2026 ARCHIVES
Wednesday, January 21
1:00 pmRegistration Open
The PepTalk Legacy and What’s Next
Dominic Esposito, PhD, Senior Director, Protein Sciences, Septerna
Join us for a special keynote panel as we celebrate 25 years of PepTalk. Hear from past and present leaders who have shaped the field and the event, reflect on the breakthroughs that defined PepTalk’s legacy, and explore what the future holds for protein engineering, expression, and production. This milestone moment honors our shared journey and looks ahead to the discoveries yet to come.
Panelists:
Nicola Burgess-Brown, PhD, Professorial Research Fellow, UCL, London; COO, Protein Sciences, Structural Genomics Consortium
Henry C. Chiou, PhD, retired Senior Director General Manager, Biosciences, Thermo Fisher Scientific
Ian Hunt, PhD, Global Head of Scientific Engagement, Biomedical Research, Novartis
Deborah Moore-Lai, PhD, Vice President, Protein Sciences, ProFound Therapeutics
David W. Wood, PhD, Professor, Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, Ohio State University
1:45 pmCelebrating 25 Years: Cake Cutting in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing
Chairperson's Remarks
Pin-Kuang Lai, PhD, Assistant Professor, Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, Stevens Institute of Technology
High-Throughput Small-Angle X-Ray Scattering for Rapid Screening of High-Viscosity mAbs
High-throughput small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) enables early viscosity prediction of high-concentration monoclonal antibody (mAb) formulations by detecting self-association at dilute concentrations. Synchrotron SAXS was applied to 22 mAbs, revealing low-q upturns below 10 mg/mL for high-viscosity candidates. A classification based on structure factor transitions accurately distinguished high- and low-viscosity mAbs. This SAXS-based method offers a scalable, sample-efficient alternative to traditional, volume-intensive viscosity measurements.
Naturally Occuring Deep Eutectic Solvents (NADES): Identification, Characterization and Low Temperature Applications
Allison Hubel, PhD, Professor, Mechanical Engineering, University of Minnesota Twin Cities
NADES typically contain natural metabolites such as sugar, sugar alcohols and amino acids. We have developed methods of prescreening candidate NADES forming molecules and then using quantum chemical modeling (COSMO-RS) to predict the phase behavior of NADES forming combinations. In addition, characterization of the NADES at low temperatures will be discussed as well as applications for NADES across a variety of applications including protein stabilization, cryopreservation and de-icing/anti-icing applications.
NMR Insights into Solution Behavior and Formulation Challenges of Novel Biologics and High-Concentration MAbs
Mark McCoy, PhD, Senior Principal Scientist, Quantitative Biosciences, Merck
Advanced NMR techniques provide critical insights into the solution behavior of novel biologics, particularly under high-concentration conditions relevant to therapeutic formulations. We will highlight how NMR reveals aggregation, conformational stability, and molecular interactions that impact developability and shelf-life. These insights help address key formulation challenges, enabling the design of stable, effective biologic drugs.
HPßCD as a Stabilizing Excipient: Reducing Soluble and Insoluble Aggregates in Antibody Formulations
Bowen Jiang, PhD, Principal Scientist, Bioformulation & Process Development, Gilead Sciences Inc
Protein drug products offer high specificity and potency but face a major challenge: aggregation, which can compromise safety and efficacy. This study evaluates Hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin (HPβCD) as an excipient to reduce both soluble and insoluble aggregation by stabilizing protein conformation and mitigating interfacial stress. Using six protein formulations under various storage and stress conditions, we assessed HPβCD’s impact on aggregation and explored its mechanisms through experimental and in silico modeling.
4:20 pmRefreshment Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing
Optimizing Monoclonal Antibody Structure and Dynamics through Formulation Variables: Insights from Diffusing Wave Spectroscopy and Microfluidic Analysis
Maria Calderon Vaca, PhD Student, Chemical Environmental & Materials Engineering, University of Miami
This presentation addresses the challenges of developing stable, high-concentration mAb formulations, where protein-protein interactions increase viscosity and affect stability and injectability. Using minimal-sample techniques (DLS,DWS, and NanovisQ), it examines how pH, salt type, and temperature influence aggregation behavior and rheological properties. The findings provide actionable insights into how formulation variables can be turned to control aggregation and improve product stability.
POSTER HIGHLIGHT: Cuvette-Based Spectroscopic Technology for the Formulation and Stabilization of Biologics
Sylvia Austin, Commercial Lead, Biologics Spectroscopy, Tulane University
Tulane University has developed a cuvette-based spectroscopic platform providing comprehensive formulation data on the stability and aggregation of biologics. By enabling real-time monitoring of protein, peptide, or other biologic aggregation under a continuous excipient concentration gradient, researchers can identify optimal formulation parameters to support formulation development and optimization. This presents an overview of the technology’s design and capabilities, and summarizes key market research findings on its applications in biologic drug development.
POSTER HIGHLIGHT: High Throughput Characterization of Biologics and Their Stability via Cuvette Based Dialysis and Automatic Continuous Dilution
Curt Jarand, PhD, Research Assistant Professor, Physics & Engineering Physics, Tulane University
This recent cuvette-based technology allows characterizing of biologics and their stability, critical for formulation optimization, including avoidance of aggregation. It encompasses two technologies; i) monitoring the effects on biologics, including their reversibility, as agents are dialyzed in or out; these latter include electrolytes, surfactants, denaturants, and other excipients, and ii) measuring Molecular Weight, virial coefficients (A2, B22), kD for diffusion coefficients, CMC, and dissolution rates using automatic continuous dilution. The cuvette technology can be used in any spectroscopic instrument that accepts a 1 cm pathlength cuvette, without any need for modifications. Additionally, samples can be recovered following analysis.
5:50 pmClose of Day
Thursday, January 22
8:00 amRegistration Open
Welcome Remarks
Christina Lingham, Executive Director, Conferences and Fellow, Cambridge Healthtech Institute
Plenary Keynote Introduction
Andrew Nixon, PhD, Senior Vice President, Global Head Biotherapeutics Discovery, Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals Inc.
New Frontier of Biotherapeutic Discovery: Where Machine Learning Meets Molecular Design
Stephanie Truhlar, PhD, Vice President, Biotechnology Discovery Research, Eli Lilly and Company
PLENARY FIRESIDE CHAT: End-to-End in silico–Designed Biologics
Charlotte M. Deane, PhD, Professor, Structural Bioinformatics, Statistics, University of Oxford; Executive Chair, Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)
Garegin Papoian, PhD, Co-Founder & CSO, DeepOrigin
9:30 amCoffee Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing
Meet the Moderators at the Plaza in the Exhibit Hall
Michelle R. Gaylord, MS, Former Principal Scientist, Protein Expression & Advanced Automation, Velia Therapeutics
Join us for an inspiring Women in Science Meet-Up at this year’s Peptalk—an inclusive meet-up designed to connect, uplift, and celebrate women across all stages of their scientific careers. Engage in meaningful conversations, share your journey, and gain insights from trailblazing women shaping the future of bioprocessing. Whether you're a newcomer or a seasoned professional, this is a chance to build a supportive network, foster mentorship, and discuss opportunities and challenges unique to women in the field. Our Women in Science programming invites the entire scientific community to discuss these barriers as we believe that all voices are necessary and welcome.
Christian Schoeneich, PhD, Takeru Higuchi Distinguished Professor & Chair, Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of Kansas Lawrence
FEATURED PRESENTATION: Mechanisms of Near-UV and Visible-Light Degradation of Therapeutics Proteins
Evidence is mounting that formulations of therapeutic proteins are susceptible to photo degradation by near-UV and visible light, but little to no information is available on the underlying chemical reactions. Here, we present evidence that monoclonal-antibody photo degradation is promoted by common excipients such as histidine and impurities, such as Fe(III), leading to site-specific fragmentation and radical conversion mechanisms of amino acid residues located within one or more metal-binding domains.
Spectroscopic Monitoring of Biologic Stability under Continuously-Changing Formulation Conditions
Wayne F. Reed, PhD, Professor, Physics, Tulane University
A new device and methodology spectroscopically monitor how biologics behave as formulation conditions change continuously using dialysis. This allows rapid, real-time determination of regions of biologic stability as the concentrations of electrolytes, surfactants, and other excipients vary. Using complete dialysis cycles the reversibility of aggregates and other associations can also be assessed
Freeze/Thaw of Biologicals: Degradation Mechanisms and Stabilization Strategies
Evgenyi Y. Shalaev, PhD, FAAPS, Distinguished Research Fellow, Pharmaceutical Sciences, Abbvie, Inc.
Although many biotech products are successfully stored in the frozen state, there are cases of degradation of biologicals during freeze storage. The degradation (e.g., aggregation) has been often linked to crystallization of a cryoprotector or pH changes while other factors include protein crowding and unfolding (either due to cold denaturation, interaction of protein molecules with ice crystals or air bubbles formed on the ice crystallization front) and mechanical stresses.
Accelerated Strategies to Assess Interfacial Stability of Biopharmaceuticals
Danny Chou, PhD, President and Founder, Compassion BioSolution, LLC
In this talk, I will discuss the latest developments in rational strategies to evaluate the effects of surface-mediated stress on protein stability. The focus will be on early detection and mechanistic understanding that will enable the creation of an effective control strategy in the industrial setting.
12:25 pmTransition to Lunch
12:30 pmEnjoy Lunch on Your Own
1:00 pmIce Cream & Cookie Break in the Exhibit Hall with Last Chance for Poster Viewing
JiMin Lee, PhD, Professor, KAIST
Controlling Gastric Delivery of a GIP/GLP1 Peptide in Monkeys by Mucoadhesive SNAC Tablets
Huyen Tran, PhD, Director, Formulation Research, Eli Lilly & Company
In this presentation, we will discuss strategies to enhance oral peptide bioavailability. This includes understanding the impact of peptide properties on oral absorption in the presence of permeation enhancers, as well as the effect of delivery site. Combining peptide engineering for oral delivery and formulation optimization for site-specific delivery can improve oral bioavailability. Additionally, we will present the controlled gastric delivery of a GIP/GLP-1 peptide in monkeys using mucoadhesive SNAC tablets.
Immunogenicity of Generic Peptide Impurities: Current Orthogonal Approaches
Aimee Mattei, Director of Bioinformatics, EpiVax Inc.
Widespread use of peptide drugs like Ozempic raises concerns about the immunogenicity risks posed by generic versions. This presentation introduces orthogonal immunogenicity risk assessment methods for generic peptide drug impurities under the FDA’s Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) pathway, focusing on two case studies: salmon calcitonin and teriparatide, to illustrate that understanding the inherent immunogenicity of the active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) is critical to estimating the potential immunogenicity of impurities.
Next-Generation Delivery of Peptides: Enhancing Stability and Barrier Penetration
Nitin Joshi, PhD, Assistant Professor, Harvard Medical School, Associate Bioengineer, Department of Anesthesiology, Peripoperative and Pain Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital
Our work focuses on biointelligent biomaterial platforms that overcome the intrinsic barriers limiting peptide therapeutics.I will discuss how enzyme-responsive nanoparticles and hydrogels sense and respond to diseased microenvironments—stabilizing fragile peptides, navigating mucus and epithelial barriers, and localizing therapy with precision. These adaptive systems enable sustained delivery in the lung, mucosa, and osteoarthritic joints, opening new possibilities for clinically transformative peptide medicines.
MA-[D-Leu-4]-OB3: A Safe, Effective, and User-Friendly Synthetic Peptide Leptin Mimetic for the Treatment of Metabolic and Neurologic Dysfunctions
Patricia Grasso, PhD, Professor, Medicine, Neurosciences & Experimental Therapeutics, Albany Medical College
MA-[D-Leu-4]-OB3 is a synthetic peptide leptin mimetic encompassing the functional epitope of the leptin molecule and engineered for optimal pharmacokinetics, efficacy, and oral or nasal administration. In mouse models of obesity, diabetes, and cognitive impairment, MA-[D-Leu-4]-OB3 has been shown to be safe and to have therapeutic and prophylactic efficacy. MA-[D-Leu-4]-OB3 reduces body weight gain, enhances insulin sensitivity, normalizes blood glucose, reverses diabetic dyslipidemia, promotes bone turnover, and enhances memory/cognition. Its ability to cross the blood-brain barrier, inhibit neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration, prevent/reduce beta-amyloid build-up, and improve cognitive function promises significant therapeutic benefit for an aging world population.
Formulating the Future—Innovations in Peptide Therapeutics
4:15 pmClose of Conference
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