensive characterization of our virus using a suite of analytics.

10:30 am Sponsored Presentation (Opportunity Available)
11:00 am Breakout Discussions

Breakout discussions provide an opportunity to discuss a focused topic with peers from around the world in an open, collegial setting. Select from the list of topics available and join the moderated discussion to share ideas, gain insights, establish collaborations or commiserate about persistent challenges. Please visit the breakout discussions page  on the conference website for a complete listing of topics and descriptions.

IN-PERSON ONLY BREAKOUT: DSP Strategies for Gene Therapies

Meisam Bakhshayeshi, PhD, Senior Director and Head, Process Development, Intergalactic Therapeutics
  • Technology gaps
  • AAV Purification ​
  • Needs from USP
  • Available Platforms
Christine Ricci, Senior Scientist, Upstream Process Development, Viral Gene Therapy, Fujifilm Diosynth Biotechnologies

There are a number of challenges drug developers face on the journey to the clinic, including high costs and competitive timelines. FDB has solutions that help our partners navigate the challenges of development and material supply for clinical trials as well as propel their life changing medicines to commercialization. Our solutions include a flexible AAV platform and a wealth of regulatory experience taking medicines to the market for our partners.

12:30 pm Refreshment Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing (Grand Ballroom)

ROOM LOCATION: Gardener

NEXT-GENERATION NANOPARTICLES: PRECLINICAL AND CLINICAL CASE STUDIES

1:10 pm

Next-Generation Lipid Nanoparticles – Paving the Road to Patients

Sven Even F. Borgos, PhD, Senior Research Scientist, Biotechnology & Nanomedicine, SINTEF

Lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) have proven their value for delivery of RNA medicines in the clinic. We argue that some critical needs should be addressed to facilitate and accelerate the next-generation of LNPs for nucleic acid delivery, for the benefit of patients. These needs include i) automated platforms for combinatorial synthesis linked to high-throughput in vitro and in vivo screening systems; ii) mRNA and/or LNP reference materials, and iii) robust test methods and protocols.

1:40 pm

Lipid Nanoparticles for Overcoming Biological Barriers to mRNA Delivery

Michael Mitchell, PhD, Skirkanich Assistant Professor of Innovation, Department of Bioengineering, University of Pennsylvania

Recently, the development of gene editing technologies (CRISPR-Cas,TALENs, zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs)) have opened new opportunities to precisely edit the genome, target disease causing mutations, and potentially enable one-time cures of genetic diseases. However, these therapeutics must overcome numerous obstacles to be successful, including rapid in vivo degradation, poor uptake into target cells, required nuclear entry, and potential in vivo toxicity in healthy cells and tissues. In this talk, I will discuss our efforts towards the development of lipid and polymer-based nanoparticles that enable the delivery of nucleic acid therapeutics to target cells and tissues in vivo. Furthermore, I will describe new therapeutic strategies utilizing these nanoparticles to (i) reprogram immune cells for cancer immunotherapy applications, (ii) in utero mRNA delivery for treating disease before birth.

2:10 pm

Double-Encapsulated mRNA Vaccine

Trevor P. Castor, PhD, President & CEO, Aphios Corp.

We are developing a single-shot, room temperature stable mRNA vaccine by double nanoencapsulating the mRNA construct in phospholipid nanosomes and biodegradable polymer nanospheres. We are using continuous flow, solvent-free processes that minimize loss of potency, preserve antigenicity of the nanoencapsulated mRNA, and eliminate residual organic solvents. The impact of this development would be significant to the US and worldwide vaccination for current and future coronavirus pandemics and other infectious diseases.

2:40 pm Refreshment Break in the Exhibit Hall & Last Chance for Poster Viewing (Grand Ballroom)
4:40 pm Close of Summit