Cambridge Healthtech Institute's Inaugural

Characterization and Development of Vaccines

Development, Analytics, and Manufacturing of Covid Vaccines, mRNA Vaccines, and Beyond

January 19 - 20, 2023 ALL TIMES PST

Vaccines and mRNA-based vaccines have recently gained a lot of attention due to COVID-19. Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s Characterization and Development of Vaccines tackles the practical challenges facing the development, analysis, and characterization of a variety of vaccines including COVID-19 and other indications. Experts will delve into topics such as CMC under accelerated timelines, utilizing new technologies, ensuring product quality, formulation, and delivery, and managing supply chains This conference is part of the Characterization of Biotherapeutics & Vaccines Pipeline which also features the 9th Annual Characterization of Biotherapeutics conference and the 14th Annual Characterizing Protein Aggregates and Impurities.

Thursday, January 19

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

Organizer's Welcome Remarks8:30 am

ROOM LOCATION: Aqua Salon E

UPDATES ON COVID-19 VACCINES AND BOOSTERS

8:35 am

Chairperson's Opening Remarks

Alois Jungbauer, PhD, Professor & Head, Biotechnology, Institute of Bioprocess Science and Engineering, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (BOKU)

8:40 am KEYNOTE PRESENTATION:

Personalized Vaccinology: Missed Opportunities during COVID-19; Is It Too Late Now?

John Mattison, Operating Partner/Chief Medical Information Officer, Arsenal Capital Partners

Understanding vaccine strategies and monitoring for immunocompromised populations are critically missing. The COVID pandemic offered a fantastic opportunity to expand our knowledge base, but there was little T cell research from pharma associated with new vaccine development. As the pandemic subsides, there may still be time for critical research more broadly on personalizing vaccine strategies across a variety of risk cohorts, including Long COVID sufferers who often experience deterioration of symptoms post-vaccine.

9:20 am

Selected Poster Presentation: YghJ: Preclinical Vaccination and Human Disease Studies at the Epitope Level

Michael Szardenings, PhD, Head, Ligand Development, Fraunhofer Institute for Cell Therapy & Immunology IZI

Peptide epitope fingerprints for YghJ, a vaccine antigen of interest for preventing urinary tract infections, were identified from Patient’s as well as immunized animals’ sera. The overall pattern of peptide epitopes recognized after immunization of rabbits and mini-pigs as well as infection in humans and mini-pigs is almost identical. In contrast, individual responses within each group apparently show an even larger deviation at epitope level. The cause for this is the acquired immune response due to repeated or continuous contact with the natural antigen. This pre-immunisation has a large influence on the vaccine’s effects.

9:50 am Level up your tools for the development and characterization of lipid nanoparticle vaccines

Andre Mueller, PhD, Marketing Manager, Biologics Solutions, Unchained Labs

Lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) are a valuable tool in the repertoire of vaccine delivery vectors, but LNP development is a complex process. Screening formulations, controlling the size and quality of the LNPs, getting rid of organic solvents, and characterization require significant and tedious work. Level up your tools with Nunchuck, Stunner, Unagi, and Uncle to make the perfectly-sized LNPs, characterize size and quality, buffer exchange and concentrate samples, and analyze stability.  

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

11:00 am

Manufacturing and Analytical Challenges in Pandemic Vaccine Development

Nikolai Petrovsky, PhD, Research Director, Vaxine Pty Ltd.; Professor of Medicine, Flinders University

The rapid development of safe and effective vaccines is a key requirement to conquering any pandemic. Recombinant proteins remain amongst the most reliable and safest approaches but face challenges in design, manufacture, structural characterization, analytical analysis, and delivery. The examples of the 2009 influenza pandemic and 2019 COVOD-19 pandemic highlight the many challenges faced when compressing development of a novel pandemic vaccine into months rather than decades.

11:30 am PANEL DISCUSSION:

Lessons Learned from COVID-19 Vaccine Development to Take Forward

PANEL MODERATOR:

Alois Jungbauer, PhD, Professor & Head, Biotechnology, Institute of Bioprocess Science and Engineering, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (BOKU)

PANELISTS:

John Mattison, Operating Partner/Chief Medical Information Officer, Arsenal Capital Partners

Martha Perez, PhD, Marketing Dir, LNP Solutions, Unchained Labs

Sabrina Leslie, PhD, Associate Professor, Physics and Astronomy Department, The University of British Columbia

Sponsored Presentation (Opportunity Available)12:00 pm

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

DEVELOPMENT AND STABILITY OF VACCINES, mRNA, AND GENOMIC-BASED VACCINES

2:00 pm

Chairperson's remarks

Gautam Sanyal, PhD, Principal Consultant, Vaccine Analytics, LLC

2:05 pm

Advances in Characterization and Formulation Development of Vaccines

Prashant Kumar, PhD, Scientific Assistant Director, Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of Kansas, Lawrence

This presentation will focus on providing an overview of high-throughput analytical characterization and formulation development considerations for new vaccine candidates targeted for use in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Case studies with live-virus vaccine candidates will highlight implementing state-of-the-art selective and stability-indicating assays to enable expeditious formulation development to enhance vaccine access in LMICs.

2:35 pm

Analytical Characterization of mRNA Vaccines

Gautam Sanyal, PhD, Principal Consultant, Vaccine Analytics, LLC

This talk will include analytical strategies for quantitative evaluation of critical quality attributes (CQAs) of mRNA vaccine drug substances (DS) and drug products (DP) with a view to speedy batch release of high quality vaccines. In-process measurements of CQAs can drive optimization of critical process parameters and help development of an optimized process that will yield high quality products. Strategies for addressing the challenges with evaluating integrity of each mRNA construct and potency of each antigen in a multivalent mRNA vaccine will be discussed.

Networking Refreshment Break (Aqua Foyer)3:05 pm

3:30 pm

Analytical Tools to Support Vaccine Quality

Kevin L. Carrick, Director, Global Biologics, USP

Appropriate quality assessment is an important element of vaccine development and manufacturing. The USP-NF contains general information and best practices on the quality assessment of vaccines. This presentation will cover General Chapters in the USP-NF that support vaccines and new efforts to develop additional tools for vaccine quality assessment.

4:00 pm

Single-Particle Imaging to Quantitate Biophysical Properties of mRNA Lipid Nanoparticles and Engineer Improved Vaccines

Sabrina Leslie, PhD, Associate Professor, Physics and Astronomy Department, The University of British Columbia

We present a quantitative single-particle imaging platform that enables simultaneous measurements of the size, mRNA-payload, and dynamic properties of vaccines in cell-like conditions. We investigate the dependence of mRNA-lipid-nanoparticle structure and fusion dynamics on formulation, using commercially available formulations as a starting point. These measurements are made on confined, freely diffusing particles, and during reagent-exchange such as in response to solution pH, in order to emulate intracellular dynamics in a controlled setting. Over the long term and in collaboration with health scientists, we propose to correlate multi-scale data sets including single-particle measurements made in vitro as well as in cells and tissues, with clinical results, to create a throughline of understanding of vaccine effectiveness from the microscopic to clinical scale, to enable and optimize their rational design and engineering.

4:30 pm

Size Characterization of Vaccine Antigens: Ensemble vs Single Particle Analysis Approach

Rahul Misra, PhD, Scientist, Biophysics and Process Analytical Technology, Sanofi

Light scattering techniques (DLS) for protein size characterization takes an ensemble-based approach to particle sizing. Although being a gold standard, this approach may not accurately distinguish particle sizes in a multimodal sample where the diameter of particles is similar or when particle size distributions are broad. Additionally, concentration of large particles can be overestimated thereby skewing the particle size distribution of the sample. On the other hand, single particle analysis approach involves tunable resistive pulse sensing (TRPS) technology which measures the size of individual particles passing through a nanopore and claims to provide more accurate particle size distribution data within a sample. Particle concentration analysis is also based on single-particle measurements thereby ensuring highly accurate calculations for each size band compared to the ensemble-based approach. The present study performs the comparative analysis of size distribution of vaccine antigens to evaluate the performance of these methods.

Close of Day5:00 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

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 3:

High-Capacity Chromatography Material for Virus Purification

Alois Jungbauer, PhD, Professor & Head, Biotechnology, Institute of Bioprocess Science and Engineering, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (BOKU)

  • Diffusion limitation of existing material 
  •  How to meet selectivity and capacity 
  •  Single vs multiple use​

ROOM LOCATION: Aqua Salon E

ANALYTICS AND CMC OF mRNA VACCINES AND BEYOND

9:00 am

Chairperson's Remarks

Prashant Kumar, PhD, Scientific Assistant Director, Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of Kansas, Lawrence

9:05 am

Development of RNA Vaccines and Therapeutics Enabled by Lipid Nanoparticles

Mano Manoharan, PhD, Distinguished Scientist & Senior Vice President, Innovation Chemistry, Alnylam Pharmaceuticals

The regulatory approval of ONPATTRO, a lipid nanoparticle-based short-interfering RNA drug for the treatment of polyneuropathies induced by hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis, paved the way for the clinical development of many nucleic acid-based therapies including the approved mRNA vaccines, enabled by nanoparticle delivery. The chemistry and biology principles behind the discovery, development and targeting based on LNP technology will be discussed.

9:35 am

Evaluation of in vivo Delivery, Kinetics of Protein Translation, and Immunogenicity of Self-Amplifying and Non-Amplifying mRNA Formulated with Cationic Nanolipoprotein Particles

Wei He, PhD, Biomedical Scientist, Biosciences and Biotechnology Division, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

Messenger RNA (mRNA) has great potential as a therapeutic or vaccine agent. We generated cationic nanolipoprotein particles (c-NLPs) to complex with traditional non-amplifying mRNA or self-amplifying mRNA (SAM) for in vivo delivery, evaluating protein expression relative to a lipid nanoparticle (LNP)-based delivery vector over 22 days. Furthermore, SAM formulated with c-NLPs or LNPs induced robust immune response against a variety of viral and bacterial antigens.

10:05 am

Measurement of Adenovirus-Based Vector Heterogeneity

Shaleem I. Jacob, PhD, Research Fellow, Biochemical Engineering, University College London

Adenovirus vectors have become an important class of vaccines with the recent approval of Ebola and COVID-19 products. In-process quality attribute data collected during Adenovirus vector manufacturing has focused on particle concentration and infectivity ratios (based on viral genome: cell-based infectivity), and data suggests only a fraction of viral particles present in the final vaccine product are efficacious. Here we examine the product heterogeneity of two Adenovirus viral vectors, Chimpanzee adenovirus (ChAdOx1) and Human adenovirus Type 5 using TEM and MS.

VACCINE BIOPROCESSING AND MANUFACTURING

Networking Coffee Break (Aqua Foyer)10:35 am

11:00 am

Purification of COVID-19 and Influenza Virus-Like Particles by Non-Woven Material

Alois Jungbauer, PhD, Professor & Head, Biotechnology, Institute of Bioprocess Science and Engineering, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (BOKU)

Non-woven material represents the next-generation of chromatography material with special features for bionanoparticles separation. The architecture of this bed allows the processing of large particles and molecules without diffusional limitation. This is exemplified by separation of COVID-19 and influenza virus-like particles.

11:30 am

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.

12:00 pm

COVID-19 Vaccines: Technology Transfer and Licensing Facilitated Rapid Deployment

Elizabeth R. Nesbitt, Senior International Trade Analyst, Office of Industry & Competitiveness Analysis, U.S. International Trade Commission

The rapid deployment of three COVID-19 vaccines authorized for use in the United States in 2020 and 2021 involved substantial firm-level collaboration to rapidly complete the multidimensional matrix of steps along the entire global value chain from discovery to commercialization. Key enabling factors included quickly establishing and expanding international supply chains meeting regulatory requirements and the vaccine owners’ rapid technology transfer to firms in developing and developed countries.

Close of PepTalk12:30 pm