Cell Line Engineering and Synthetic Biology track banner

The complexity of biotherapeutics and the increasing demands of “faster, better, more economical” resonate with recombinant protein expression and production researchers. To meet these goals, protein scientists are exploring new engineering tools to make biology easier to “engineer.” These biology-based toolboxes can change how we build biological systems and expand the range of possible bioproducts. Ultimately, these tools must be weighed against traditional expression and production strategies to achieve the desired quantity and quality. The Cell Line Engineering and Synthetic Biology conference features effective engineering strategies for protein expression and production research that lead to functional protein products. Learn from seasoned, savvy researchers as they share their real-world experiences, applications and results.

Tuesday, 2 November

07:00 Registration and Morning Coffee

CHO CELL LINE ENGINEERING & DEVELOPMENT

07:55

Chairperson's Opening Remarks

Johan Rockberg, PhD, Professor, Antibody Technology and Directed Evolution, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden
Greg Bleck, Vice President, R&D, Biologics, Biologics, Catalent Biologics

Catalent recently introduced GPEx Lightning, a fast, flexible way to shorten the path to production of phase 1 material. During this talk, we share the latest data leveraging GPEx Lightning to generate highly stable, highly productive cell pools and discuss how the GPEx suite of technologies can be tailored to the specific needs of each individual program on its path to clinical trials.

08:30

A Novel Hydrogen Peroxide Evolved CHO Host Can Improve the Expression of Difficult-to-Express Bispecific Antibodies

Rajesh Mistry, Senior Scientist, BioPharmaceuticals Development R&D, AstraZeneca

Strategies to boost cellular antioxidant capacity appear to be beneficial for recombinant protein expression. Here we showcase the use of a novel hydrogen-peroxide evolved CHO host in improving the expression of two difficult-to-express bispecific antibodies. We demonstrate that these improvements are linked to enhanced antioxidant capacity through the upregulation of diverse antioxidant defense genes as well as improved glutathione content.

09:00

Engineering of Chinese Hamster Ovary Cell Lipid Metabolism Results in an Expanded ER and Enhanced Recombinant Biotherapeutic Protein Production

James D. Budge, PhD, Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Kent

Lipid metabolism plays a key role in cellular processes, such as endoplasmic reticulum size and secretion, which are central to achieving high recombinant protein titres. We have developed a selection system based on the requirement of CHO cells to produce proline and employed this system to genetically engineer lipid metabolism in CHOK1-SV cells which resulted in endoplasmic reticulum expansion and enhanced recombinant protein titres between 1.5 and 9-fold.

09:30

CHO Cell Line Development and Engineering via Site-Specific Integration: Challenges and Opportunities

Jae Seong Lee, PhD, Associate Professor, Applied Chemistry & Biological Engineering, Ajou University

Recombinant CHO cell line development (CLD) has been a crucial step for therapeutic protein production platforms; however, this step remains time-consuming and costly. With the emergence of genome editing technology such as CRISPR/Cas9, site-specific integration has been successfully implemented in CHO cells for expediting the process of CLD. This presentation describes the trends in CHO CLD from random to targeted approaches. And I will cover the major obstacles faced in rational CHO CLD and the potential strategies employed to overcome its limitations. Finally, I conclude by discussing future directions and challenges for next-generation CHO cell factories.

  • NEW DATA - This Presentation Contains New Data
10:00 Coffee Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing
10:45

Finding the Needle in the Haystack – A New Method for Selecting High-Producing Stable Cells

Dennis Karthaus, MSc, Director, Protein Products & Assays, IBA Lifesciences

High producing stable mammalian cells are often required for producing recombinant proteins. Traditional methods like antibiotic selection cause high levels of cell stress during the selection or require high initial costs for instruments. Here, we present a new bead based method for generating high producing stable cell pools that avoids substantial negative effects on viability or cell growth after selection and that does not have high acquisition costs for instruments. Selected pools showed a threefold higher expression than puromycin selected cells. However, this method can also be combined with other selection technologies. *NEW DATA – This Presentation Contains New Data

11:15

A Platform for Precise Tuning of Protein Translation in Mammalian Cells for Improved Product Quality and Yield

Johan Rockberg, PhD, Professor, Antibody Technology and Directed Evolution, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden

Recombinant expression requires cells in balance for quality and yield. We present a toolbox for balancing protein translation in mammalian cells by RNA regulation elements (RgE) in the 5'-UTR. RgEs varying in thermodynamic stability lead to predictable dosage from 6-110% in mammalian cell lines. Applying these to tune expression of IgG heavy/light chains lead to up to 3.5-fold increased titers and reduction of IgG aggregates.

Lars Stöckl, PhD, Division Manager, FyoniBio - Service Branch of Glycotope

During the live cycle of a biopharmaceutical project the production needs to stay up to date with productivity and quality demands from early pre-clinical to market phase. Optimization can be done at different stages and on different levels with selecting the right cell line, selecting the right clone or optimizing the media/feed combination and / or optimizing process parameters. We provide case studies which address the different possibilities of optimization.

12:15 Session Break
Renee Tobias, Director, CLD Product Management, Marketing, Berkeley Lights Inc.

CHO cell line selection represents a painful bottleneck in biotherapeutic development, particularly for complex molecules like bispecifics. The Opto™ CLD workflow on the Beacon® system accelerates early CLD by integrating high throughput cell sorting, cloning, culture, productivity, growth, and product quality assays into a single, 5-day automated process. We will introduce new capabilities including on-chip detection of product aggregates and contaminating byproducts that pinpoint the best clones early on – saving valuable development time while de-risking the path to IND.

12:55 Session Break

STRATEGIES FOR ENHANCING & EXPANDING THE EXPRESSION TOOLBOX

13:45

Chairperson's Remarks

Peter Schmidt, PhD, Director, Recombinant Technologies, R&D, CSL Behring GmbH

Breakout Discussion: New Tools for Cell Line Development

Raja Srinivas, PhD, Co-Founder, Asimov, Inc.
  • Is the current "one size fits all" process to generating expressing cells sufficient for the multitude of new modalities we are witnessing
  • What genetic tools are being developed to address the key painpoints in cell line development?
  • What are ways to reduce timelines in cell line development?
  • Given complex modalities often lead to increased potency, is manufacturability a concern
  • Beyond titer considerations - how can we deal with CQAs with synthetic biology tools.
14:20

Engineered Glutathione S-Transferase Tag Suitable for High-Yield Soluble Expression at Low Temperature

Takanori Kigawa, PhD, Team Leader, Laboratory for Cellular Structural Biology, RIKEN Center for Biosystems Dynamics Research

Low temperature expression is an effective strategy to improve the solubility of aggregation-prone "difficult-to-express" proteins especially in case of the expression using E. coli. Glutathione S-transferase (GST) has been widely adopted as an affinity fusion tag, which has also been shown to promote the solubility of its fusion partners. We have developed engineered GSTs that can dramatically enhance the protein expression at low temperature. Our engineered GST is highly suitable for expressing and purifying proteins that tend to aggregate and/or be insoluble at normal temperature (30-37 ºC) if it combined with the low temperature expression strategy (10-25 ºC).

  • NEW DATA - This Presentation Contains New Data
14:50

A Synthetic Biology Approach Yielding Therapeutic Lanthionine-Constrained GPCR Agonists

Gert N. Moll, PhD, CEO & CSO, Lanthio Pharma

Lactococcus lactis bacteria have been engineered such that they can produce lanthionine-containing GPCR agonists. The lanthionine-constraint confers high GPCR specificity and in vivo stability. LP2 a lanthipeptide agonist of the angiotensin II type 2 receptor had in man a T1/2 of >2 hours in contrast to seconds of the natural ligands. High therapeutic efficacy in animal models of multiple diseases has been demonstrated for lanthionine-constrained peptide agonists of GPCRs.

15:20 KEYNOTE PRESENTATION:

A 'Poly-Transfection' Method for Rapid, One-Pot Characterization and Optimization of Genetic Systems

Ron Weiss, PhD, Professor, Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Synthetic biology is revolutionizing how we conceptualize and approach the engineering of biological systems. Recent advances in the field are allowing us to expand beyond the construction and analysis of small gene networks towards the implementation of complex multicellular systems with a variety of applications. I will describe our integrated computational/experimental approach to engineering complex behavior in a variety of cells, with a focus on mammalian cells.

15:50 Refreshment Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing
Alexandra Martiné, MSc, Project Leader, Cell Culture Automation, Selexis SA

Technology platforms are integral to the design, development and commercialization of recombinant biotherapeutics. We developed a versatile platform - SUREtechnology – that facilitates the effective combination of polypeptides. It provides convenience to produce complex protein scaffolds including antibodies, bispecifics, viruses, Fc-fusions, cytokines, and vaccine antigens. By enabling a robust expression of transgenes and enhanced throughput it enables the combination with metabolism interfering proteins to ease the expression of difficult-to-express scaffolds.

Takashi Ebihara, PhD, COO, GeneFrontier Corporation

Our unique platform technology named PUREfrex is a fully reconstituted (or rebuilt) cell-free protein expression system. It's easy to customize the system for various applications, and useful for high throughput screening of various kinds of biologics as well. Plus, we established robust ribosome display with customized PUREfrex named PUREfrexRD, which has great advantage in screening of highly diversified library to generate new antibodies or cyclic peptides.

17:20 PANEL DISCUSSION:

Protein Production Lab Challenges: Methodologies, Strategies, and the Art of Managing Multiple Projects

Panel Moderator:
Richard Altman, Field Application Scientist, Life Science Solutions, Thermo Fisher Scientific
Protein expression laboratories provide crucial support to drug discovery efforts.  As we would expect, there are numerous challenges in the effective operation of these critically needed facilities.  This panel discussion will focus on the concepts, technologies, and strategies necessary to meet the ever-increasing need for recombinant proteins. 
  • How to build an effective expression facility 
  • ​​Prioritizing projects or asking the right questions
  • Total workflow efficiency
  • Engaging and developing team members
  • The importance of tech development to long term success
Panelists:
Nicola Burgess-Brown, PhD, Associate Professor, Centre for Medicines Discovery (CMD), Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford
Dominic Esposito, PhD, Director, Protein Sciences, Frederick National Laboratory
Peter Schmidt, PhD, Director, Recombinant Technologies, R&D, CSL Behring GmbH
Bjørn Voldborg, MSc, Head, National Biologics Facility, DTU Bioengineering, Technical University of Denmark
18:05 Welcome Reception in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing

Explore new products and services in our Exhibit Hall, engage with poster presenters, schedule 1-on-1 meetings, and build your research community during this open networking period.

19:05 Close of Cell Line Engineering and Synthetic Biology