Dr. Giuseppe Sautto is Assistant Professor at the Cleveland Clinic Florida Research and Innovation Center. His main expertise is focused on antibody discovery and characterization, especially for infectious diseases-associated pathogens, including hypervariable, respiratory (e.g., influenza, SARS-CoV-2, RSV) and chronic infection viruses (HCV). In particular, the potential of these mAbs is investigated as therapeutic molecules, able to directly neutralize infectious pathogens, or for guiding the development of prophylactic approaches and the modeling of the humoral response. Moreover, their possible engineering to improve or gain new functions (e.g., chimeric antigen receptors, CARs), represents a promising and alternative approach for difficult-to-eradicate infectious pathogens explored in his research program.
OPTIMIZING mAbs FOR INFECTIOUS DISEASES [W3] – 10am – 5pm
Room 202B
10am Workshop leader’s opening remarks: Dr Michel De Wilde, Former Senior Vice President R&D at Sanofi Pasteur & Owner, MDW Consultant LLC
Presentations: Developing improved mAbs for Infectious Diseases:
Global Health:
10.10 -10.30 Strategies to optimize mAbs for malaria
Dr Neville Kisalu, Senior Scientist, Cellular Immunology Section, Vaccine Research Center, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health
10.30 – 10.50 Development of mAbs for unmet needs in global health * Title TBC
Dr Larry Zeitlin, President, Mapp Biopharma
10.50 – 11:10 Development of mAbs to prevent vertical transmission of HIV from breastfeeding mom to infant
Marion Gruber, Vice President, Public Health and Regulatory Affairs, IAVI
Respiratory diseases:
11:10 – 11:30 Antibody engineering for ID (in vivo expression)
Antonio DiGiandomenico, Senior Director, Bacterial Antibodies, AstraZeneca
11:30 – 11:50 Developing Ab therapies that keep pace with rapidly evolving viral threats (COVID + Flu)
Dr Robert Allen, CSO, Invivyd
11:50 – 12:10 dmAb platform updates (COVID + Flu) * Title TBC
Dr Dave Liebowitz, Senior Vice President, Early-Stage Clinical Development, Inovio
12.10 – 12.30 Vaccination with Next-Generation Influenza Vaccines May Preferentially Recall Influenza Hemagglutinin-Directed Antibodies Endowed with Broadly Neutralizing Activity
Dr Giuseppe Sautto, Assistant Professor, Cleveland Clinic
12.30 – 12.50pm Computationally optimizing antibodies for infectious disease
Dr Daniel Faissol, Principal Investigator, Center for Bioengineering, Executive Director, Predictive Design of Biologics, LLNL
1pm Break
2pm Taking mAbs to the next level: Recombinant polyclonal antibody therapeutics * Title TBC
Sheila Keating, VP Immunology, Grifols
2.30pm Commercialization challenges for mAb products – understanding pathways to recommendation
Richard Hughes, Partner, Epstein Becker & Green, Professor of Law, The George Washington University Law School
3.00pm Panel: NextGen AI / computational technologies for improved vaccines and therapeutics
Introductory Presentation: Jonathan Heeney, CSO, DIOSynVax
Discussion:
Approaches to antibody-antigen interaction prediction / antigen payload synthesis
What are the challenges of computational approaches, how can we ensure more accurate/higher prediction rates
What are the implications of these new technologies for antibody and vaccine development?
What are the challenges of moving from traditional approaches to computational approaches – is it hard to keep up with technology?
Moderator: Jonathan Heeney, CSO, DIOSynVax
Dr Giuseppe Sautto, Assistant Professor, Cleveland Clinic
Dr Fadil Bidmos, UK MRC Senior (Non-Clinical) Fellow, Imperial College London
Dr Daniel Faissol, Principal Investigator, Center for Bioengineering, Executive Director, Predictive Design of Biologics, LLNL
4.15pm End of workshop