Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s 27th Annual

Recombinant Protein Production - Part 1

Driving Higher-Yield, Higher-Quality Targets

January 20 - 21, 2026 ALL TIMES PST

Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s 27th Annual Recombinant Protein Production – Part 1 Conference focuses on maximizing the yield and quality of recombinant target proteins once a host system is chosen. We begin with a talk on host cell selection that sets the stage for the core agenda to dive into practical, bench-tested tactics for squeezing more functional protein out of every flask. Presenters will share real-world strategies for producing challenging proteins and peptides, including the use of computational tools to boost efficiency. Protein production is essential to all discovery research, complex and often underappreciated, and this track highlights the innovation driving more reliable and efficient expression.

Tuesday, January 20

7:30 amRegistration and Morning Coffee

PRODUCING CHALLENGING PROTEINS: MEMBRANE AND DIFFICULT-TO-EXPRESS TARGETS

8:30 am

Organizer's Opening Remarks

Nikki Cerniuk, Conference Producer, Cambridge Healthtech Institute

8:35 am

Chairperson's Opening Remarks

Michelle R. Gaylord, MS, Former Principal Scientist, Protein Expression & Advanced Automation, Velia Therapeutics

8:40 am

Optimizing Target Protein Production: Host Selection's Impact On Quality

Erika Orban, PhD, Principal Scientist, Protein Discovery and Bioanalytics, Zoetis Inc.

Zoetis is working with a canine cytokine, which is important in the disease of interest, but its expression is challenging. The protein was expressed in different hosts, but none of them produced functionally active cytokine. For this reason, three cell-free expression systems were tested. Two of the proteins showed binding, but only one was functionally active. Choosing the best expression system is critical and is key for antibody screening.

9:10 am

Cell-Free Refolding of Challenging Membrane Proteins into SMALP Nanodiscs for Enhanced Stability and Functionality

Matthew A. Coleman, PhD, Senior Scientist & Group Leader, Biosciences and Biotechnology Division, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

We will discuss cell-free methods using various forms of nanodisc such as apolipoprotein, telodendrimers, and SMALPs to support and refold challenging membrane proteins, including large mammalian proteins over 200 kDa. This includes proteins like MOMP, CAR-T receptors, voltage-gated ion channels, and SARS-CoV-2 RBD that were all expressed in E. coli lysates and solubilized in synthetic or natural lipids. These approaches significantly enhance protein stability, solubility, and biological functionality, outperforming traditional refolding methods. Our strategy enables efficient production of therapeutic membrane proteins and supports new solutions for producing complex, high-molecular-weight mammalian proteins, addressing key challenges in protein biochemistry and biotechnology.

9:40 am

CHS-114, a Highly Selective, Cytolytic Antibody Targeting Intratumor CCR8+Tregs: A Case Study in Overcoming Challenges in Developing Anti-GPCR Antibodies Without Off-Target Binding

Narendiran Rajasekaran, PhD, Director, Research Translational Medicine, Coherus Oncology

G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) regulate important physiological processes and are attractive targets for drug development. Generation of selective antibodies against GPCRs is challenging due to their structural complexities and low immunogenicity. CHS-114 is a human afucosylated IgG1 monoclonal antibody targeting CCR8, that preferentially depletes intratumor CCR8+Tregs, relieving immunosuppression . CHS-114, is a differentiated antibody with no off-target binding and in clinical studies has demonstrated acceptable safety profile to date, anti-tumor activity and immune activation.

10:10 am Expi293 PRO Expression System: Higher Titers and Faster Time to Protein in an Easily Automated Format

Jonathan Zmuda, Sr Director, R&D, Protein & Viral Vector Expression Systems, Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc

Producing increasingly complex proteins with higher yields and higher throughput is critical to accelerating protein research and therapeutic drug development. Here, we introduce the Expi293 PRO Expression System, a next-generation transient expression system designed to meet the rigorous demands of protein expression scientists from the milliliter to multi-liter scale. We highlight the ability of the Expi293 PRO system to achieve gram-per-liter titers in as little as 48 hours, while also possessing an easily automatable protocol to maximize throughput.

10:40 amGrand Opening Coffee Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing

11:20 am

Emerging Tools to Target Complex Multi-Spanning Membrane Proteins for Therapeutic Antibodies

Puneet Khandelwal, PhD, Associate Director, Biologics Discovery-Therapeutic Discovery, Johnson & Johnson Innovative Medicine

Complex multipass membrane proteins are targets for many potential therapeutic antibodies. However, producing these proteins in a native-like state for antibody discovery and development presents a significant challenge. Presently, there is no single expression system or immunogen that can consistently support antibody discovery strategies and thus requires a diversified repertoire to efficiently target these complex membrane protein targets. This presentation will present key challenges and solutions for these complex targets.

11:50 am

Unlocking Complex Targets: Efficient Production of Multi-Protein Assemblies in Mammalian Cells via MultiBacMam

Robert M. Petrovich, PhD, Protein Expression Director, Genome Integrity & Structural Biology Lab, NIH NIEHS

As most of the low hanging fruit has been picked, people are now finding it harder and harder to express and purify protein targets. These include multi-protein complexes and transmembrane protein complexes. Many of these target proteins require co-expression of chaperone proteins as well. I will focus my talk on two targets: the Alpha 7 nicotinic receptor (requires co-expression of a chaperone), and the Ghrelin GPCR complex (4 proteins, a chaperone, and a nanobody to help stabilize the complex).

12:20 pmTransition to Lunch

12:30 pm LUNCHEON PRESENTATION: Future Fields' EntoEngine™: From Sequence to Scale in Seven Months with Transgenic Drosophila

Matt Anderson-Baron, Co Founder & CEO, Future Fields

Future Fields produces custom proteins at scale in transgenic Drosophila melanogaster. Conventional systems struggle with manufacturing challenging proteins; our novel platform, the EntoEngine™, overcomes issues with PTMs, host toxicity, insolubility, and protein folding, all while seamlessly scaling functional proteins for commercial use. Highlighting multiple case studies, including a key client success, we demonstrate how our transgenic system circumvents recombinant protein expression difficulties associated with conventional systems and brings a sequence to scale in seven months.

1:00 pmRefreshment Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing

LINKEDIN SKILLS WORKSHOP

1:10 pm

Meet the Moderator at the Plaza in the Exhibit Hall

Julie Ming Liang, PhD, Co-Founder & CSO, Opera Bioscience

Do Scientists use LinkedIn? How to Effectively use LinkedIn as a Scientist and Some Best Practices: Improve your LinkedIn profile to help build or promote your personal/professional brand.  Discussion Topics Include:

  • Connecting on LinkedIn using the QR code feature - pros and cons 
  • Adding a profile image and banner image to your LinkedIn profile
  • Possible topics to help brand yourself on LinkedIn
  • LinkedIn is no longer just a job search social too
  • Exploring privacy settings​​

PRODUCING CHALLENGING PROTEINS: MEMBRANE AND DIFFICULT-TO-EXPRESS TARGETS (CONT.)

1:30 pm

Chairperson's Remarks

Christopher Cooper, DPhil, Senior Lecturer in Biotechnology, University of Surrey

1:35 pm

Recombinant Membrane Protein Production and Subsequent in vitro Glycosylation: Overcoming the Challenges of Producing Membrane Proteins with Complex Post-Translational Modifications

Gabriel A. Cook, PhD, Assistant Professor, Department of Chemistry, Oklahoma State University

Glycoproteins take part in nearly every biological process and, when not properly maintained, can lead to disease states. Glycosylation of these important proteins has been shown to influence protein structure, dynamics, protein-protein interactions, and recognition by host immunity. In order to study these affects, full-length recombinantly expressed membrane proteins that contain N-glycosylation consensus sequences have been glycosylated in vitro by N-glycosyltransferase in the presence of membrane mimetic environments.

2:05 pm

High-Yield Production of C-Terminally Processed KRAS4a, HRAS, and NRAS for Biophysical Study

Simon A. Messing, PhD, Scientist II, Frederick National Lab & Protein Expression Lab, Leidos Biomedical Research, Inc.

The RAS proteins are important molecular switches in the cell that control cell growth and several basic cell functions. The RAS family consists of four isoforms (KRAS4b, HRAS, KRAS4a, NRAS), and mutations are involved several types of human cancer, such as colorectal, lung, and skin. A key element to HRAS, KRAS4a, and NRAS activation is loading of a molecule of GTP and localization to the plasma membrane. This last element is facilitated by the post-translational modification of the c-terminus, where three c-terminal residues are cleaved, and a cysteine is both farnesylated and methylated to generate a hydrophobic lipid tail that can insert into the membrane. Using our insect cell expression platform, we describe a protocol that leads to milligram quantities of protein. Production of these three proteins is important to novel drug-screening campaigns.

2:35 pm

Evaluation of Codon Optimization Strategies for Human and Murine Glycoproteins

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

Efficient biologics development depends on optimal protein expression in mammalian cells. We evaluated five codon usage strategies for 21 human and murine glycoproteins expressed from our open-source pTipi2.1 vector in HEK293 cells. Small-scale screens revealed no benefit of codon optimization over native sequences, while RNA stability-focused schemes reduced yields. In large-scale production, biased codon usage occasionally improved yields. Thus, codon optimization is non-essential, but exploring multiple strategies can enhance consistency.

3:05 pm Advanced vector platforms for enhanced biotherapeutic protein expression

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

In the fast-paced world of recombinant protein manufacturing using GS-CHO cells it’s crucial to start the process with an optimised expression vector that is delivered into the host cell line at transfection. The design of the expression vector has many variables that can influence the final product titre, product quality, as well as long-term expression stability, and in particular, the choice of promoter driving transcription of the product genes is key. In this presentation I will describe the development of Lonza's new expression vector platform GSquad® Pro, and its engineered high-performance promoter LHP-1, which delivers significant benefits to key biomanufacturing performance metrics. I will also give some scientific insights into how Lonza is building industry-leading datasets on gene expression control in CHO cells, and taking learnings from this work to inform further improvements to DNA vector design.

3:35 pmRefreshment Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing

PLENARY KEYNOTE SESSION:
TRENDS AND INNOVATION DRIVING THE FUTURE OF BIOTHERAPEUTICS

4:30 pm

Welcome Remarks

Mimi Langley, Executive Director, Life Sciences, Cambridge Healthtech Institute

4:35 pm

Chairperson's Remarks

Deborah Moore-Lai, PhD, Vice President, Protein Sciences, ProFound Therapeutics

4:40 pm

From Targets to Biologics: AI Powering the Next Leap in Discovery at Takeda

Yves Fomekong Nanfack, PhD, Head of AI/ML Research, Takeda

Takeda’s AI/ML strategy is redefining the path from targets to biologics, using advanced models to identify and validate novel targets, decode complex biology, and design the next generation of high-quality therapeutic molecules. By integrating agentic, generative, and large language model–driven approaches, AI is powering the next leap in discovery at Takeda.

4:50 pm

Agentic AI for Biologics: Scalable Infrastructure for GxP-Compliant, Insight-Driven Testing

Lieza M. Danan, PhD, Co-Founder & CEO, LiVeritas Biosciences

As biotherapeutics become more complex, automation of traditional testing labs falls short of delivering the insights needed for regulatory success. This talk introduces a GxP-native, full-stack AI platform designed to orchestrate and optimize mass spectrometry-based testing workflows across CMC, bioanalysis, and regulatory reporting. Dr. Lieza Danan shares how LiVeritas applies agentic AI to automate data interpretation, reduce error-prone manual steps, and generate submission-ready outputs—already proven in over 10 IND/BLA filings. Rooted in regenerative system design, this infrastructure enables scalable, adaptive, and compliant operations, empowering biopharma teams to accelerate product development with confidence, clarity, and scientific precision.

5:00 pm

Technological Trends Shaping the Landscape of Biopharmaceuticals

Aline de Almeida Oliveira, PhD, Competitive Intelligence Office (AICOM), Bio-Manguinhos/Fiocruz, Brazil

Currently, the biopharmaceutical industry is undergoing rapid technological advancements that are revolutionizing development and production of biopharmaceuticals. Consequently, new therapeutic categories are gaining prominence, such as antibody-drug conjugates, bispecific antibodies, advanced therapies, among others. This rapid evolution requires constant vigilance to identify breakthroughs and guiding strategic decision-making in this dynamic field. The aim of this strategic foresight analysis is to discuss technological trends and design the future of biopharmaceuticals.

5:10 pm

PLENARY FIRESIDE CHAT

PANEL MODERATOR:

Deborah Moore-Lai, PhD, Vice President, Protein Sciences, ProFound Therapeutics

Kicking off with three focused 10-minute presentations, the Fireside Chat transitions into an engaging 30-minute fireside discussion. Panelists will delve into cutting-edge topics, including the role of AI/ML in biologics discovery, advancements in next-generation analytics and tools, entrepreneurial trends and investment landscapes, and emerging therapeutic modalities. In tribute to Dr. King’s legacy, this session will also highlight the importance of fostering diversity, equity, and inclusion within the biotech innovation ecosystem.

PANELISTS:

Lieza M. Danan, PhD, Co-Founder & CEO, LiVeritas Biosciences

Aline de Almeida Oliveira, PhD, Competitive Intelligence Office (AICOM), Bio-Manguinhos/Fiocruz, Brazil

Yves Fomekong Nanfack, PhD, Head of AI/ML Research, Takeda

5:40 pmNetworking Reception in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing

YOUNG SCIENTIST MEET-UP

6:00 pm

Meet the Moderator at the Plaza in the Exhibit Hall

Maria Calderon Vaca, PhD Student, Chemical Environmental & Materials Engineering, University of Miami

This young scientist meet-up is an opportunity to get to know and network with members of the PepTalk community. This session aims to inspire the next generation of young scientists with discussion on career preparation, work-life balance, and mentorship.

6:40 pmClose of Day

Wednesday, January 21

7:15 amRegistration Open

BuzZ Sessions

7:30 amBuzZ Session with Continental Breakfast

BuzZ Sessions are informal, moderated discussions, allowing participants to exchange ideas and experiences and develop future collaborations around a focused topic. Each discussion will be led by a facilitator who keeps the discussion on track and the group engaged. To get the most out of this format, please come prepared to share examples from your work, be a part of a collective, problem-solving session, and participate in active idea sharing. Please visit the BuzZ Sessions page on the conference website for a complete listing of topics and descriptions.

BuzZ Table 1:

Recent Developments in Tools for Protein Production: What's Hot and What Have We Not Got (but Need)

Christopher Cooper, DPhil, Senior Lecturer in Biotechnology, University of Surrey

  • Alternative proteases for fusion tag removal
  • Cost-effective reagent-based QC methods
  • Protein-labeling technologies
  • Up-and-coming fusion tags and promising expression systems
  • Is there one hypothetical reagent that would be transformational to your protein production efforts??
BuzZ Table 2:

Revisiting Construct Design, Cloning Strategies, and Expression Systems

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

  • What is the use of codon optimization? Revisiting gene synthesis
  • HTP cloning methods; Golden gate assembly, Gibson cloning, etc
  • Expression systems revisited (Old and up and coming)Expression chaperones, fusion proteins
  • Open source cell lines, vectors and media​​

LEVERAGING COMPUTATIONAL TOOLS

8:15 am

Chairperson's Remarks

Erika Orban, PhD, Principal Scientist, Protein Discovery and Bioanalytics, Zoetis Inc.

8:20 am

Boosting Recombinant Protein Titers with Metabolic Modelling, and Harmonizing Metabolomics Datasets for Cross-Study Integration

Hardik Dodia, PhD, Postdoctoral Scholar, Shu Chien-Gene Lay Department of Bioengineering, University of California San Diego

Efficient recombinant-protein production requires strategies that enhance yield while reducing experimental trials. This work demonstrates how metabolomics and dynamic flux balance analysis accelerate process optimization. By mapping substrate utilization and identifying metabolic hubs, targeted supplementation boosted protein productivity by 12-fold. This approach enables rapid, cost-effective bioprocess development. We also present a novel framework to harmonize metabolomics datasets from repositories such as Metabolomics Workbench, enabling broader comparative analyses across studies.

8:50 am

Smart Production: Leveraging AI for Efficient Recombinant GPCR Expression

Alex Blanco, PhD, Scientist, Nabla Bio

AI-based protein design enables generation of novel antibodies and antigens with improved properties, but successful translation depends on scalable recombinant production. We present our integrated workflow for expressing and characterizing AI-designed proteins, including antibodies and solubilized multi-pass membrane protein mimics (solMPMPs). By combining structure-guided design with high-throughput expression and screening, we evaluate design success and identify key failure modes related to expression, folding, and manufacturability. Our experience underscores the value of coupling computational tools with robust experimental pipelines to improve hit rates, especially for complex or traditionally intractable targets.

9:20 am

Membrane Protein Targets Reengineered for Soluble Expression

Alexander Taguchi, PhD, Director of Machine Learning, iBio Inc.

Membrane protein targets are recombinantly expressed in a soluble, native-like conformation using a machine learning-guided scaffolding approach. These membrane protein surrogates are experimentally validated to retain native ligand binding and are expressed in human cells to support post-translational modifications. This strategy enables soluble production of previously intractable targets and has led to the successful discovery of highly specific antibodies against challenging membrane proteins.

9:50 am AI-Accelerated Advancements to Cell Line Development: Integrating Sequence Mining, ASR, and ML-Stability Models

Cintia Gomez, Demeetra

Demeetra's strategy for applying computational design to enhance stable cell line expression includes the re-architecting of Cas-CLOVER targeted nuclease, and unique codon optimization of transposases. Our workflow integrates enzyme functional mining, ancestral sequence reconstruction (ASR), and AI-based sequence prediction. By iterating computational design with experimental validation, we are beginning to construct a next-generation gene-editing platform shaped by computational in conjunction with biological evolution.

10:05 am “inGenius® Bioprocessing: Reducing Risk, Boosting Titre with ML-Driven Protein Production”

Ian Fotheringham, President & Founder, Ingenza Ltd

Optimising recombinant protein production remains a stubbornly unpredictable process, frequently requiring time-consuming and costly iteration of gene sequences and genetic constructs. To overcome this persistent manufacturing limitation, Ingenza has developed codABLE®, a groundbreaking machine-learning algorithm being deployed across bacterial, yeast and mammalian protein production hosts. codABLE® aligns gene sequence design with tuneable host-specific gene expression, for optimal recombinant protein production first time. Its use, alongside novel, orthogonal gene regulators, AI-optimised protein secretion and innovative antibiotic-free gene maintenance, within Ingenza’s “inGenius®” platform, results in more predictable routes to maximise production of biologics, biocatalysts and any other protein target.

10:20 amCoffee Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing

SPEED NETWORKING

10:30 am

Meet the Moderator at the Plaza in the Exhibit Hall

Kevin Brawley, Project Manager, Production Operations & Communications, Cambridge Innovation Institute

Bring yourself and your business cards or e-cards, and be prepared to share and summarize the key elements of your research in a minute. PepTalk will provide a location, timer, and fellow attendees to facilitate the introductions.

ADVANCEMENTS IN TARGET-PEPTIDE PRODUCTION

11:00 am

Recombinant Expression and Characterization of Histatin-Derived Peptides

Robert M. Hughes, PhD, Associate Professor, Chemistry, East Carolina University

Histatins comprise a family of ~12 histidine-rich peptides naturally present in human saliva. Their antimicrobial properties have attracted significant interest as potential therapeutics for combating oral infections. Recombinant expression of histatin peptides with E. coli has traditionally used cyanogen bromide to cleave the desired peptide sequence from a fusion protein. This talk will present an immobilized enzyme approach for obtaining histatin peptides that obviates the need for cyanogen bromide. The applicability of this approach to the production of other peptides, and its practicality in terms of yield, cost, and environmental impact, will also be discussed.

11:30 am

Engineering Cell-Free Glycosylation Systems for Immune-Optimized Vaccines

Zachary Shaver, Research Scientist, Michael Jewett Laboratory, Northwestern University

Conjugate vaccines, composed of pathogen glycans attached to immunogenic carrier proteins, are effective tools to prevent bacterial infections. However, many conjugate vaccines produce poor immune responses, and new methods are required to optimize vaccine design for stronger immunogenicity. We developed an in vitro workflow coupling cell-free gene expression and AlphaLISA to rapidly characterize and engineer post-translational modifications, including glycosylation. We used our workflow to engineer oligosaccharyltransferases involved in protein glycan coupling technology, leading to the identification of mutant enzymes and sites within a vaccine carrier protein that enable high efficiency production of glycosylated proteins. We then scaled up the cell-free production of vaccines for in vivo immune evaluation. Our method accelerates the characterization of post-translational modifications and the engineering of enzymes for more efficient production of therapeutic proteins.

12:00 pm

KEYNOTE PRESENTATION: Yeast-Based Expression and Enzymatic Cyclization of Disulfide-Rich Cyclic Peptide Scaffolds for Drug Development

David J. Craik, PhD, Professor & UQ Laureate Fellow, The University of Queensland

Macrocyclic, disulfide-rich peptides are valuable in drug development, but traditional solid phase peptide synthesis is environmentally harmful. We present a sustainable platform using yeast to secrete peptide precursors, which are matured in vitro via asparaginyl endopeptidases. Three peptide classes were produced, including the first recombinant α-conotoxin in native form. Yields reached 85–97 mg/L in bioreactors—surpassing prior methods—offering an eco-friendly, scalable alternative for cyclic peptide production.

12:30 pmTransition to Lunch
12:40 pm LUNCHEON PRESENTATION: Accelerating Membrane Protein Purification: Innovations with Nuclera

Wenguang Liang, Sr Scientist, Molecular & Cell Sciences, Bayer CropScience

Membrane proteins are crucial for various cellular processes and serve as key targets in drug discovery as well as trait development in crop science. However, their purification presents significant challenges due to their hydrophobic nature and complex structural requirements. This talk will delve into recent innovations we have adapted using Nuclera that are transforming the landscape of membrane protein purification. We will discuss high-throughput screening methods that expedite optimization processes, followed by advanced expression systems and novel extraction techniques that enhance both yield and stability. By integrating these innovative approaches, researchers can effectively overcome traditional barriers in membrane protein purification, thereby facilitating more effective studies and accelerating product development. Join us to discover how these advancements can lead to breakthroughs in both drug discovery and agricultural biotechnology.

PEPTALK KEYNOTE PANEL:
CELEBRATING 25 YEARS OF SCIENCE AND THE NEXT ERA OF PROTEIN RESEARCH

1:10 pm PANEL DISCUSSION:

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

2:15 pmClose of Conference





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