Cambridge Healthtech Institute's 20th Annual

Difficult-to-Express Proteins

Mastering the Expression, Purification, and Production of Challenging Proteins

May 12 - 13, 2025 ALL TIMES EDT

The structural and functional study of proteins, as well as the development of targeted biotherapeutics, depend critically on the ability to express, produce, and purify recombinant proteins. However, some proteins present significant challenges in these processes due to factors such as complex folding, host toxicity, and purification difficulties. The 20th Annual Difficult-to-Express Proteins conference, organized by Cambridge Healthtech Institute, explores these challenges in depth. This conference offers a platform for researchers to share innovative approaches and advanced technologies that have proven effective in overcoming the hurdles associated with producing higher yields of these difficult-to-express proteins (DTEPs).

Monday, May 12

7:00 amRegistration and Morning Coffee

EXPRESSION AND PRODUCTION OF CHALLENGING BIOTHERAPEUTICS

8:20 am

Chairperson's Opening Remarks

Haruki Hasegawa, PhD, Scientific Director, Discovery Protein Science, Amgen

8:30 am

Optimizing the Assembly of an Asymmetric Antibody: Lessons Learned and Methods Implemented

Sulo Baskaran, PhD, Senior Director, Protein Science, Santa Ana Bio

IgG-like asymmetric bispecific antibodies are one of the challenging biotherapeutics—and successful scalable production might demand engineering of both heavy and light chains to facilitate correct pairing. Multiple engineering possibilities have been developed to increase the quality, quantity, and stability of bispecifics. In this case study we will be presenting the challenges encountered and the analytical strategies implemented to check product quality during expression, purification and formulation.

9:00 am

Production and Characterization of AI-Engineered Proteins: From Antibodies to Soluble MPMP Proxies

Allison Sheen, PhD, Senior Scientist, Nabla Bio Inc.

AI protein design strategies show promise for drug design—from de novo binder discovery to redesign of antibodies and antigens with improved properties. Even with best-in-class computational design, high-throughput laboratory methods are required to identify successful designs at scale. Here, we describe our experience producing and characterizing AI-designed proteins, including antibodies and solubilized multi-pass membrane protein proxies ("solMPMPs"), highlighting benefits, challenges, and the integration of computational and experimental methods.

9:30 am

Understanding the Biosynthesis of Polymeric IgM to Explore Its Structure as a Multivalent Binder Modality

Haruki Hasegawa, PhD, Scientific Director, Discovery Protein Science, Amgen

Polymeric IgMs are abundantly secreted from plasma cells despite their structural complexity and intricate polymerization steps. To gain insights into IgM’s assembly mechanics that underwrite high-level secretion, we characterized IgM’s biosynthetic process by testing a series of mutant subunits that differentially disrupt secretion, folding, and specific inter-chain disulfide bond formation. The findings demonstrate the crucial role of underlying non-covalent protein-protein interactions in orchestrating the initial subunit interactions and maintaining the polymeric IgM product integrity during ER quality control steps, secretory pathway trafficking, and secretion. Insights obtained from this study provide a foundation for designing IgM-like multivalent binders.

10:00 am Harnessing Platform Synergy: Invenra’s B-Body and ATUM’s Leap-In in
Multispecific Antibody Discovery

Nicholas Marshall, Sr Dir & Head, Protein Sciences, Invenra Inc

Intentional design is critical to successful multispecific antibody discovery. Splicing novel domains into bispecific constructs often compromises quality due to mispaired chains and impurities. This talk presents two case studies where Invenra’s B-Body platform and ATUM’s Leap-In Transposase and DNA design tools were combined to improve expression quality and accelerate early-stage discovery and cell line development.

10:30 amNetworking Coffee Break

11:00 am

Greasing Protein Wheels: Unlocking Lipidation Strategies for Next-Generation Biomaterials and Therapeutics

Davoud Mozhdehi, PhD, Associate Professor, Chemistry, Syracuse University

Protein lipidation remains a largely untapped resource in therapeutic development, despite its prevalence regulating cell biology. Traditional semi-synthetic methods for protein lipidation often suffer from low yields, harsh reaction conditions, and can induce protein misfolding, complicating purification processes and limiting therapeutic potential. Our work addresses these challenges by genetically engineering prokaryotes to rapidly produce diverse libraries of lipidated proteins, enabling systematic investigation of lipid-driven protein behavior.

11:30 am

Developing mRNA Therapeutics for Cardiovascular Diseases

Ajit Magadum, PhD, Assistant Professor, Center for Regenerative Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Heart Institute, University of South Florida

mRNA therapeutics is rapidly emerging as a groundbreaking strategy for treating cardiovascular diseases (CVD), which affect 650 million people. Despite advances in medicine, the need for curative therapies remains urgent. I will share our decade of work on mRNA therapies that promote cardiac regeneration—and combat fibrosis, cell death, and hypertrophy in CVD animal models. Additionally, we introduce novel cell-specific mRNA expression platforms, advancing the field of CVD therapeutics.

12:00 pmSession Break

12:10 pm LUNCHEON PRESENTATION: Pfast Protein Expression: A Rapid, Robust Solution for Accelerating Biotherapeutic Screening

Russell Coleman, Dir Strain Engineering, Strain Engineeing, Primrose Bio

P. fluorescens-based Pfenex Expression Technology® (PET) transforms protein production through combinatorial screening to identify robust strains. With >20 years of development and 6 marketed products, PET excels where others fail. Launched in 2024, Pfast™ offers an affordable 10 day evaluation of protein titer and quality. Tested on >30 partner proteins, Pfast significantly improved productivity challenges, enabling better pipeline management and seamless integration into existing capabilities.

12:40 pm LUNCHEON PRESENTATION: Streamlining Drug Development: From Developability Assessment to High-Concentration Formulation Development

HeonChang Lim, Lead Scientist, Formulation Development, Samsung Biologics

As biologics shift toward patient-friendly delivery, the need for high-concentration formulations continues to grow. Meeting these demands requires early assessment of molecular properties to reduce risk. Samsung Biologics’ DEVELOPICK™ platform evaluates key factors like viscosity and aggregation, guiding downstream formulation with S-HiCon™, a platform designed to achieve high target concentrations while minimizing development challenges. Join this session to learn how our integrated strategy supports efficient, high-concentration development.

1:10 pmSession Break

EXPLORING PROTEIN ENGINEERING STRATEGIES

1:15 pm

Chairperson's Remarks

Athéna Patterson-Orazem, PhD, Senior Scientist II, RNAimmune Inc.

1:20 pm

A Genetic Encoding for Glycans: Platform Agnostic and Site-Specific Glycan Design, Selection, and Homogenization

Benjamin Kellman, PhD, Research Fellow, Pathology, Ragon Institute of MGH MIT & Harvard

Unlike other biopolymers, central dogma describes glycosylation as non-template biosynthesis. Without a genetic encoding, glycan impact on biology is opaque. Here, we challenge template-free glycosylation and describe protein-encoded rules for glycan biosynthesis. We quantified glycan-protein associations and used these associations to predict glycosylation in HIV, SARS-CoV-2, and multiple immunoglobulins. Next, we reformulated these associations as an engineering strategy, leveraging many amino acid substitutions that minimally change protein structure but significantly impact glycosylation.  With this genetic encoding for glycans, we can integrate the siloed practices of glycan and protein engineering into a unified process of glycoprotein engineering.

1:50 pm

Overcoming Expression Challenges to Antigen Engineering through Iterative in silico Design with Limited in vitro Screening

Athéna Patterson-Orazem, PhD, Senior Scientist II, RNAimmune Inc.

We applied AI-assisted, iterative in silico approaches to stabilize RSV and influenza antigens for mRNA vaccines. Abrogated protein expression and secretion in early design rounds motivated adaptations to in silico design methodology. Within two iterations and twenty variants, four sets of unique mutations demonstrated RSV expression and stability enhancement comparable to established stabilizing mutations. Similar success with influenza B optimization supports broader applicability of iterative in silico design methods to streamline antigen engineering.

2:20 pm

KEYNOTE PRESENTATION: Introns: From Nature to Design

Kärt Tomberg, PhD, Co-Founder & CEO, ExpressionEdits Ltd.

If you compare a typical human gene to the transgenes used to manufacture proteins, they have markedly different structures despite both being foundational to the biotechnology industry. At ExpressionEdits, we have revised the paradigm for how a mammalian transgene should look by reintroducing introns back into the cDNA sequence. We have trained an AI model of "genetic syntax" to learn how to combine coding and non-coding DNA to improve protein expression.

2:50 pm GPEx Lightning Technology: Overcoming Challenges to Deliver Difficult-to-Express Proteins

Rachel Kravitz, Principal Scientist, R&D, Catalent Pharma Solutions

The GPEx Lightning platform accelerates high-titer production of next-generation multi-specific antibodies and complex protein biologics with unmatched speed, flexibility, and scalability. Utilizing over 100 dock sites for stable integration, Catalent’s GPEX Lightning technology achieves unique genetic tunability ensuring balanced expression of complex and hard-to-express proteins. This presentation will provide case studies leveraging GPEx Lightning’s flexibility to deliver complex molecules such as multi-chain bi-specifics, virus-like particles, and unusual fusion protein combinations.

3:20 pmNetworking Refreshment Break

4:05 pmTransition to Plenary Keynote Session

PLENARY KEYNOTE SESSION

4:15 pm

Plenary Keynote Introduction

Jennifer R. Cochran, PhD, Senior Associate Vice Provost for Research and Macovski Professor of Bioengineering, Stanford University

4:25 pm

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.       

YOUNG SCIENTIST KEYNOTE

5:10 pm

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

6:30 pm

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. 

  • 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​

7:20 pmClose of Day

Tuesday, May 13

7:30 amRegistration and Morning Coffee

MENTORING MEET-UP

7:31 am

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

  • What it takes to be a mentor
  • Finding the right match
  • Goal of Mentoring is to provide support for professional career development and informal coaching
  • The Mentor:Mentee relationship: you get out of it what you put into it.
  • Establishing boundaries and clear action items to make the most of the experience.​

TOOLS AND PROTOCOLS FOR IMPROVING FUNCTIONAL PROTEIN PRODUCTION

8:15 am

Chairperson's Remarks

Sunhee Hwang, PhD, Scientist 4, Peptide Therapeutics, Genentech Inc.

8:20 am

Unprecedented GPCR Expression for Conformational Dynamics Study of GPCR Using 19F-NMR

Libin Ye, PhD, Associate Professor, Molecular Biosciences, University of South Florida

Despite minimal sample preparation of cryo-EM results in thousands of GPCR structures resolved, we still face challenges to conduct conformational transitions and dynamics study using 19F-qNMR, a super tool in quantifying conformational states because of its ultra-sensitivity to the microenvironmental changes compared to other nuclei. To address this, my lab developed two protocols driving the field forward, allowing us to produce 5-10 mg. of functional receptors/1L cell culture.

8:50 am Enhancing Genome Editing Capabilities: Unveiling the Advantages of Cas-CLOVER over CRISPR/Cas9

Corey Brizzee, Director, Gene Editing, Demeetra

Cas-CLOVER is an advanced CRISPR/Cas9 alternative offering higher targeted integration efficiency, larger transgene capacity (≥20 kb), and superior FTO. Unlike CRISPR/Cas9, which has low knock-in efficiency and off-target effects, Cas-CLOVER’s dimeric system and Clo051 nuclease enhance precision. It achieves 3x higher knock-in rates, making it ideal for cell line development (CLD) and complex biologics like bi- and tri-specific antibodies.

9:05 am

High-Throughput Protein Expression Screening and Production of Cell-Surface Protein Ectodomains

Rob Meijers, PhD, Head, Biological Discovery, Institute for Protein Innovation

Cell-surface receptors pose challenges in expression and purification due to low levels, misfolding, and instability. We introduce a high-throughput ELISA fluorescence approach to rapidly assess multiple recombinant constructs. Utilizing small-scale expression, enzymatic biotinylation, and C-terminal His-tag capture, this approach efficiently prioritizes constructs for large-scale production. We also tested several codon optimization schemes using a minimally designed expression vector. Testing truncation constructs across various protein families demonstrated its effectiveness, significantly saving time in identifying optimal candidates for downstream applications

9:35 am

Capabilities of KIWI-Biolab’s Robotic Ecosystem for Process Development and Optimization of Difficult-to-Express Proteins

Peter Neubauer, PhD, Lab Head, Bioprocess Engineering, TU Berlin

Based on fully-automated, well-controlled, parallel fed-batch cultivations with integrated analytics and model-based DoEs/Machine learning, the KIWI biolab allows a fast selection of best clones and optimization of process parameters in a single experiment. The power of the established self-driven lab is demonstrated with difficult-to-express protein processes, including hydrogenase, Fabs and elastin like proteins.

10:05 am Enabling Drug Discovery Through Innovation in Protein Purification and Screening Technologies

Fabian Mohr, Chief Commercial Officer, Cube Biotech

At Cube Biotech, we make membrane proteins accessible and high-throughput compatible via our NativeMP™ platform, unlocking challenging targets like GPCRs, ion channels, and transporters. This presentation highlights our screening capabilities, including Strep-Tactin® XT, Ni-INDIGO magnetic beads, and the Rho1D4 tag system. Our automation-ready technologies for soluble and membrane proteins accelerate workflows from target ID to screening with consistency.

10:20 am Innovative Cell Line Development Approaches for the Next Generation of mAb Formats and Non-Antibody Products

Lena Tholen, Director, Cell Line & Bioprocess Development, FyoniBio

We will illustrate the relevance of host cell selection in early development with its effect on product quality and process feasibility. We will show how seamless and full-blown CLD approaches can impact final results in complex antibody format production. Finally, case studies for complex bispecific antibody project developed in FyoniBio’s CHOnamite and difficult-to-express protein in human GlycoExpress cells will be presented.

10:35 amCoffee Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing

11:15 am

EZ Tag: A New Solution for Difficult-to-Express Proteins

Sangyong Jon, PhD, Professor, Biological Sciences, KAIST

In this talk, I will share with the audience a new protein tag, designated EZ-tag, as a solution for difficult-to-expression proteins. Our EZ-tag platform is based on the unique behavior of an endogenous calcium-storage protein in cells. Our EZ-tag demonstrates notable increase in the expression and solubility of various recombinant proteins compared with other conventional protein tags. Moreover, the fusion protein can be facilely purified using a simple calcium-ion-mediated precipitation method. Our EZ-tag will benefit researchers in related industry and academia who are seeking an efficient protein tag for expression and purification of difficult-to-express proteins of interest.

11:45 am

Bioproduction Platform to Generate Functionalized Disulfide-Constrained Peptide Analogues

Sunhee Hwang, PhD, Scientist 4, Peptide Therapeutics, Genentech Inc.

A versatile and highly-efficient bioproduction platform to generate various forms of disulfide-constrained peptides (DCPs) has been developed as an environmentally sustainable alternative to SPPS. This platform can be used to generate: (1) multivalent DCPs with different geometries, (2) DCPs with functional chemical groups such as biotin, (3) DCPs with unnatural amino acids through amber codon suppression, and (4) isotope-labeled DCPs.

12:15 pm Redefining Antibody Discovery: From Monoclonal to Multispecifics by ALiCE Cell-Free HTPE Platform

Ridhima Gomkale, Senior Scientist, R&D, LenioBio GmbH

Antibody discovery and target identification are critical for the development of effective therapeutics. LenioBio’s ALiCE cell-free platform accelerates this process by enabling rapid screening and production of full-size antibodies, bispecifics, and trispecifics. With a scalable, customizable system, ALiCE® delivers functional antibodies within 3-4 days, outperforming traditional mammalian systems. This transformative, end-to-end solution streamlines multispecific antibody development, optimizing therapeutic discovery while ensuring reproducible and robust performance for advanced drug development.

12:45 pmSession Break

12:50 pm LUNCHEON PRESENTATION: Next-Gen Bispecific Antibody Manufacturing: Achieving Superior Productivity and Purity with TurboCHO

Darren Yuan, Director of Production Support Department, GenScript

Bispecific antibodies (BsAbs), pivotal in next-gen antibody therapies, face complex production challenges including secretion issues, chain imbalance, and impurity formation. GenScript’s TurboCHO technology addresses these with a streamlined workflow—optimizing cell lines, vectors, and media through iterative DOE-driven cycles, and refining chain ratios for enhanced yields. A tailored purification roadmap, powered by various chromatography selection, ensures high purity by leveraging molecular differences among impurities. Real-world cases demonstrate this systematic approach effectively resolves common BsAb production hurdles, supporting diverse formats from concept to clinic.

1:20 pm LUNCHEON PRESENTATION: Overcoming Biotherapeutic Protein Expression Challenges with Advanced Vector Technology 

Peter O'Callaghan, Senior Director & Head, Expression Systems Sciences, Lonza

The development of biotherapeutic products is complex and the growing prevalence of next-generation and difficult-to-express formats places increasing demands on CHO expression systems to deliver high yield, scalable, and quality consistent bioproduction. Maximising the potential of an expression system requires precise coordination between various elements of upstream production, starting with the crucial first step of DNA vector design. In this presentation, we detail how Lonza has developed advanced GS® expression vector technology that can power high titers, excellent product quality and long-term expression stability for a range of product types. We’ll cover how implementing a proven expression system early in development, alongside early de-risking strategies can help pave the way for successful biotherapeutic drug development, whatever the molecule type.

1:50 pmClose of Difficult-to-Express Proteins Conference






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