Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s 4th Annual

Emerging Immune Modulation Strategies

New Methodologies and Modalities for Profiling and Modulating Immune Responses

September 22, 2025 ALL TIMES EDT

There is increased awareness and heightened interest in learning more about the role of immune responses in diseases like cancer, neurodegeneration, fibrosis, autoimmune disorders, and more. Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s symposium on Emerging Immune Modulation Strategies highlights techniques and drug modalities being used to understand and target immune pathways and responses for drug discovery and therapy.

Monday, September 22

8:00 amPre-Conference Symposium Registration Open and Morning Coffee

8:50 amWelcome Remarks

EXPLORING DIVERSE MODALITIES

8:55 am

Chairperson's Remarks

Rakesh Dixit, PhD, DABT, CEO & President, Bionavigen Oncology, LLC; CSO, TMAB Therapeutics, Regio Biosciences

9:00 am

Harnessing Sphingolipid Biology for the Targeted Degradation of Immunoglobulins

Justin Wolfe, PhD, Co-Founder & CSO, Transcera

Transcera builds upon fundamental discoveries in sphingolipid biology to enable a new modality for extracellular protein degradation. By harnessing native ceramide trafficking pathways, Transcera develops novel degraders that work across multiple tissue types, have extended half-life for durable target depletion, and are simple to manufacture. With a rapidly advancing pipeline focused on immune disorders, we aim to transform the treatment landscape for chronic diseases driven by extracellular proteins.

9:30 am

RNAi Conjugates Targeting Tumor Microenvironment

Shanthi Ganesh, PhD, Senior Scientific Director, Global Nucleic Acid Therapies, Novo Nordisk

Refractory malignant tumors create an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME), which renders them resistant to standard-of-care immune checkpoint inhibitors. We developed RNAi agents to silence PD-L1 in tumor-associated immune cells, which mediate immune suppression in the TME. Silencing PD-L1 in antigen presenting cells remodeled the TME, increased cytotoxic T cell infiltration, and mediated single agent activity in immunotherapy-resistant pre-clinical tumors. Human active PDL1 RNAi is currently in Phase 1 clinical trials for immunotherapy-refractory cancers (NCT06504368).

10:00 am

Reprogramming the Fibrotic Niche: A New Frontier in Cell Therapy

Bishwas Shrestha, PhD, Co-Founder & CEO, Adjuva Bio Inc.

We are developing a cell engineering platform directed at pathogenic fibroblasts to locally modulate immune responses and disrupt fibrotic signaling in chronic diseases. Engineered fibroblasts are programmed to deliver immunomodulatory decoy receptors to reprogram diseased tissue environments as a means to  treat conditions like endometriosis and pulmonary fibrosis. We are pioneering a new class of cell therapies that reshape the fibrotic niche, including its immune landscape, toward a healthy state. We plan to develop an in vivo delivery method to expand clinical impact.

10:30 am Engineering the Chicken Immunoglobulin Loci to Diversify Novel Antigen-Binding Scaffolds in Vivo

Phil Leighton, Fellow, Animal Genetics, OmniAb

Antibodies in chickens are produced from single VL and VH frameworks that undergo CDR diversification by gene conversion. OmniAb leverages the gene conversion machinery at the immunoglobulin loci in transgenic chickens to produce diverse repertoires of human antibodies based on optimized human frameworks that support conventional and single domain formats. Transgenic chickens can also be engineered to diversify novel scaffolds to support the development of next-generation binding modalities.

11:00 amEnjoy Lunch on Your Own

12:30 pm

Safety Risks of Immune-Modulation Therapies 

Rakesh Dixit, PhD, DABT, CEO & President, Bionavigen Oncology, LLC; CSO, TMAB Therapeutics, Regio Biosciences

Immune modulation therapies offer promising treatment options for various diseases but have significant safety risks that must be carefully managed. Increased susceptibility to infections, development of secondary autoimmune diseases, malignancy risk, and organ toxicity are among the primary concerns. Healthcare providers must remain vigilant in monitoring patients, providing prophylactic measures, and adjusting treatments to mitigate these risks. The presentation will address the safety risks associated with immune modulation therapies and innovative strategies to optimize their benefits while minimizing potential harm to patients.

1:00 pm

AI Methods to Integrate Multi-Modal Omics, Spatial, and Single-Cell Profiling to Identify Mechanisms and Potential Therapeutic Opportunities

Arvind Rao, PhD, Associate Professor, Department of Computational Medicine and Bioinformatics, University of Michigan

Spatial profiling technologies, coupled with scRNAseq, enable a multi-factorial, multi-modal characterization of the tissue microenvironment. Objective scoring methods inspired by recent advances in statistics and ML can aid the interpretation of these datasets, as well as their integration with companion data like bulk and single-cell genomics. I will discuss analysis paradigms from ML that can be used to integrate and prioritize gene regulatory programs (and therapeutic candidates) underlying oncogenesis.

1:30 pm

TALK IS CANCELED: AI-Designed ENPP1 Inhibitor Emerges as Next-Gen STING Modulator for Cancer

Petrina Kamya, PhD, Global Head of AI Platforms & Vice President, Insilico Medicine; President, Insilico Medicine Canada

The STING (Stimulator of Interferon Genes) pathway functions as a tumor suppressor by translating DNA damage signals into innate immune activation and ENPP1 (ectonucleotide pyrophosphatase/phosphodiesterase 1) is the predominant ectoenzyme that hydrolyzes extracellular cGAMP, a potent STING agonist, thereby dampening STING-dependent innate immune responses. ENPP1 also contributes to production of adenosine, a key immunosuppressive metabolite within the tumor microenvironment (TME) that promotes tumor progression. We hypothesized that small-molecule ENPP1 inhibition would simultaneously preserve cGAMP–STING signaling and limit adenosine generation, restoring innate immunity and countering tumor growth and metastasis.

2:00 pmIn-Person Brainstorming Session

This informal session will be led by the speakers, allowing participants to ask questions and exchange ideas around topics related to the symposium. To get the most out of this session, please come prepared to share your ideas and participate in collective problem solving.

2:45 pmNetworking Refreshment Break

Join your colleagues for a cup of coffee or refreshments and make new connections​

3:15 pm

Targeting CD59 with Macrocyclic Peptide Conjugates to Enhance Immunotherapy and Block Sepsis

Edward Tate, PhD, Professor, Chemical Biology, Imperial College London

Abstract: CD59 is a key immune regulator exploited by both pathogens and cancer cells to evade immune clearance. We developed the first macrocyclic peptide inhibitors of CD59, enabling potent, selective modulation of its activity in cells. These compounds enhance antibody-dependent cytotoxicity and block bacterial toxin-mediated lysis, offering a novel therapeutic approach to overcome resistance in cancer and infection. This work opens new avenues for targeting immune evasion with drug-like, non-antibody modalities.

3:45 pm

Cytokines: Bottling the Lightning of Immunotherapy

Sushma Gurumurthy, PhD, Former Senior Director, Oncology Research, Moderna, Inc.

The therapeutic potential of cytokines is often hindered by significant challenges, namely their extremely short half-lives and systemic toxicity. This volatility necessitates a multi-pronged approach to harness their full power with sophisticated protein engineering to improve stability and target specificity, the use of novel modalities to create controlled delivery systems, innovative routes of administration to minimize systemic exposure while maximizing local effect. Furthermore, strategic combinations with other therapeutic agents will be crucial to mitigate toxicity and achieve synergistic anti-tumor effects, ultimately moving these potent molecules from a promising concept to a safe and effective treatment reality.

4:15 pmClose of Symposium

5:00 pmDinner Short Courses*

*All Access Package or separate registration required. See Short Courses page for details.

7:30 pmClose of Day





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