2025 ARCHIVES
Sunday, May 11
1:00 pmMain Conference Registration
2:00 pmRecommended Pre-Conference Short Course
SC2: Safety & Efficacy of Bispecifics and ADCs
*Separate registration required. See short course page for details.
Monday, May 12
7:00 amRegistration and Morning Coffee
Chairperson's Remarks
Horacio G. Nastri, PhD, Vice President, Protein Science and Technology, Incyte Corporation
Development and Translation of Radiolabeled Antibodies for Cancer Therapy and Diagnostics
Anna M. Wu, PhD, Chair and Professor, Immunology & Theranostics, Center for Theranostic Studies, City of Hope
Recent approvals of radiopharmaceuticals for prostate and neuroendocrine cancers have renewed interest in antibodies for targeted radionuclide therapy. Advantages include the potential for paired imaging to evaluate target expression, delivery and response to radioimmunotherapy (“theranostics”); disadvantages include extended circulation of antibodies leading to hematologic toxicity. PK-optimized engineered antibodies and fragments can provide novel agents for non-invasive imaging (of tumors and immune cells) and localized delivery of therapeutic radionuclides.
Development and Optimization of Radiopharmaceuticals for Combination with Immunotherapies
Zachary S. Morris, PhD, MD, Department Chair and Endowed Professor of Human Oncology, University of Wisconsin Madison
Radiopharmaceutical therapy can be used to deliver radiation to tumor sites throughout a patient’s body in settings of metastatic disease while minimizing dose to healthy tissue. Radiopharmaceuticals can elicit immunogenic tumor cell death and phenotypic changes in surviving tumor cells as well as inflammatory changes in the tumor microenvironment, and this may alter tumor immunogenicity in a way that enables cooperative therapeutic effects in combination with certain immunotherapies. Further preclinical and clinical research is needed to clarify mechanisms whereby radiopharmaceutical therapies may affect anti-tumor immunity and response to cancer immunotherapies.
AbTACs, KineTACs & TrainTACs: Three Platforms for Extracellular Targeted Protein Degradation
Josef Gramespacher, PhD, Co-Founder, EpiBiologics
By ablating all disease-associated functions of a given protein at once, targeted protein degradation has emerged as a promising therapeutic strategy to overcome limitations of traditional occupancy-based inhibitors To this end, at EpiBiologics, we are developing three fully recombinant and modular bispecific antibody-based platforms—AbTACs, KineTACs, & TrainTACs—that can be applied to effectively mediate degradation of cell-surface and extracellular proteins.
Xuan Liu, SVP, OriGene
Antibody specificity is critical for ensuring accurate diagnostic and therapeutic outcomes. Cross-reactivity, however, poses significant risks, including erroneous results and potential misdiagnoses. To address this challenge, OriGene has developed high-density protein microarrays featuring 10K and 17K protein chips, enabling comprehensive antibody specificity testing. These arrays allow for rapid profiling of antibody binding behavior. This approach streamlines the selection of optimal antibodies from multiple candidates within a development pipeline. This presentation will introduce the features and capabilities of this novel platform. Two case studies will highlight its value, showcasing instances where the platform not only revealed antibody non-specificity but also identified unsuspected cross-reacting targets.
Jihye Jo, Principal Scientist, Biomarker Development, Proteina
PROTEINA’s SPID platform enables high-throughput, single-molecule affinity screening without purification, accelerating antibody engineering with a 2-week turnaround. It maps sequence–affinity landscapes and assesses developability across mAbs, bsAbs, and VHHs. We present case studies including anti-HER2, anti-TNFα, and anti-GIPR antibodies, showcasing SPID’s utility in cancer immunotherapy and beyond.
10:30 amNetworking Coffee Break
Nonclinical Immunogenicity Risk Assessment and Mitigation for Bispecific Antibodies
Paul J. Carter, PhD, Genentech Fellow, Antibody Engineering, Genentech
Immunogenicity risk assessment and mitigation is desirable to aid successful engineering of protein therapeutics including antibodies. Multiple in silico and ex vivo assays suggest that some mutations (knob-into-hole and Fab) used to facilitate in vivo assembly of bispecific IgG represent a low risk for immunogenicity. Common light chains may reduce the immunogenicity risk of bispecifics. Key immunogenicity challenges for engineered proteins therapeutics will be discussed including steps towards addressing them.
Advancing TCRm Antibody Therapy: Insights and Lessons Learned for Maximizing Patient Outcomes
Scott Chunhua Shi, PhD, Associate Director Institute & Head of Biological Discovery, ORBIT Therapeutic Discovery, MD Anderson Cancer Center
Tumor cells present specific peptides on HLA-I molecules, which can be targeted by TCRm antibodies to address otherwise undruggable proteins. However, the limited peptide copies and the specificity challenges of targeting these epitopes pose therapeutic hurdles. This presentation will share key insights and lessons learned from our various projects across different development stages, highlighting how we aim to overcome these challenges to ultimately benefit patients.
12:00 pmSession Break
Lei Shi, SVP, R&D, Biointron
This topic explores the revolutionary potential of the genome-edited mouse, where endogenous VH and VL genes are replaced by fully human VH and VL genes in situ, enabling the generation of fully human antibody molecules. When combined with Biointron's AbDrop microfluidic technology-enhanced single B cell screening, this approach allows for the high-throughput and efficient discovery of antibody drug molecules.
Shailendra Upraity, PhD, Team Leader, Antibody Discover and Cell Engagement, Aurigene Pharmaceutical Services
A robust antibody discovery platform is crucial for developing antibody therapeutics. A key challenge in antibody discovery is the inability to culture mouse B-cells. Current approaches rely on hybridoma, B-cell sequencing or display technologies. Our high-efficiency B-cell culturing platform enables clonal expansion of single B-cells up to 50- 100 cells/well in 384-well plate within 10–12 days. Supernatants are screened via ELISA, flow cytometry, and SPR for high-quality candidates cost-effectively.
1:10 pmSession Break
Daniel A. Vallera, PhD, Lion Scholar and Professor; Director, Section on Molecular Cancer Therapeutics; Professor, Therapeutic Radiology, University of Minnesota Masonic Cancer Center
Discovery and Design of Anti-Cytokine Antibodies for Cancer Immunotherapy
Jamie B. Spangler, PhD, Associate Professor, Biomedical and Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, Johns Hopkins University
Cytokines coordinate all facets of immune biology and thus harbor great therapeutic potential. However, endogenous cytokines are poorly suited as drugs due to their pleiotropy and poor pharmacological properties. Complexing cytokines with anti-cytokine antibodies enhances their specificity and developability, but translating a mixed cytokine/antibody complex is impeded by stability concerns. We overcame these limitations by engineering single-agent cytokine/antibody fusion proteins (immunocytokines) that bias the immune response for various disease applications.
Engineering of Single-Domain Antibody-Based Bi- & Multispecifics Mimicking Cytokine Functionalities
Stefan Zielonka, PhD, Senior Director, Antibody Discovery and Protein Engineering, Merck Healthcare KGaA & Professor of Biomolecular Immunotherapy, Technische Universität Darmstadt
Cytokines emerged as promising molecules for therapeutic intervention to modulate the immune response. However, their often pleiotropic nature, combined with their high potency when administered systemically, restricts their therapeutic applicability. We have generated cytokine mimetics with tailor-made mode-of-actions based on multifunctional antibody derivatives. In this talk, examples of IL-18 and IL-12 mimetics as well as cytokine mimetics for a rare disease indication will be presented.
Protein Engineering Using Novel Chemical Methods to Access PD1-Based Immunocytokines
Arnaud Goepfert, PhD, Director, Protein Sciences, Bright Peak Therapeutics
Antibody-cytokine conjugates leverage orthogonal mechanisms of action (MoA) in one molecule to induce potent antitumor immune responses. At Bright Peak, we generate immunocytokines through site-specific chemical conjugation of cytokine to “off-the-shelf” human IgG antibodies. During the talk, I will focus on our PD-1-targeting conjugates and share compelling preclinical data supporting the future development of BPT567, a PD1-IL18 immunocytokine.
Vincent Pai, Director, Product Management, Bruker Cellular Analysis
Kathryn Hastie, Instructor, La Jolla Institute for Immunology
The most pressing challenge in antibody discovery is efficiently identifying antibodies with the right specificity, affinity, and functional relevance to their targets at the right cost. Maintaining high-throughput functional screening without sacrificing precision remains a major hurdle, especially when analyzing large libraries or repertoires of starting candidates. Based on a proven optofluidic technology and years of continual innovation to overcome that hurdle and deliver against evolving antibody needs, the Beacon Discovery™ is now available, dramatically increasing the accessibility and flexibility needed to accelerate antibody discovery. In this talk, we highlight how the Beacon® and Beacon Discovery optofluidic systems are being used to accelerate antibody discovery in numerous research areas, especially in advancing La Jolla Institute of Immunology’s viral infectious disease research.
3:20 pmNetworking Refreshment Break
4:05 pmTransition to Plenary Keynote Session
Plenary Keynote Introduction
Jennifer R. Cochran, PhD, Senior Associate Vice Provost for Research and Macovski Professor of Bioengineering, Stanford University
The Role of Protein Engineering in Developing New Innovative Modalities
Puja Sapra, PhD, Senior Vice President, Head R&D Biologics, Engineering and Oncology Targeted Discovery, AstraZeneca
Advances in protein engineering technologies have revolutionized biologics design, paving the way for new innovative drug modalities. This talk will highlight key advancements in the field of protein engineering that have enabled these new modalities to enter the clinic and provide benefit to patients. The talk will also explore the impact of machine learning-enabled deep screening technology on hit identification, lead optimization and development of antibody-based therapies.
Antibody-Lectin Chimeras for Glyco-Immune Checkpoint Blockade
Jessica Stark, PhD, Assistant Professor of Biological Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Despite the curative potential of cancer immunotherapy, most patients do not benefit from treatment. Glyco-immune checkpoints—interactions of cancer glycans with inhibitory glycan-binding receptors called lectins—have emerged as prominent mechanisms of resistance to existing immunotherapies. I will describe development of antibody-lectin chimeras: a biologic framework for glyco-immune checkpoint blockade that is now moving toward the clinic.
5:55 pmWelcome Reception in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing
Young Scientist Meet-Up: Co-Moderators:
Iris Goldman, Production, Cambridge Innovation Institute
Garrett Rappazzo, PhD, Scientist, Platform Technologies, Adimab
Jung-Eun (June) Shin, PhD, Machine Learning Scientist, Seismic Therapeutic
Julie Sullivan, Production, Cambridge Innovation Institute
This young scientist meet-up is an opportunity to get to know and network with mentors of the PEGS community. This session aims to inspire the next generation of young scientists by giving direct access to established leaders in the field.
7:20 pmClose of Day
Tuesday, May 13
7:30 amRegistration and Morning Coffee
Creating and Fostering a Productive and Effective Mentor-Mentee Relationship
Carter A. Mitchell, PhD, CSO, Purification & Expression, Kemp Proteins, LLC
Deborah Moore-Lai, PhD, Vice President, Protein Sciences, ProFound Therapeutics
This meet-up is designed for senior scientists that are interested in becoming a mentor for junior scientists: IN-PERSON ONLY
Daniel Chen, MD, PhD, Founder & CEO, Synthetic Design Lab
ISB 2001, a First-in-Class Trispecific BCMA and CD38 T Cell Engager Designed to Overcome Mechanisms of Escape from Multiple Myeloma Treatments
Mario Perro, PhD, Head of Biologics Research, Ichnos Glenmark Innovation
Downregulation of targets limits the efficacy of monotargeted T cell engagers (TCE). ISB 2001, a first-in-class TCE targeting both CD38 and BCMA, demonstrated superior tumor cytotoxicity in vitro, in vivo, and ex vivo using patient samples when compared to teclistamab. Clinically, ISB 2001 demonstrated an overall response rate of 75% across all dose levels and a favorable safety and tolerability profile in heavily pretreated patients with r/r MM.
Bispecific Vγ9Vδ2-T Cell Engagers for Cancer Immunotherapy
Hans van der Vliet, MD, PhD, CSO, Lava Therapeutics
Vγ9Vδ2-T cells constitute a relatively homogeneous population of pro-inflammatory immune effector cells. This presentation will focus on the preclinical and early clinical development of bispecificVγ9Vδ2-T cell engagers as a novel approach for cancer immunotherapy.
Engineering Multi-Pathway Inhibition in the Same Molecule: PD1/PD(L)1 x VEGF
Rakesh K Jain, PhD, A. W. Cook Professor, Radiation Oncology & Tumor Biology, Massachusetts General Hospital
Yulei Wang, PhD, Senior Fellow, Translational Medicine Oncology, Genentech Inc.
Dan G. Duda, DMD, PhD, Professor, Radiation Oncology, Harvard Medical School; Director, Translational Research in GI Radiation Oncology, Massachusetts General Hospital
Guillaume Béchade, PhD, Senior Manager, Biologics Marketing, Waters Corporation
Colette Quinn, PhD, Senior Director of Light Scattering in QC, Waters Corporation
Proteins like monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) and protein conjugates, including antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) promise higher efficacy and novel targets compared to traditional therapies. Given the biotherapeutic structural complexity these molecules pose significant analytical challenges, with quality attributes like composition, aggregation, purity, and conformation affecting efficacy and toxicity.
This talk explores the comprehensive analysis mAbs and ADCs using Liquid Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry (LC-MS) and Liquid Chromatography-Multi-Angle Light Scattering (LC-MALS). We will discuss methodologies for accurate pairing of technology and attribute from development to QC. Emphasis will be on recent advances in analytics and attendees will gain insights into adopting advanced analytics in QC, ensuring robust practices in the biopharmaceutical industry.
10:35 amCoffee Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing
Harnessing Protein Engineering to Modulate Immune Responses via CD28 Costimulatory Pathways
Gregory L. Moore, PhD, Executive Director, Protein Engineering, Xencor, Inc.
T cells require T cell receptor engagement by peptide-major histocompatibility complexes coupled with CD28-mediated costimulation for optimal activation. Tumor cells typically lack expression of CD28 ligands, so we hypothesized that CD28 signaling at the T cell/tumor cell interface could enhance anti-tumor activity. We generated tumor-associated antigen (TAA) x CD28 bispecific antibodies that provide CD28 costimulation only in the presence of TAA and TCR engagement and show enhanced activity over traditional bispecifics.
Selective Tumor Regression in MUC16-Positive Lung and Pancreatic Cancer Models Using a Bispecific Antibody Apoptosis Trigger, Cancerlysin IMV-M
Victor S. Goldmacher, PhD, CSO, R&D, ImmuVia
The first-in-class bispecific antibody IMV-M, targets MUC16 and death receptor 5. It is uniquely designed to cluster DR5 effectively, but only in MUC16-positive cancer cells, directly activating apoptosis to induce cancer cell death. This mechanism differentiates IMV-M from ADCs, which rely on cytotoxic drugs, and from bispecific immune cell engagers. IMV-M offers the advantage of avoiding resistance to chemotherapy and reducing the side effects associated with these therapies. IMV-M has demonstrated potent efficacy in various xenograft cancer models and shown safety in non-human primates.
Bob Chen, Vice President, Discovery Systems, Discovery Systems, OmniAb
Thorough mining of primary B cells from immunized animals presents a major challenge in therapeutic antibody discovery. Traditional methods, such as hybridoma or FACS-based screening, often restrict antibody diversity, require weeks to complete, and are limited to simple soluble antigens. In contrast, the xPloration platform delivers superior screening and cell recovery. Our technology is capable of processing millions of single B cells and recovering thousands of antibody variants within hours. By merging cutting-edge screening with rapid recovery throughput, xPloration achieves impactful results. In this presentation, we will present case studies that illustrate the platform’s advantages across various assay formats, including multiplex cell surface binding assays, cross-reactivity screening, and cross-blocking.
12:45 pmSession Break
Colby Souders, CSO, Biopharma, Twist Bioscience
With Twist Biopharma Solutions, explore how data-driven antibody discovery using hyperimmune and transgenic mice can maximize hit rates, accelerate discovery, and improve success against even the most challenging oncology targets
1:20 pmClose of Antibodies for Cancer Therapy Conference
6:30 pmRecommended Dinner Short Course
SC6: Developability of Bispecific Antibodies
View By:
May 12-13
Display of Biologics
Antibodies for Cancer Therapy
Advances in Immunotherapy
Difficult-to-Express Proteins
ML and Digital Integration in Biotherapeutic Analytics
Biologics for Immunology Indications
May 13-14
Engineering Antibodies
Advancing Multispecific Antibodies
Emerging Targets for Oncology and Beyond
Engineering Cell Therapies
Optimizing Protein Expression
Biophysical Methods
Predicting Immunogenicity with AI/ML Tools
Radiopharmaceutical Therapies
May 15-16
Machine Learning for Protein Engineering
Driving Clinical Success in Antibody-Drug Conjugates
Engineering Bispecific and Multifunctional Antibodies
Next-Generation Immunotherapies
Maximizing Protein Production Workflows
Characterization for Novel Biotherapeutics