Editorial Advisory Board

Editorial Advisory Board

Senior Editor

Chris Mason

Professor of Cell & Gene Therapy, University College London 

Prof. Chris Mason is a clinician-scientist with over 20 years of cell and gene therapy experience including Full Professor of Regenerative Medicine Bioprocessing at University College London. He has a multidisciplinary track record spanning R&D, clinical medicine, bioprocessing, regulation, healthcare economics, reimbursement and commercialization. He is co-founder of the London Regenerative Medicine Network, trustee of the UK Stem Cell Foundation and on the UK-Israel Science Council. Current SAB appointments include; public and private companies, the UK Cell Therapy Catapult and the Canadian Centre for the Commercialization of Regenerative Medicine. Prof. Mason is a general spokesperson for the cell and gene therapy sector including frequent newspaper, radio and TV interviews plus social media including @Prof_ChrisMason on Twitter.

Editorial Advisory Board

Anthony Atala

W.H. Boyce Professor of Urology, Director of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine, Chair of the Department of Urology, Wake Forest School of Medicine

Director of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine. His work focuses on growing human organs. Fifteen technologies from his laboratory have been used clinically. His work was listed twice as Time Magazine’s top 10 medical breakthroughs of the year. He was named by Scientific American as one of the world’s most influential people in biotechnology, by Nature Biotechnology as one of the top 10 translational researchers in the world, and he is a recipient of the Smithsonian Ingenuity Award.

Andrew Baker

BHF Professor of Translational Cardiovascular Sciences, University of Edinburgh

Andrew graduated from the University of London in 1990 with a First Class BSc (Joint Honours) in pharmacology and toxicology and then studied for his PhD with the Leukaemia Research Fund at the University of Wales College Of Medicine, graduating in 1994. He then joined the group led by Professor Andrew Newby for his post-doctoral work in Cardiff and developed adenoviral vectors for gene delivery studies in the cardiovascular system. He then transferred to a lectureship at the University of Bristol (Bristol Heart Institute) to continue studies on adenovirus-mediated gene transfer to assess vascular function and gene therapy. In 1999, Dr. Baker joined Professor Anna Dominiczak at the University of Glasgow as a Senior Lecturer in Molecular Medicine, then as Reader and in 2005 as Professor of Molecular Medicine. Andrew was awarded the Blandsford Prize (1990) in pharmacology and the “Update in Thrombolysis Research” (Berlin, 1998) for his publication entitled “Divergent effects of tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1, -2 or -3 overexpression on rat vascular smooth muscle cell invasion, proliferation and death in vitro: TIMP-3 promotes apoptosis” which was published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation. In 1999, he was awarded the British Cardiac Society Young Investigator Research Prize for his work “Gene therapy for vein grafting: Tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-3 (TIMP-3) inhibits neointima formation in vitro and in vivo in part by promoting apoptosis”. He was awarded the MakDougall-Brisbane prize from the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 2008 and a fellowship from the Society in 2010.  Also in 2010 he was awarded an Outstanding Achievement Award from the European Society of Cardiology and in 2011 received a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award.  From August 2010 to November 2011 he was Acting Director of the Institute for Cardiovascular and Medical Sciences at the University of Glasgow and in 2011 he was awarded a British Heart Foundation Chair of Translational Cardiovascular Medicine. In 2015 he was awarded a Fellowship of the Academy of Medical Sciences and from 1st October, 2015 Andrew relocated his BHF Chair to the Centre for Cardiovascular Science at the Queen’s Medical Research Institute, University of Edinburgh, UK. He became Head of Cardiovascular Science June 2017.

Nina Bauer

Head of Commercial, Gene Editing & Novel Modalities, MilliporeSigma

Nina Bauer, a key figure in the cell and gene therapy community joined FloDesign Sonics in September as VP of Business Development. She leads the commercial aspects of establishing, launching, and further adoption of this disruptive technology. Previously Nina led Lonza’s Autologous Cell Therapy business, with manufacturing sites in the US and Europe. As part of this role, she was also in charge of establishing novel manufacturing technologies, most notably the Octane Cocoon™ platform. Prior to joining Lonza, Nina held business development roles at the Cell Therapy Catapult (London), and the University of Edinburgh, and worked as Life Science Consultant for regenerative medicine businesses.

Alexey Bersenev

Director, Cell Therapy Processing/Advanced Cell Therapy Labs, Yale University

Dr. Bersenev received his medical education and certification as a general surgeon in Russia. He holds a PhD in transplantation/ pathology. He gained expertise in immunology, hematology, stem cell biology and published scientific papers during post-doctoral training in the US in Philadelphia at the Thomas Jefferson University and the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. He worked as a cell manufacturing specialist at the University of Pennsylvania and trained in clinical cell processing in a GMP cell manufacturing facility and was involved in the manufacture of CAR T-cell products for clinical trials and technology transfer to industry. He has expertise in clinical manufacturing of cellular products for clinical trials, including product and process development, cell processing and culture, operations of academic GMP facility and compliance with regulations. In addition to his position as Director of the Advanced Cell Therapy Lab at Yale-New Haven Hospital, he is an Assistant Professor of Clinical Laboratory Medicine at the Department of Laboratory Medicine at Yale University.

Barbara Bonamassa

Quality Assessor for ATMPs & CAT Alternate Member (EMA), Italian Medicines Agency (AIFA) - Innovation and Pharmaceutical Strategy Division (Rome – Italy)

Dr. Barbara Bonamassa holds a 3-year Bachelor’s degree in Biological Sciences and a 2-year Master’s degree in Cellular and Molecular Biology from the Alma Mater Studiorum - University of Bologna, Italy. Further to undergraduate studies, she obtained her PhD in Pharmacology and Toxicology at the same University. She has then joined national laboratories and the University of Pittsburgh, School of Pharmacy (PA, USA) as a postdoctoral researcher supported by several national and international fellowships. Her focus has been on the study of gene expression regulation, the development of viral and non-viral gene delivery/transfer techniques as well as the identification of genes coding for therapeutic proteins and the illustration of their mechanisms of action, conducting basic research in cell culture and animal models. After earning a II level master degree in Drug Regulatory Affairs and an advanced study course degree in Statistical Methods for the Biomedical Research and Practice from the University of Rome “Sapienza” (Italy), she has joined the Italian Medicines Agency (AIFA). There, she serves as quality assessors for Advanced Therapy Medicinal Products (ATMPs). Currently, she is the Italian Committee for Advanced Therapies (CAT) alternate member at the European Medicines Agency's (EMA). Also, she is a quality assessor for biotherapeutic products within the WHO Prequalification Team – Medicines Assessment Team (PQT/MED).

Gregory Bonfiglio

Managing Partner, Proteus Venture Partners

Founder and Managing Partner of Proteus, LLC – an investment and advisory firm focused solely on Regenerative Medicine. Formed in 2006, Proteus provides fund management and consulting services to the regenerative medicine industry. Proteus works with cell and gene therapy companies across all stages of development from early stage entities to large public companies, as well as governmental organizations pursuing RM initiatives. Mr Bonfiglio serves on the Board of Healios KK, one of the largest publicly traded RM companies in Japan. He is on the Investment Committee of the Centre for Commercialization of Regenerative Medicine (RM Translation Center in Toronto, Canada). He is on the Advisory Board of BioBridge Global (RM Translation Center in San Antonio, Texas). He is on the ISSCR Finance Committee. Mr Bonfiglio was an early investor in the RM field, and he continues to be actively involved in the space. He has over 35 years’ experience working with technology companies. He received his BA in Mathematics (magna cum laude) from Michigan State University in 1975, and his JD (magna cum laude) from the University of Michigan Law School in 1981.

Christopher Bravery

Director, Consulting on Advanced Biologicals

Consulting regulatory scientist, Advbiols Ltd Christopher founded Advbiols Ltd at the end of 2009 in order to focus his activities within the Regenerative Medicine sector. Advbiols Ltd provides EU regulatory services to the regenerative medicine industry in addition to business and regulatory research and analysis to identify and focus on the real barriers to commercialisation of regenerative medicine. Christopher has a PhD in xenotranplantation immunology and spent 8 years in biotech (Imutran Ltd, A Novartis Pharma AG Co. and Intercytex) before joining the MHRA as a quality (CMC) assessor (biologicals and biotechnology unit). During this time Christopher was involved with National implementation of the new Advanced Therapies Regulation and also involved through his participation in the CHMP’s cell products working party (CPWP) in implementation at the EMA level including drafting guidelines.

Tania Bubela

Professor & Dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University

Dr Bubela is Professor and Dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences at Simon Fraser University, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada (2019) and a Fellow of the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences (2018). Previously she was Professor, School of Public Health and Adjunct Professor, Alberta School of Business at the University of Alberta, Canada. She holds a PhD in biology from the University of Sydney and a JD from U Alberta. She joined the faculty of U Alberta in 2004 after clerking at the Supreme Court of Canada and being admitted to the Law Society of Alberta in 2005. Her research program in intellectual property and health law related to translational biomedical research brings together her legal training and a PhD in biology and expertise in genetics and molecular biology. It focuses on large collaborative science networks in genomics, gene therapy, and stem cell biology, addressing barriers to the effective translation of new technologies. These are varied and include ethical issues, effective communication of risks and benefits among stakeholder groups, commercialization and regulation. She provides advice for government health and science agencies as well as life sciences research communities, and patient organisations. Her research is funded by Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Canadian Stem Cell Network, Genome Canada, and Alberta Innovates, BioCanRx, and the Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research, among others. She co-leads CLEONet, funded by Genome Canada and others, on implementation of precision oncology in Canada. She has over a hundred publications in law, ethics and biomedical journals including Nature, Nature Biotechnology, Cell Stem Cell, PLoS Biology, Trends in Biotechnology, American Journal of Bioethics, Science and Science Translational Medicine.


Lee Buckler

Managing Director, Cell Therapy Group of HighMont Advisors, Inc; Senior Vice President, Advanced Therapies, Blood Centers of America

Lee is an experienced senior executive and corporate director within the biotechnology sector with his deepest expertise being in the cell therapy and regenerative medicine sector particularly within the American and Japanese markets. His management experience includes C-suite, senior management and Board roles in public and private biotech companies as well as non-profit organizations. He provides board, management, and strategic advisory services to public and private bio-pharma companies and organizations in Canada, the United States, Middle East, Japan, and Europe. He is a co-founder and owner of several start-ups as well as an investor. To any project he works on, Lee brings extensive deal-negotiating and structuring experience, strong scientific knowledge, operational expertise, and a well-developed  network of relationships within pharma-biotech and investment communities around the globe. Lee’s current role with Blood Centers of America aims to leverage the broadly distributed infrastructure and deep biomaterials collection, processing, and hospital supply experience of independent blood centers across the United States to enable broader access of advanced therapies to hospitals and patients.  Lee holds a Bachelors of Education and a JD from the University of British Columbia.


Juan Bueren

Professor & Director, Hematopoietic Innovative Therapies Division, CIEMAT & Centre for Biomedical Research on Rare Diseases (CIBERER); Coordinator, Advanced Therapies Unit of Fundación Jiménez Díaz/CIEMAT

Dr Bueren is the Head of the Division of Hematopoietic Innovative Therapies of CIEMAT and CIBER of Rare Diseases. Dr Bueren is also Coordinator of the Mixed Unit of Advanced Therapies CIEMAT/IIS-Jiménez Díaz Foundation and consultant of Rocket Pharmaceuticals Inc, and currently serves as Vice-President of the European Society for Cell and Gene Therapy. Dr Bueren is Scientific Director of gene therapy trials for patients with Fanconi anemia and also for patients with the primary immunodeficiency, Leukocyte adhesion deficiency type I, and has participated in the development of therapeutic lentiviral vectors designed as Orphan Drugs by the European Medicines Agency and by the FDA for these two diseases. Both ODs have been licensed to Rocket Pharmaceuticals which is currently development different global gene therapy programs in Europe and in the USA for Fanconi anemia and LAD-I.


Bruce Bunnell

Professor & Chair, Dept. of Microbiology, Immunology, and Genetics, University of North Texas Health Science Center

Bruce Bunnell, PhD is a professor and Chair of the Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Genetics at the University of North Texas Health Science Center in Fort Worth, TX. Previously, he served as Director of the Tulane Center for Stem Cell Research and Regenerative Medicine and Professor in the Department of Pharmacology in the Tulane University School of Medicine. Dr. Bunnell obtained his PhD in Microbiology from the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Medicine. He then pursued Postdoctoral Fellowship research at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute in the School of Medicine at the University of Michigan and the National Human Genome Research Institute at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, MD. Dr. Bunnell was an Assistant Professor at the Nationwide Children’s Hospital Research Institute, part of the Ohio State University School of Medicine prior to joining the faculty at Tulane University in 2002. Dr. Bunnell's research program is focused on both the basic science and translational applications of adult stem cells isolated from the bone marrow and adipose tissue. Dr. Bunnell investigates use of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) isolated from the bone marrow or adipose tissue as a therapeutic intervention for both Multiple Sclerosis (MS) wound repair, lung injury and bone repair. He is particularly interested the interactions of MSC with the immune system and how the cells elicit robust anti-inflammatory effects in vivo. He is currently working towards a human clinical trials for the treatment of osteoarthritis, traumatic brain injury and Multiple Sclerosis with these cells. He has served as a reviewer of stem cell, regenerative medicine and tissue engineering grants for the National Institutes of Health, Department of Defense and several state funded programs including Maryland, New York, Virginia and Pennsylvania. He has also served on grant review panels for several foreign countries including Denmark, Ireland, Poland, Germany and Spain. Dr. Bunnell serves as an Editorial Board Member for several journals, including Stem Cells, BMC Genomics, and Regenerative Medicine.


Nathalie Cartier

Director, NeuroGenCell

Marina Cavazzana

Professor of Hematology, Paris Descartes University; Head of the Department of Biotherapy, Hospital Necker-Enfants Malades; AP-HP & Chief of Research, Laboratory of Human Lympho-hematopoiesis, U1163 Inserm, Institut Imagine, Paris

Marina Cavazzana is a paediatrician, Professor of Haematology since 2000, Director of the Department of Biotherapy at Hospital Necker, University Paris Descartes. She is the Director of the Inserm / Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris GHU Ouest Biotherapy Clinical Investigation Center and leads a research Laboratory at Imagine Institute. She studied medicine in Padua, Italy and received the degree of Doctor of Medicine in 1983, her certification in Paediatrics in 1987 and a PhD in Life Sciences in 1993 (University Paris VII).

Her main research and clinical interests are development of the immune system, genetic diseases of the haematopoietic system and cell and gene therapy. She has initiated several clinical trials based on the use of ex vivo gene modified cells to treat patients with inherited disorders, the preliminary clinical results of which are encouraging. This work was rewarded by the American Society of Hematology (Award on Clinical Research in Gene Therapy in 1999), by the French Academy of Sciences (Special Medical Award in 2000 and Jean-Pierre Lecocq Award on Gene Therapy in 2004). She was awarded the title of Officier de l'Ordre National de la Légion d'honneur in 2011, given the Irène Joliot Curie 2012 award "Scientific Women of the Year" (Science Academy and French Ministry of Education and Research). She was also awarded with the French National Academy of Medicine in 2016 and the 2017 Ernest Beutler Lecture and Prize for Clinical Science (American Society of Hematology).


Alexis Cockroft

Director and Regulatory Consultant, Lex Regulatory Ltd

Alexis has worked in CMC regulatory affairs for more than 17 years and focused solely on gene/cell therapy products for the last 11+ years. She is currently a freelance regulatory consultant as Lex Regulatory Ltd and works with a number of organizations developing advanced therapies. A large proportion of her experience is with gene therapy products. She has accumulated knowledge from more than 25 years in science-related roles and finds the complexities and challenges of advanced therapies very rewarding.

Michael Covington

Chief Quality & Regulatory Officer, Landmark Bio 

Anindya Dasgupta

Director of Vector Development, Expression Therapeutics

Anindya is the director of vector development at Expression Therapeutics. He obtained his PhD from University of South Carolina, USA. His post-doctoral training and research associateship at the school of medicine, Emory University, Atlanta, USA, were focused on the evaluation of novel anti-cancer therapies and the development of strategies for expansion and lentivirus-based bioengineering of gd T cells in serum-free media. Anindya is a co-inventor of a patent on anti-cancer strategy. At his recent role at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, he led vector development to manufacture high titer lentiviral vectors.

Robert Deans

CSO, Synthego  

Dr Deans is CSO at Synthego, a genome engineering company pushing automation and machine learning towards a new era of cell and gene therapeutics.  Prior to Synthego, Dr Deans was Chief of Innovation at BlueRock Therapeutics, a biotechnology company creating allogeneic cell therapeutics by harnessing pluripotent stem cell biology and gene editing tools. Prior to BlueRock, Dr Deans was CSO at Rubius Therapeutics developing a platform of novel enucleated cell therapeutics based on genetic engineering and expansion of hematopoietic progenitors to mature reticulocytes.  Dr. Deans has more than 25 years of experience in adult stem cell therapeutics which includes commercialization of cell therapeutics from from bone marrow.  This includes both hematopoietic gene therapies as well as mesenchymal stromal cell (MSC) products (Prochymal, MultiStem). 

Maria del Pilar Redondo

Site Head, Takeda Madrid, Cell Therapy Technology Center

MARIA DEl PILAR REDONDO holds an MsC in Pharmacy, specializing in Pharmaceutical technology and analysis and control of drugs. Although she began her career at Pfizer within the area of Quality, she later focused on Pharmaceutical Development. After incorporation into the Pharmamar group in 2005, she became in charge of pharmaceutical development and production of investigational medicines for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease. Pilar joined Tigenix SAU in June 2013 as Senior Director of Technical Operations. Her responsibilities included the overview and management of activities in the areas of Pharmaceutical Development (CMC/Industrialization) and Manufacturing of the stem cell platform.

Colleen Delaney

Founder & CMO, Deverra Therapeutics

David DiGiusto

Chief Technology Officer, Garuda Therapeutics

David DiGiusto has more than 21 years of academic and 11 years of industrial experience in translational medicine with a focus on blood cells as therapeutic agents. He has led the creation and/or operation of 11 GMP compliant biologics manufacturing facilities including the oversight of process development, manufacturing, quality systems and regulatory affairs infrastructure. Under his direction, plasmid DNA, CAR T-cells, regulatory T-cells, pancreatic islets, engineered stem cell grafts and gene modified hematopoietic stem cell products have been developed, manufactured and used in clinical investigations. Dr. DiGiusto is the former North American Vice President for ISCT (2016-2018), former member of the NIH recombinant DNA advisory committee (RAC) and an independent biotechnology consultant. He received his undergraduate and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Colorado.

Massimo Dominici

Head Lab of Cell Biol. & Advanced Cancer Therapies, Univ. Modena & Reggio Emilia

   


Lauren M. Drouin

Director, Analytical Development, at Alexion, AstraZeneca Rare Disease

Lauren M. Drouin leads the Analytical Development group at LogicBio Therapeutics, where she supports the development and implementation of analytical methodologies needed to progress LB-001 and other pipeline products from preclinical development into the clinic and beyond. Current research interests include novel AAV capsid characterization and developing a robust understanding of the factors that influence potency of gene therapy products. Previously, Lauren worked at Voyager Therapeutics where she was responsible for analytical method development and overseeing CMC analytics operations for the Parkinson’s Disease clinical program. Lauren received her PhD in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology from the University of Florida where she utilized molecular, biophysical, and structural techniques to characterize the AAV capsid for improved gene delivery.

Gary du Moulin

Independent Consultant (Fairlead Quality Compliance); Member, Modern Microbiological Methods Expert Panel, U.S. Pharmacopoeia; Former, VP, Quality Operations, Genzyme Biosurgery

Gary C. du Moulin, Ph.D., M.P.H., RAC retired as Vice President, Quality Operations at Genzyme Biosurgery and Senior Director of Quality Aseptic Control for Genzyme (A Sanofi Company) after a 20 year career in the development and execution of quality systems for Genzyme’s products including biologics and cell based therapies. Before entering the field of cell therapy he began an academic career on the faculty of Harvard Medical School and has 160 publications in the areas of microbiology, epidemiology, and the regulation and quality control of living cells as a therapeutic modality. Dr. du Moulin received his graduate degrees from Northeastern University and Boston University School of Medicine. Dr. du Moulin has served on U.S. Pharmacopoeia’s Gene Therapy, Cell Therapy, and Tissue Engineering Expert Committees and chaired the ad hoc advisory panel for fetal bovine serum. He currently serves on the Modern Microbiological Methods Expert Panel. He has served on the editorial board of Regenerative Medicine and is RAC certified and past Chairman of the Editorial Board of the Regulatory Affairs Professionals Society Magazine, RAPS Focus. Dr. du Moulin was appointed to the Grants Review Working Group of the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine. He is retired from the U.S. Army Reserve at the rank of Colonel after 38 years of service and has completed a teaching assignment at the Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences University where he taught graduate pharmacists a course entitled, “Principles of Quality Assurance and Quality Control in a Regulated Environment”. Dr. du Moulin continues to consult in the cell and gene therapy sector.

Boris Fehse

Professor & Head of the Research Dept., Cell and Gene Therapy, University of Hamburg

Franz Gerner

Chief Technology Officer, Excision BioTherapeutics

Franz Gerner is Chief Technology Officer at Excision BioTherapeutics, a clinical-stage CRISPR company using viral and non-viral transfer vehicles to treat persistent infectious diseases, where he is responsible for CMC and related activities internally and at external contract organizations. Dr. Gerner has over 25 years’ experience working in the gene therapy field, in process and analytical development, manufacturing, Quality Control, Quality Assurance and vector development. Prior to joining Excision, he was Vice President of Technical Operations at Axovant/Sio Gene Therapies where he oversaw the activities of CMC activities at contract organizations. Previously, he was one of the early members of Regenxbio, responsible for Process Development, including the establishment and subsequent expansion of in-house capabilities. In addition, he was responsible for new innovative approaches to produce recombinant AAVs. Prior to Regenxbio, he held increasing positions in the biotech industry. He holds a MS in Chemistry and a PhD in Chemistry with focus on Gene Therapy by the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München.

Philip Gregory

Chief Scientific Officer, bluebird bio 

Richard Harbottle

Head of DNA Vector Research, German Cancer Research Centre

Richard is currently the Principle Investigator and Group Leader of the DNA Vector Research Group at the German Cancer Research Centre (DKFZ) in Heidelberg.

Our research focuses on the development of DNA vector technologies for gene therapy with particular focus on the application of minimally sized scaffold/matrix attachment region (S/MAR) vectors. 

We have recently made a breakthrough in our DNA vector design which allows the application of our vector in stem cells and in primary human cells. For the first time we have generated a DNA vector system which can provide persistent transgene expression in primary human T-Cells without the risk of integration-mediated genotoxicity and we are currently developing a range of novel DNA vectors for anti-tumour immunotherapy.This DNA vector can also be used to genetically modify stem cells and we have recently shown for the first time that we can generate stable mouse embryonic cell lines and can generate transgenic mice from these modified cells.

Martin Hildebrandt

Vice-Director, Department of Transfusion Medicine, Cell Therapeutics and Haemostasis, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Munich

Armand Keating

Director, Cell Therapy Program, University of Toronto

Paul Kemp

CEO, HairClone

Sven Kili

CEO, Antion Biosciences

Dr Sven Kili joined Antion as CEO in November 2020. He brings extensive, relevant clinical and industry expertise to grow Antion into a leading Cell and Gene Therapy company. He was previously the Head of Development for the Cell and Gene Therapy division of GSK Rare Diseases where he led teams developing and commercializing ex vivo Gene Therapies for a variety of rare genetic disorders including Strimvelis®, the first ex vivo gene therapy to be approved for children with ADA-SCID; Wiskott - Aldrich syndrome (WAS); Metachromatic Leukodystrophy (MLD) and Beta-Thalassemia. Prior to this, he was Senior Director, Cell Therapy and Regenerative Medicine for Sanofi (Genzyme) Biosurgery where he led the clinical development, approval and commercialization activities of the first combined ATMP approval in the EU for MACI®. He and his team also prepared and submitted Advanced Therapy regulatory filings for Australia and the US, including health technology assessments and he was responsible for late-stage developments for Carticel® and Epicel® in the US. Before joining Genzyme, Sven led the cell therapy activities and oversaw all UK & Irish regulatory functions, and was the QPPV for pharmacovigilance for Geistlich Pharma. 

Sven also sits on the boards of CCRM in Canada, Xintela (a Swedish Stem Cell company), and the SAB for LGC Corporation, and is the chair of the CGTAC as part of the UK BIA and a Board member of the Standards Co-ordinating Body for Regenerative Medicine. Most recently, Sven was appointed as Chair of the UCL course “Masters in Manufacture and Commercialization of Stem Cell and Gene Therapies” steering committee. Additionally, he still maintains his clinical skills in the UK NHS and serves as an ATLS Instructor in his spare time.

Michael Klichinsky

Co-founder and VP, Discovery Research, ‎Carisma Therapeutics

Michael is a co-inventor of the CAR Macrophage technology and a scientific co-founder of Carisma Therapeutics Inc. In his role as VP of Discovery Research, he oversees the research & discovery efforts of the company.Michael developed CAR Macrophages during his doctoral thesis under the co-mentorship of Saar Gill and Carl June at the University of Pennsylvania. Michael’s scientific expertise is in the intersection of immunology, synthetic biology, cancer immunotherapy, and translational pharmacology. Michael previously earned a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the University of Sciences in Philadelphia, and a PhD in Pharmacology from the University of Pennsylvania.

Karen Kozarsky

Co-founder & Chief Scientific Officer, SwanBio Therapeutics

Karen Kozarsky, Ph.D., has 25 years of experience in gene therapy, with a primary focus on the development of gene therapy for inherited rare diseases utilizing adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors. Dr. Kozarsky has deep experience evaluating potential therapeutic opportunities, identifying new areas, and developing products from the earliest preclinical stages through IND. She has been involved in the development of multiple gene therapy products that are in clinical trials. Previously, Dr. Kozarsky was President of Vector BioPartners, VP of R&D at REGENXBIO Inc., and Head, Gene Therapy in the GlaxoSmithKline Biopharmaceutical Center of Excellence for Drug Discovery. Prior to that, she was a Research Assistant Professor at the University of Pennsylvania in the Institute for Human Gene Therapy, and completed postdoctoral fellowships at the University of Michigan in gene therapy and in immunology. Dr. Kozarsky was named by the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine as the first co-Chair of the Gene Therapy Section to support policies to advance novel gene therapies, and has been a committee member for the American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy. Dr. Kozarsky received a Ph.D. in Biology from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a B.A. in Biology from Amherst College.

Joanne Kurtzberg

Director, Carolinas Cord Blood Bank, Duke University 

     

Tamara Laskowski

Senior Director / Head of Clinical Development - Personalized Medicine, Lonza

Dr. Tamara J. Laskowski received her doctorate degree in Human Molecular Genetics and Immunology from University of Texas Health Science Center where her work focused on genome editing of patient-derived stem cells to correct genetic mutations causative of Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome, an immunodeficiency disorder that results in severe impairments to the immune system.  Subsequently, Tamara joined Dr. Laurence J.N. Cooper’s laboratory at MD Anderson Cancer Center as a fellow. Her work focused on engineering stem cells with the goal of generating off-the-shelf NK and T-cell immunotherapies for targeting solid tumor malignancies. Though Tamara remains as a collaborator in the Cooper laboratory, her work has led her to transition to Dr. James Allison’s Immunotherapy Platform at MD Anderson.  In her new role as Senior Research Scientist, Dr. Laskowski’s work primarily involves immune-monitoring of patients undergoing clinical trials in Immunotherapy and development of novel immunoassays. Dr. Laskowski also shares an interest in technology innovation, and has developed multi-plex assays for testing therapies against solid tumors. In 2017, this work led to an invitation to participate in the National Science Foundation (NSF) Innovation Corps, an exclusive program through which she was trained to develop strategies for expanding the economic and societal benefits of innovative ideas which have commercialization potential. She was the sole recipient of an award for outstanding performance upon completion of the program.  In addition to her research work, Dr. Laskowski participates in several educational programs at MD Anderson. She is a lecturer at MD Anderson’s School of Health Professions and also serves as a scientific communications coach teaching students and fellows how to effectively communicate science and medicine with scientific and lay audiences.


Christine Lebec

Head of CMC Gene Therapy, Sensorion Pharma

Christine Lebec, PhD, joined Sensorion Pharma, a small biotech company, in early 2020 as Head of CMC Gene Therapy. She is responsible for CMC development (process & analytical development, product characterization) including non-clinical and clinical manufacturing, CMC transfer to CDMO/CRO and CMC regulatory issues. Prior to joining Sensorion Pharma, she worked for more than 20 years at Genethon, a French non-profit organization, in the field of Gene Therapy vectors (AAV, lentivirus, baculovirus) for rare diseases. She has a strong expertise in the development, qualification, validation of analytical methods for product characterization, release testing of gene therapy products and in stability studies. She also has a solid knowledge of international regulations and reviewing CMC documents for clinical applications.


Michael Leek

Executive Chairman & Founder, TC BioPharm

Michael Leek is the Executive Chairman & Founder at TC BioPharm. Michael was previously CEO of both TC BioPharm and an orthobiologicals company, and he also worked with a clinical team developing an autologous infusion of stem cells to initiate regeneration of new hepatic tissue. He was jointly responsible for moving Intercytex from a pre-clinical research company, to an AIM-listed biotech with several cell therapy products in the clinic. Michael is also a Fellow of the Royal Society of Medicine and Honorary Lecturer at the University of Aberdeen, School of Medical Sciences. In 2017, he was presented with the ‘Scottish Life-Sciences Entrepreneurial Business Leadership’ award.

Mark Lowdell

Director of Cellular Therapy & Biobanking at the Centre for Cell, Gene & Tissue Therapy, Royal Free London NHS FT & UCL; Chief Scientific Officer and Chief Manufacturing Officer, InMuneBio

Mark trained as an immunopathologist at the Royal London Hospital and moved to the Royal Free Hospital / UCL in 1994 to set up the immunotherapy programme in malignant haematology. He has specialist knowledge of cellular therapeutics and is the UK representative on the Joint Accreditation Committee ISCT/EBMT (JACIE) which is responsible for setting and co-ordinating standards for cellular therapies across Europe. Mark holds Qualified Person status for the release of investigational somatic cell therapy medicinal products in the EU and is a Designated Individual under a Human Tissue Authority licence for therapeutic cells. Mark has been a Chief Scientific Officer and Chief Manufacturing Officer since the formation of the InMuneBio in September 2015. Since February 2009, he has also been Director of Cellular Therapy at the Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust. He received his PhD in clinical immunology from London Hospital Medical College, University of London in 1992 and is a qualified immunopathologist.

Geoff Mackay

CEO, Avrobio

Geoff is an experienced CEO with proven success leading innovative businesses. While CEO of Organogenesis Inc., the company treated 1 million patients with living cell therapies, received the first FDA CBER allogeneic cell-therapy approval and achieved an unparalleled position within regenerative medicine. Geoff was founding CEO of eGenesis, applying CRISPR Cas-9 gene editing to xenotransplantation. Geoff spent 11 years at Novartis in senior leadership positions within the Global Transplantation & Immunology franchise. Past activities include Chairman of the Board of MassBio, Chairman of the Board of the Alliance of Regenerative Medicine, and Advisory Council to the Health Policy Commission for Massachusetts. Through his public and private enterprise work, Geoff is dedicated to applying innovation to reshape and improve the quality of healthcare.

Aby Matthew

Senior Vice President & Chief Technology Officer, BioLife Solutions

Dr. Mathew was part of the founding team of BioLife Solutions, Inc., and is a co-developer of BioLife’s biopreservation media solutions. He is a co-inventor on multiple issued and pending patents related to methods, devices, and formulations for the preservation of cells, tissues, and organs. He holds a Ph.D. in Biological Sciences within the Biochemistry, Cell and Molecular Biology Program from Binghamton University and a B.S. in Microbiology from Cornell University. Dr. Mathew has been researching low temperature biopreservation since 1994, and his studies contributed to the development of BioLife’s current commercial HypoThermosol® and CryoStor® product platforms and intellectual property foundation. Dr. Mathew was part of the scientific team that linked cell death via apoptosis (programmed cell death) to exposure to hypothermic and/or freezing temperatures. These discoveries were integral to the development of BioLife’s intracellular-like biopreservation media, and also contributed to improvements in cryosurgical ablation of cancer. Dr. Mathew was BioLife’s first Director of Manufacturing, established BioLife’s initial Quality system, and has been Executive Vice President & Chief Scientific Officer since December 2019. From February 2011 through November 2019, Dr. Mathew served as Senior Vice President & Chief Technology Officer. From January 2007 through February 2011, Dr. Mathew served as Senior Scientist, Director of Strategic Relations, and Senior Director of Strategic Relations. From June 2003 through January 2007, Dr. Mathew served as Director of Manufacturing. From September 2000 through June 2003, Dr. Mathew served as Clinical Accounts Manager and Director of Hypothermic Preservation for Cryomedical Sciences/BioLife Solutions. Dr. Mathew is currently active in, or previously a member of, AABB (formerly the American Association of Blood Banks), BEST (the Biomedical Excellence for Safer Transfusion collaborative), the International Society for Cell and Gene Therapy (ISCT), the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine (ARM), Tissue Engineering & Regenerative Medicine International Society (TERMIS), Society for Cryobiology, International Society for Biological and Environmental Repositories (ISBER), American Society for Cell Biology, and the Society for In Vitro Biology. Dr. Mathew is a member of: the Board of Directors, and Advisory Panel, of the Parent’s Guide to Cord Blood Foundation, the Scientific Advisory Board of HemaCare Corporation, the founding Board of Directors of the Cord Blood Association, the NIST-AMTech National Cell Manufacturing Consortium, the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM) Clinical Advisory Panel, the Business Advisory Board of RoosterBio Inc., and the Scientific Advisory Board of SAVSU Technologies. Dr. Mathew has obtained UCLA Corporate Governance Program Certification.

Kirstin Matthews

Fellow in Science and Technology Policy, Baker Institute, Rice University

Kirstin R.W. Matthews, Ph.D., is a fellow in science and technology policy at the Baker Institute. She is also a lecturer in the Department of BioSciences in the Wiess School of Natural Sciences. In addition, she is a track advisor for the Wiess School of Natural Sciences’ Professional Science Master in Biosciences and Health Policy. Matthews directs the activities of the Baker Institute Science and Technology Policy Program, and the Center for Health and Biosciences’ Biomedical Research Program. Her research focuses on ethical and policy issues at the intersection between traditional biomedical research and public policy. Specifically, she focuses on regulation and ethical issues associated with emerging biotechnology, including stem cells and genomic medicine. Matthews also leads a project to review scientific advice in and to the federal government, including the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy and the President’s Council of Advisors for Science and Technology. Matthews has a B.A. in biochemistry from The University of Texas at Austin and a Ph.D. in molecular biology from The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston.

Michael May

CEO, Centre for Commercialization of Regenerative Medicine (CCRM)

Jan Joseph (Jos) Melenhorst

Director, Cell Therapy & Immuno-Engineering Program & Vice Chair, Center for Immunotherapy & Precision Immuno-Oncology, Cleveland Clinic

Dr. Jan Joseph (Jos) Melenhorst obtained his PhD at the LUMC (Department of Hematology) on the pathogenesis of Aplastic Anemia. In 1998 he moved to Bethesda, Maryland, where he did his research ‐ first as a postdoc, later as a staff scientist ‐ in the laboratory of Dr. John Barrett at the National Institutes of Health, on the immunobiology of marrow failure syndromes, leukemic disorders, and allogeneic stem cell transplantation. In 2012 he was recruited by Dr. Bruce Levine and Dr. Carl June to the University of Pennsylvania, first as Deputy Director of their clinical manufacturing (cGMP) facility. After a year he was promoted to Director of Product Development & Correlative Sciences. In this role, he was at the cusp of the first ever CAR T cell therapy approved by FDA: Kymriah. Dr. Melenhorst is interested in understanding and improving the anti-tumor efficacy and safety of adoptively transferred chimeric antigen receptor-modified T cells through correlative, mechanistic, and functional genomics approaches.

Emma Morris

Professor of Clinical Cell and Gene Therapy, University College London

David Morrow

ATMP & Vaccine Scientific Program Manager, EATRIS

Dr David Morrow is the ATMP and Vaccine Scientific Program Manager at EATRIS C&S. David received a BSc (Hons) in Molecular Biology from University College Dublin in 2001 and a PhD in Vascular Biology from Dublin City University in 2006. This was followed by an American Heart Association Postdoctoral Fellowship at the University of Rochester Medical Center, NY from 2006-08 which resulted in an American Heart Association Young Investigator Award in 2008. From 2009-2015 he was an NIH/American Heart funded Principal investigator heading multiple projects in Cardiovascular disease and Cancer. David also holds an MBA in health science management and has worked as a consultant and in technology transfer in lifesciences. David has recently authored papers and being invited as guest speaker at panel discussions at international conferences discussing the major bottlenecks in ATMP development.


John Moscariello

Vice President, Cell Therapy Drug Product Process Development, Bristol Myers Squibb

John Moscariello, Ph.D. Senior Director, Viral Vector and Gene Editing Process Development, Juno Therapeutics, a Celgene Company. John joined Celgene in 2018 and serves as the Senior Director of Viral Vector and Gene Editing Process Development. Prior to joining Celgene, John was the Vice President of Process Development at AGC Biologics (formerly CMC Biologics) where his organization was responsible for all cell line development, upstream and downstream process development, analytical and formulation development, and technology transfer and technical manufacturing support. Prior to AGC Biologics, John held director-level positions at Amgen, focused on process development and characterization, clinical and commercial technology transfer and process validation. John has a Ph.D. in chemical and biological engineering from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a bachelors of chemical engineering from the University of Delaware.

Claudio Mussolino

Group Leader, Genome and Epigenome Engineering, University of Freiberg

Amit Nathwani

Director of the Katharine Dormandy Haemophilia Centre, Royal Free Hospital, London

Christiane Niederlaender

Vice President Technical, Parexel

Christiane has spent 9 years at the UK medicines regulator MHRA, most recently as the Unit Manager of the Biologicals Unit. In that capacity she chaired and oversaw all formal scientific advice meetings and had in-depth involvement of Brexit preparedness. At the same time Christiane was a Senior Assessor and the UK delegate at the EMA committee for advanced therapies (CAT). She was UK CAT Rapporteur responsible for managing the portfolio of all UK ATMP products (cell and gene therapies). She was also the Rapporteur for the EMA CAT Gene Therapy Guideline and quality lead for gene therapy section of new draft guideline for investigational ATMPs. She was a drafting group member in all other quality related ATMP drafting groups, including GMP for ATMPs. Prior to joining MHRA, Christiane worked with the UK regulator for the European Tissues and Cells Directive as a quality manager and inspector.

Nicole Nuñez

Regulatory Scientist II, Eureka Therapeutics, Inc.

Nicole is a scientist dedicated to understanding the molecular biology of cancer as well as developing novel drugs for its treatment. She currently serves Eureka Therapeutics as a Regulatory Scientist focusing on the development and implementation of regulatory strategies for their T-cell therapy and vector products. Previously, as a Process Development Scientist for Eureka Therapeutics, she co-led the process development, manufacture, tech transfer, quality control, and vendor management of lentiviral vectors to be used in the production of T-cell based therapies. Prior to this she served as a Research Scientist for ARIZ Precision Medicine, and aided in the development of the scientific rational and generation of novel target specific RNA-based anti-cancer therapeutics. She was also a Biologics Analytical Chemistry Intern at Gilead Sciences, performing mass spectrometry-based method development research on biopharmaceuticals. She holds a Ph.D. in Bioorganic Chemistry with a Designated Emphasis in Biotechnology from U.C. Davis and a M.S. in Biochemistry from San Francisco State University. She is the co-author of several published research publications, scientific reviews, provisional patents and a DNA repair textbook chapter.

Ioannis Papantoniou

Adjunct Professor & ATMP Research coordinator, Prometheus, KU Leuven

Ioannis Papantoniou is a Chemical Engineer by training (graduated from the University of Patras, Greece) and is currently a Principal Investigator at the Institute of Chemical Engineering Sciences at the Foundation of Research&Technology-Hellas and a visiting Professor at Prometheus, KU Leuven. He obtained his PhD at Department of Biochemical Engineering, University College London funded by the National Scholarship Foundation of Greece. Subsequently he joined KU Leuven where he obtained funding to initiate an autonomous research track and is currently ATMP Research coordinator, within Prometheus – the KU Leuven division of skeletal tissue Engineering. He is active in addressing bioprocessing/translational challenges that would allow scalable and robust manufacturing of adult progenitor/stem cells, required for moving ATMPs for skeletal healing into the clinic. His task is to promote interfaces with industrial partners aiming at valorising research solutions generated within the platform along the entire ATMP bioprocess pipeline and has initiated several collaborations at the academia/industry interface. His research aims are to: Design and engineer progressively complex yet autonomous skeletal 3D living implants adopting breakthroughs in organoid technologies (Tissue engineered ATMPs); Develop a panel of metrics to enable quantitative definition of biologic events ensuring activation and maintenance of mechanism of action; Link therapeutic functionality upon implantation to the patient to in vitro quality attributes of skeletal ATMPs; Develop automated devices that can contribute to a cell therapy industry 4.0 equivalent. Integrate in silico derived tools for a self-regulated/adaptive manufacture of next generation living implants.

Anne Plant

NIST Fellow, National Institute of Standards and Technology

Dr. Plant was recently awarded the title of NIST Fellow, and previously served as Chief of the Biosystems and Biomaterials Division at National Institute of Standards and Technology, an agency of the U.S. Department of Commerce. She has served in the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy and on National Science and Technology Council committees, co-founded the ASTM International Committee F04.46 on Standards for Cell Signaling, and is currently an ex officio member of the NIBIB National Advisory Council for Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering. She is a Fellow of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering, and an American Association for the Advancement of Science Fellow. Her research interests focus on robust quantification of cell response through quantitative cell imaging, and theoretical approaches for prediction of complex biological response.

Qasim Rafiq

Associate Professor of Cell & Gene Therapy Bioprocess Engineering, University College London

Dr Qasim Rafiq is an Associate Professor at University College London in Cell and Gene Therapy Bioprocess Engineering. He is a multidisciplinary engineer working at the life science, engineering and commercial interfaces with a research focus on the bioprocessing, automation and biomanufacture of cell and gene-based therapies. He has specific interest in addressing the large-scale manufacturing challenges and enhancing process and product understanding to enable successful translation from the laboratory to the clinic. Qasim currently leads a research portfolio of > £2.5M as Principal Investigator and leads the Cell and Gene Therapy Bioprocess Engineering group at UCL which includes 4 post-doctoral researchers and 7 PhD students. Projects focus on addressing both upstream and downstream process development challenges for the production of patient-specific and universal donor ATMPs for a range of clinical applications. Product applications include stem cells (mesenchymal, haematopoietic and pluripotent), extracellular vesicles and gene-modified T-cells. He is also Programme Director of a new MSc programme launching in September 2020 entitled “Manufacture and Commercialisation of Stem Cell and Gene Therapies”. Prior to joining UCL, he was an Assistant Professor at Aston University where he established the Bioprocess Engineering Group. He completed his PhD at Loughborough University investigating the scalable manufacture of human mesenchymal stem cells in bioreactors where he was the first to demonstrate the litre-scale production of hMSCs on microcarriers in stirred-tank bioreactors. He is both a Chartered Engineer (CEng) and Chartered Scientist (CSci) and sits on multiple scientific and engineering committees including the IChemE Biochemical Engineering Subject Interest Group, British Standards Institute Biotechnology Committee and the BIA’s Cell and Gene Therapy Advisory Committee.

Brock Reeve

Executive Director, Harvard Stem Cell Institute

Brock Reeve has been the Executive Director of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute since 2006. In partnership with the Faculty Directors, he has overall responsibility for the operations and strategy of the Institute which is comprised of the schools of Harvard University and its affiliated hospitals and research institutions. Under the leadership of its Executive Committee, HSCI invests in scientific research and its faculty has grown to include over 370 Principal and Affiliated members. The Institute is engaged with several leading pharmaceutical companies and foundations in joint research projects and its faculty have founded over 40 stem cell-related startup companies and serve on leading Scientific Advisory Boards.

Brock came to HSCI from the commercial sector with extensive experience in both management consulting and operations for technology-based companies, with a focus on life sciences. Prior to Harvard, Brock was COO and Managing Director of Life Science Insights a consulting and market research firm specializing in information technology in life sciences.  As a consultant, Brock has additional experience in the healthcare/life sciences market with IBM, Viant Corp. and SRI Consulting, where his clients included some of the leading pharmaceutical, biotechnology and medical device companies.  

Brock received a BA and MPhil from Yale University and an MBA from Harvard Business School.

Louise Rodino-Klapac

Senior Vice President, Gene Therapy, Sarepta Therapeutics

Dr. Rodino-Klapac is a gene therapy pioneer who has dedicated her professional life to advancing medicines designed to treat genetically based diseases. With professional experience across industry and academia, she is renowned for her contributions to molecular genetics and gene therapy that have advanced the field. She is author to a vast body of published, peer-reviewed work, the recipient of multiple awards, a National Institutes of Health (NIH) Fellow appointee, and current Board member of the Association for Regenerative Medicine, as well as a member of the American Society for Gene and Cell Therapy, the American Academy of Neurology, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. She is the former head of the Laboratory for Gene Therapy Research at Nationwide Children’s Hospital, established the Gene Therapy Center of Excellence within Sarepta and leads the Company’s Gene Editing Innovation Center, directing a team of researchers to discover and develop novel gene replacement and gene editing therapies. She co-founded and served as chief scientific officer of Myonexus Therapeutics, a gene therapy company focused on limb-girdle muscular dystrophies acquired by Sarepta in 2019. She currently serves as Sarepta’s Executive Vice President, Chief Scientific Officer. Her work has led to 11 investigational new drug applications and she is the co-inventor of SRP-9001, an investigational micro-dystrophin gene therapy, and the inventor of five investigational gene therapies for limb-girdle muscular dystrophy. She is the inventor of over 50 U.S. and over 70 international published patent applications. She earned her Ph.D. in molecular genetics form the Ohio State University and graduated summa cum laude from Kings College in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, with a Bachelor of Science degree in Biology.

Paula Salmikangas

Director of Biopharmaceuticals & ATMP, NDA Group AB

Dr. Salmikangas is a clinical biochemist by original training, with a Ph.D. in muscle cell biology. Her main research work career has been in cell and molecular biology of various inherited diseases. Since 2006, she has been an Adjunct Professor of Biochemistry for the University of Helsinki. Dr. Salmikangas joined NDA in 2017 from her position as a Research Professor at the Finnish Medicines Agency (2003-2017). She has served as a member of the EMA Committee for Advanced Therapies (CAT) from 2009 to 2017 and as the Chair of the CAT 2014-2017. She has also been the Chair of EMA CPWP and a member of the BWP. Her main areas of expertise are biological medicinal products, especially advanced therapy medicinal products, CMC and immunogenicity aspects of biopharmaceuticals.

Beatriz San Martin

Partner, Arnold & Porter

Beatriz San Martin is an intellectual property specialist focusing her practice on the life sciences sector and emerging/disruptive technologies. She has significant experience handling cases before the UK Courts and the Court of Justice of the European Union, including high-profile European litigation. Beatriz was formerly a scientist with a Wellcome Trust PhD and a postdoctoral from the University of Cambridge specializing in genetics, cellular, and molecular biology. She is a member of the UK BioIndustry Association Cell & Gene Therapy Advisory Committee and Engineering Biology Advisory Committee.

Stefan Scheding

Division Head, Molecular Hematology, Lund Stem Cell Center, Lund University

Stefan Scheding, MD, is a professor and senior consultant in hematology at the University Hospital in Lund, Sweden. He has a long-standing experience in stem cell research and transplantation as well as a track record of establishing and leading clinical stem cell transplantation laboratories. Currently, he is heading the “Bone Marrow Stem Cell and Cellular Therapies” research group at the renowned Lund Stem Cell Center, and he is acting head of the Stem Cell Center division. Dr. Scheding is representing the Southern Swedish Medical Region in the Swedish Cell Therapy Project (Vävnadsrådet) and he is currently the vice chair of the board and WP leader in the Swedish National ATMP Consortium, CAMP.

Shintaro Sengoku

Associate Professor, Graduate School of Innovation Management, Tokyo Institute of Technology

Shintaro Sengoku (Dr Sci., molecular biology, the University of Tokyo, Japan, 2001) is an Associate Professor and Principal Investigator of School of Environment and Society, Tokyo Institute of Technology and a Visiting Associate Professor of the Institute for Future Initiatives, the University of Tokyo. He has professional experience in advisory services at McKinsey&Company (2001-05) and Fast Track Initiative, Inc., a venture capital focusing on biotechnology and healthcare industries (2005-07); research and education experience in the field of management of technology and innovation research at Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, the University of Tokyo (2005-07), International Collaborative Center, Kyoto University (2008-09) and Institute for Integrated Cell-Material Sciences (WPI-iCeMS), Kyoto University (2009-14).

Nolan Sutherland

Senior Scientist, Ring Therapeutics

Nolan Sutherland graduated from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst with a BS in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology where his research areas of focus were on molecular cloning and RNAi. Over the past 10 years he has worked in both Upstream and Downstream Process Development roles, getting his start in the area of enzyme replacement therapies before being hired into the Vector PD team at bluebird bio. Since that time, the majority of Nolan’s work has been on developing suspension-based lentiviral vector production systems for commercial manufacturing. His areas of focus include process development, optimization and improvement at the miniature and bench-scales, nanoparticle analysis and characterization, as well as scale-up and tech transfer.

Jan Thirkettle

Chief Executive Officer, Transine Therapeutics

JAN THIRKETTLE is Chief Executive Officer of Transine Therapeutics. He was previously Chief Development Officer at Freeline, a Syncona-funded start-up focused on liver-directed AAV gene therapy. Jan has extensive experience in the development and deployment of novel platforms including natural product and enzyme derived NCEs, biologics and gene therapies. Prior to joining Freeline Jan led the establishment of GSK’s Cell & Gene Therapy platform and was responsible for CMC/supply for Strimvelis, the first ex vivo gene therapy to receive an EU Marketing Authorisation Application. He has held industry positions spanning from discovery to commercial manufacturing, but is most passionate about late-state development, new technology introduction and project delivery. Jan holds an MA in Chemistry and a PhD in Biological Chemistry from Oxford University.

Adrian Thrasher

Professor of Paediatric Immunology and Wellcome Trust Principal Research Fellow at the UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health (UCL GOSICH)

Andrew D. Tustian

Senior Director, Preclinical Manufacturing and Process Development, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals

Andrew leads the viral vector process development group at Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, focused on developing bioprocesses for Adeno-associated virus (AAV) based viral vectors. Andrew has worked at Regeneron since 2009. Prior to moving to gene therapy Andrew co-led the purification development group for protein therapeutics, working on Fc-fusion, monoclonal antibody, and bispecific processes. He has worked on the process development for the FDA-approved drugs Dupixent®, Libtayo®, Inmazeb™, Kevzara®, Evkeeza™ and Praluent®, and helped develop the bispecific antibody platform at Regeneron. Andrew received his doctorate in biochemical engineering from University College London and his undergraduate masters in biochemistry from the University of Oxford.

Phil Vanek

CTO & Partner, Gamma Biosciences

General Manager of GE Healthcare’s Cell and Gene Therapy business development and strategy, a business formed to address the unique challenges of cell and gene therapy manufacturing and distribution. Prior to joining GE, Phil was Head of Business Development for Cell Therapy, and later Head of Innovation for Lonza’s life science business. Phil’s career has included a number of innovation, business and market development roles at Becton Dickinson, Invitrogen, and Life Technologies, as well as two start-up biotechnology companies in the Washington, DC area. Additionally, Phil was an Instructor for Johns Hopkins University Advanced Academic Programs teaching Biotechnology Marketing in the Masters of Biotechnology / MBA program. Phil received his Ph.D. in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology from Georgetown University Medical Center and subsequently held an IRTA fellowship at the National Cancer Institute in the Laboratory of Molecular Oncology and the Hollings Cancer Center in Charleston, South Carolina. Phil is an active board member of the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine and the ARM Foundation, as well as the Centre for Commercialization of Regenerative Medicine (CCRM) in Toronto. Additionally, Phil serves on several advisory boards in both not-for-profit and for-profit organizations and associations. Phil has published a number of industry position pieces and serves on the Editorial Board of Cell and Gene Therapy Insights.

Xiuyan Wang

Assistant Director, Michael G.Harris Cell Therapy & Cell Engineering Facility, Associate Laboratory Member, Department of Molecular Pharmacology, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

Dr. Wang was trained by Dr. Adolfo García-Sastre and received her Ph.D. in Biomedical Sciences from the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York. She joined Dr. Peter Cresswell’s laboratory in the Department of Immunology at Yale University as a Howard Hughes Medical Institute fellow, and later as a Cancer Research Institute postdoctoral associate. Dr. Wang joined Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in 2007, and is currently the Associate Director of the Michael G Harris Cell Therapy and Cell Engineering Facility, and an Associate Lab Member in the Department of Molecular Pharmacology. Dr. Wang is in charge of the R&D, process development and manufacturing. She has overseen the successful manufacturing of all the CAR T cell products used in 13 phase I/II clinical trials, over 20 batches of cGMP grade viral vectors, as well as tech transfers to multiple industrial partners. She served in the translational science and product development committee in the American Society of Gene and Cell Therapy (ASGCT). She is currently a member for the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI) independent external expert panel and a committee member for the Alliance of Regenerate Medicine (ARM) and the National Institute for Innovation in Manufacturing Biopharmaceuticals (NIIMBL).

Mike West

Founder & CEO, AgeX Therapeutics, Inc.

Charles Wilfong

Global Vice President - Information Management, Bioinformatics, Facilities & Bioprocess Engineering, Adaptimmune

Charles Wilfong is Vice President of Information Management and Facilities Engineering functions at Adaptimmune, where he is responsible for global strategies and operations. He has 23 years experience across the pharmaceutical, biotechnology and engineering industries supporting Research, Clinical, Manufacturing and Commercial functions. Charles has led several large cross-functional change management initiatives to digitize core business process and make better use of data and analytics. He has a Bachelor of Architectural Engineering from the Pennsylvania State University, and a Master of Business Administration and Master of Public and International Affairs from University of Pittsburgh.

Christopher Wiwi

Vice President Technical Operations, Mnemo Therapeutics

Prior to joining Mnemo Therapeutics, Chris Wiwi served as the Technical Commercialization Team lead for bb2121, Celgene’s 1st in class anti-BCMA CAR T product for patients with relapsed refractory multiple myeloma. His team was responsible for ensuring a successful global launch of bb2121, in collaboration with Celgene’s partner, bluebird bio. Chris worked on the bb2121 program since its inception, in both functional leadership and team leadership roles. Most recently, he served as the CMC team lead, where he was responsible for all CMC aspects of bb2121 from IND phase to global registration. Under Chris’ leadership, the bb2121 team initiated clinical development in the United States, Europe, Canada and Japan, and completed enrollment for bb2121’s global registration study, KarMMa-1. Previously, Chris was head of Analytical Research & Development for Celgene’s cell therapy organization, where he built and led the analytical development, validation and QC teams that were responsible for the advancement of multiple novel cellular therapy and biomaterials candidates from research to clinical manufacturing. Chris is a recognized leader in the cell therapy field internally and externally. He is a graduate of Celgene’s accelerated leadership program (Catalyst) reserved for top talent across the organization. Chris is very active in coaching and mentoring staff and was recently nominated for Celgene’s Mentor of the Year award. Chris is regularly invited to speak at external conferences, serves on the board of directors for the Standards Coordinating Body and has been active in the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine. Prior to joining Celgene, Chris worked in biologics at Schering-Plough and Merck as a leader in large molecule analytics. Chris received his B.S. in Biology from the University of Notre Dame, his Ph.D. in Cell and Molecular Biology from Boston University, and carried out postdoctoral work at Johnson & Johnson.

Lynn Zechiedrich

Kyle & Josephine Morrow Chair & Professor in Molecular Virology & Microbiology, Baylor College of Medicine

Lynn Zechiedrich, Ph.D. is the Kyle and Josephine Morrow Chair and Professor in Microbiology at Baylor College of Medicine. She developed minivectors to study DNA, the enzymes that act on DNA, and the antibiotic and anticancer drugs that inhibit these enzymes. Minivectors also proved to be excellent gene therapy delivery vectors. Among other honors, she won a New Investigator Award from the Burroughs Wellcome Fund, a Curtis Hankamer Research Award, and funding from the Human Frontier Science Program. She is a Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors. She was Baylor College of Medicine's BRASS Mentor of the Year in 2013. She holds two issued U.S. patents and three issued foreign patents that are licensed to Twister Biotech, Inc., a company she founded in 2011, and has multiple patents pending. She has published more than 60 articles and book chapters and given over 170 invited talks. She served on numerous grant review committees, reviews for 40 different peer-reviewed journals, ranging from mathematics and physics to microbiology and gene therapy, and serves on multiple editorial boards

Yan Zhi

Director, Cell and Gene Therapy Product Owner, Process Engineering, CSL Behring

After postdoctoral research training with Dr. James M. Wilson at Institute of Human Gene Therapy, University of Pennsylvania, Yan had spent over 15 years in global contract testing organizations (WuXi AppTec and Charles River Laboratories) to provide scientific leadership to Biologics testing services with the strong focus on cell and gene therapy industry as well as a global contract development and manufacturing organization (Fujifilm Diosynth Biotechnologies) to design cell and gene therapy product development programs from clinical to commercial manufacturing. In 2020, Yan joined Spirovant Sciences, Inc. to lead the analytical development and develop CMC strategy of a novel serotype AAV based in vivo gene therapy product for IND submission. Since 2022, Yan has been working with CMC, regulatory, quality, supply, and commercial teams at CSL Behring to support commercial launch of an AAV gene therapy product as well as manufacturing process and analytical methods transfer to a second site for future registration. Yan received a PhD in Microbiology and Molecular Genetics from University of California, Irvine, and a BA in Molecular Biology from University of Science & Technology of China. She is a leading author and co-author of numerous publications in peer-reviewed scientific journals and a patent holder.