Past Event

2024 MIT Health Science Technology Conference

Advancements at the Intersection of Biomedical Sciences and Engineering

April 10, 2024 - April 11, 2024
2024 MIT Health Science Technology Conference

Location

Boston Marriott Cambridge
50 Broadway
Cambridge, MA 02142

Accommodations

Secure your hotel room at Marriott at a special group rate of $399+tax.

To benefit from this discounted rate, guests are encouraged to make their reservations using the provided reservation link by no later than March 26, 2024.


Overview

The 2024 MIT Health Science Technology Conference will highlight broad and transformative trends in biology and healthcare, including early-stage discovery, immune cell responses, diagnostics, clinical capabilities, process development, rapid and continuous manufacturing, robotics and automation, and sustainability, all enhanced by artificial intelligence and machine learning technologies. Leading MIT researchers and MIT-connected startups will showcase these advances and discuss their implications for improving human health.


Registration Fee
  ILP Member: Complimentary
  General Public: $2,250 
  Current MIT Faculty/Staff/Student: Complimentary, On-site Registration only
    * MIT Alum, Sloan Exec Ed, and Professional Education Member: 70% discount Send an email for a discount code.
    * MIT Startup Exchange Member: Send an email for a comp code.

Live Streaming is available to ILP members
ILP members with an ILP website account will receive the Live Streaming link one week before the conference. No account? Register at the top of the page.  

Registration Questions: ocrevents@mit.edu
  • Overview

    The 2024 MIT Health Science Technology Conference will highlight broad and transformative trends in biology and healthcare, including early-stage discovery, immune cell responses, diagnostics, clinical capabilities, process development, rapid and continuous manufacturing, robotics and automation, and sustainability, all enhanced by artificial intelligence and machine learning technologies. Leading MIT researchers and MIT-connected startups will showcase these advances and discuss their implications for improving human health.


    Registration Fee
      ILP Member: Complimentary
      General Public: $2,250 
      Current MIT Faculty/Staff/Student: Complimentary, On-site Registration only
        * MIT Alum, Sloan Exec Ed, and Professional Education Member: 70% discount Send an email for a discount code.
        * MIT Startup Exchange Member: Send an email for a comp code.

    Live Streaming is available to ILP members
    ILP members with an ILP website account will receive the Live Streaming link one week before the conference. No account? Register at the top of the page.  

    Registration Questions: ocrevents@mit.edu

Agenda

  • Day 1 | Wednesday April 10, 2024
    8:00 AM

    Registration and Light Breakfast
    9:00 AM

    Welcome and Introduction
    Executive Director, MIT Corporate Relations
    Gayathri Srinivasan photo
    Gayathri Srinivasan
    Executive Director

    Dr. Srinivasan is a distinguished scientist who received her PhD in Microbiology from The Ohio State University in 2004, where she contributed to the discovery of the 22nd amino acid, Pyrrolysine (2002). She first came to MIT as an NIH Postdoctoral Fellow in Prof. Tom Rajbhandary’s lab, where her research focused on understanding protein synthesis mechanisms in Archaea.

     Dr. Srinivasan subsequently moved into the business development and technology licensing space, serving in MIT’s Technology Licensing Office, where she helped commercialize technologies in medical devices and alternative energies. She then moved to UMass Medical School’s Office of Technology Management in 2009 and to Emory University in Atlanta in 2014 as the Director of Public and Private Partnerships for the Woodruff Health Sciences Center. In 2019, Dr. Srinivasan joined Emory’s Office of Corporate Relations as Executive Director, and in 2021, she led the Office of Corporate and Foundation Relations.

    Program Director, MIT Industrial Liaison Program
    Sheryl Greenberg
    Program Director

    Sheryl Greenberg initiates and promotes the interactions and development of relationships between academic and industrial entities to facilitate the transfer of new ideas and technologies between MIT and companies, and has created numerous successful partnerships. By understanding the business, technology, and commercial problems within a company, and understanding the technologies and expertise of MIT researchers, Greenberg identifies appropriate resources and expertise to foster new technology applications and collaborative opportunities.

    Prior to MIT, Greenberg created and directed the Office of Technology Transfer at Brandeis University. In the process of managing intellectual property protection, marketing, and licensing, she has promoted the successful commercialization of technologies as diverse as new chemicals and manufacturing, biotechnology, food compositions, software, and medical devices. She facilitated the founding and funding of new companies, as well as creating a profitable technology transfer program. She also facilitated the patenting, marketing, and licensing of Massachusetts General Hospital technologies. In addition to her cellular, biochemical, and genetic research experience in academic and corporate environments, she has also created intellectual property for medical uses. Greenberg has been an independent intellectual property and business development consultant, is a U.S. Patent Agent, and has previously served the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation as Co-Chair of the Islet Research Program Advisory Committee and grant reviewer. She currently also mentors startup companies and facilitates partnering them with large life science and healthcare companies.


    Program Director, MIT Industrial Liaison Program
    Rebekah Miller
    Program Director

    Rebekah Miller joined the Office of Corporate Relations team as a Program Director in March 2022. Rebekah brings to the OCR expertise in the life sciences and chemical industries as well as in applications including sensors, consumer electronics, semiconductors and renewable energy.

    Prior to joining the OCR, Rebekah worked for over a decade at Merck KGaA, most recently as a Global Key Account Manager in the Semiconductor division. Rebekah also served as Head of Business and Technology Development for the Semiconductor Specialty Accounts, during which time she led strategic planning and technology roadmapping.

    While at Merck KGaA, Miller established a strong track record in industry-university partnerships, corporate entrepreneurship, and innovation management, with experience in roles spanning Technology Scouting, Alliance Management, and New Business Development. Early in her career, she led early phase R&D projects as a member of the Boston Concept Lab, which focused on technology transfer from academia.

    Miller earned her B.A. in Chemistry and Biology from Swarthmore College and her Ph.D. in Chemistry, with a Designated Emphasis in Nanoscale Science and Engineering, from the University of California, Berkeley. She first joined MIT as a postdoctoral associate in the Bioengineering and Material Science Departments.

    Program Director, MIT Corporate Relations

    Natalie Kim headshot
    Natalie Kim

    Program Director, MIT Corporate Relations

    Dr. Najung “Natalie” Kim is a Program Director at the MIT Industrial Liaison Program. She brings to the Office of Corporate Relations (OCR) expertise in strategic collaboration in life sciences and biotech industries, including cell and gene therapy and AI/ML analytics. Kim comes to OCR from Adjuvant Partners where she has been serving as Senior Consultant, Strategic Partnering, working to connect industry, startups, and academic leaders in the cell and gene therapy sector. Before Adjuvant, Natalie worked at Ajinomoto, where she was Manager of the Research & Innovation Center, facilitating collaborations on preclinical and clinical development of biologics, diagnostics, and cell therapy ancillary products in Asia, Europe, and North America. Prior to Ajinomoto, Kim was a business development manager at Medipost, where she led strategic partnerships in mesenchymal stem cell therapeutics in orthopedic and neurodegenerative applications. Kim also went through her postdoctoral training at the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine as a Department of Defense Research Fellow working on translational gene therapy in tissue engineering programs.

    Kim earned her B.S. Bioscience and Food Engineering at Handong Global University, her M.S. Medicine at Seoul National University in South Korea, and her Ph.D. Biomedical Engineering at the University of Iowa.

    9:15 AM
    Caroline Uhler
    Caroline Uhler

    Caroline Uhler is a Full Professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and the Institute for Data, Systems, and Society at MIT. Additionally, she serves as the Director of the Eric and Wendy Schmidt Center at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard.

    Caroline Uhler holds an MSc in mathematics, a BSc in biology, and an MEd in mathematics education from the University of Zurich. She earned her PhD in statistics from UC Berkeley. Prior to her current positions, she participated in the "Big Data" program at the Simons Institute at UC Berkeley, held postdoctoral positions at the IMA and at ETH Zurich, and served as an assistant professor at IST Austria for three years.

    She is recognized as a SIAM Fellow and an elected member of the International Statistical Institute. She has been honored with prestigious awards including an NIH Director's New Innovator Award, a Simons Investigator Award, a Sloan Research Fellowship, an NSF Career Award, a Sofja Kovalevskaja Award from the Humboldt Foundation, and a START Award from the Austrian Science Foundation.

    Her research primarily focuses on machine learning, statistics, and computational biology, particularly in the areas of causal inference, generative modeling, and their applications to genomics, such as investigating the spatial organization of DNA and its relationship to gene regulation.

    Professor Uhler's CV can be found here.

    Machine learning and the biomedical sciences have both experienced revolutions in the 21st century. We will discuss how these two fields are coming together and, in particular, also how today’s biomedical questions are motivating new developments in machine learning to help find answers.

    9:50 AM
    Geometric Deep Learning for Antibody Drug Discovery
    Wengong Jin
    Wengong Jin
    Wengong Jin
    Postdoctoral Fellow

    Wengong Jin is a postdoctoral fellow in the Eric and Wendy Schmidt Center at Broad Institute. Previously, he obtained his PhD at MIT CSAIL, advised by Prof. Regina Barzilay and Prof. Tommi Jaakkola. His research focuses on machine learning for drug discovery. He is particularly interested in developing geometric deep learning and generative AI models for virtual drug screening, de novo drug design, antibody design, and protein-ligand/protein binding. His work was published in leading AI conferences and biology journals like ICML, NeurIPS, ICLR, Nature, Science, Cell, and PNAS. His research received extensive media coverage including Guardian, BBC News, CBS Boston, and Financial Times. He is the recipient of the BroadIgnite Award, Dimitris N. Chorafas Prize, and MIT EECS Outstanding Thesis Award.

    Modeling antibody-antigen binding is pivotal to drug discovery. Geometric deep learning is a promising paradigm for binding energy prediction, but its accuracy is limited by the size of training data, as high-throughput binding assays are expensive. Herein, we propose an unsupervised binding energy prediction framework named DSMBind, which does not need experimental binding data for training. DSMBind is an energy-based model that estimates the likelihood of a protein complex via SE(3) denoising score matching (DSM). This objective, applied at both backbone and side-chain levels, builds on a novel equivariant rotation prediction network derived from Euler's Rotation Equations. We find that the learned log-likelihood of protein complexes is highly correlated with experimental binding energy across multiple antibody-antigen binding prediction benchmarks. We further demonstrate DSMBind's zero-shot binder design capability through a PD-L1 nanobody design task, where we randomize all three complementarity-determining regions (CDRs) and select the best CDR sequences based on DSMBind score. We experimentally tested the designed nanobodies with ELISA binding assay and successfully discovered a novel PD-L1 binder. In summary, DSMBind offers a versatile framework for binding energy prediction and binder design.

    Unbiased Biological Discovery Without a Reference Genome
    Tavor Baharav
    Tavor Baharav
    Tavor Baharav
    Postdoctoral Fellow

    Tavor Baharav is a first year postdoctoral fellow at the Eric and Wendy Schmidt Center at the Broad Institute, working with Professor Rafael Irizarry. His recent work has focused on developing computationally efficient and statistically valid methods for analyzing raw sequencing data without a reference genome. He has also worked on adaptive algorithms for data science problems using multi-armed bandits. His research borrows tools from optimization, information theory, and probability theory to design practically efficient and theoretically grounded algorithms for problems in computational genomics. Tavor obtained his Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering at Stanford University in 2023, where he was advised by Professors David Tse and Julia Salzman. At Stanford, he was a recipient of the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship and the Stanford Graduate Fellowship. Previously, he obtained his bachelor’s degree at UC Berkeley, where he worked with Professor Kannan Ramchandran on coding theory and its applications to distributed computing.

    Computational genomics pipelines often rely heavily on alignment of sequencing data to a reference genome; however, this use of a reference genome can bias downstream inference and limit discovery of novel biology. In this talk I will discuss a unifying paradigm for genomic inference, SPLASH, which performs inference directly on raw sequencing data. We demonstrate SPLASH’s power for unbiased discovery by identifying viral strain mutations, cell-type-specific isoforms, and Ig and TCR diversity, in addition to tissue-specific transcripts in octopus and geographic and seasonal variation and diatom association in eelgrass.

    Optimal Experimental Design for Genetic Perturbations
    Jiaqi Zhang
    Jiaqi Zhang
    Jiaqi Zhang

    Jiaqi Zhang is a fourth-year Ph.D. student in MIT's Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS), under the guidance of Caroline Uhler. Her research centers on establishing statistical and algorithmic foundations for decision-making within systems governed by underlying causal rules. Specifically, she focuses on developing algorithms and tools to discern causal relationships in data, forecast the impacts of unseen interventions, and identify informative interventions for experimental design, with a particular emphasis on applications in cell biology. Jiaqi's research is backed by the Eric and Wendy Schmidt Center PhD Fellowship and the Apple AI/ML Scholarship.

    Sequential experimental design to discover interventions that achieve a desired outcome is a key problem in various domains. A predominant example is how to identify optimal genetic perturbations that induce a specific cell state transition. This talk covers our methods for predicting unseen combinatorial perturbational effects and actively selecting the next most-informative experiment for identifying desirable interventions more efficiently.

    10:25 AM

    MIT Professional Education
    Myriam Joseph

    Manager, Business Development and Marketing, MIT Professional Education

    10:30 AM

    Networking Break
    10:55 AM

    Professor of Electrical Engineering, Department of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science (EECS)
    Professor of Biological Engineering, Biological Engineering Division

    Jongyoon Han

    Professor of Electrical Engineering, Department of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science (EECS)
    Professor of Biological Engineering, Biological Engineering Division

    Dr. Jongyoon Han is currently a professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and the Department of Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He received B.S.(1992) and M.S.(1994) degree in physics from Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea, and Ph.D. degree in applied physics from Cornell University in 2001. He was a research scientist in Sandia National Laboratories (Livermore, CA), until he joined the MIT faculty in 2002. He received NSF CAREER award (2003) and Analytical Chemistry Young Innovator Award (ACS, 2009). His research is mainly focused on applying micro/nanofabrication techniques to a very diverse set of fields and industries, including biosensing, desalination / water purification, biomanufacturing, dentistry, and neuroscience. He is currently the lead PI for MIT’s participation for NIIMBL (The National Institute for Innovation in Manufacturing Biopharmaceuticals).

    With the explosive growth in cell and gene therapy during the last decade, manufacturing of high quality gene delivery vectors (AAVs and Lentiviruses) now poses a critical bottleneck for the industry. In this presentation, I will introduce a continuous, intensified HEK293 bioprocessing platforms enabled by high-throughput microfluidic systems. Membrane-free vector harvesting by high-throughput inertial microfluidic system could be used to achieve intensified perfusion culture of host cells, and generated vectors are harvested continuously in order to minimize the loss and degradation. We believe that intensification of upstream vector bioprocessing would lead to a significant increase in productivity and reduction in reagents as well as GMP space needs, eventually resulting in reduction in the cost of gene and cell therapies of the future.

    11:30 AM
    Program Manager, MIT Startup Exchange
    Ariadna Rodenstein
    Program Manager

    Ariadna Rodenstein is a Program Manager at MIT Startup Exchange. She joined MIT Corporate Relations as an Events Leader in September 2019 and is responsible for designing and executing startup events, including content development, coaching and hosting, and logistics. Ms. Rodenstein works closely with the Industrial Liaison Program (ILP) in promoting collaboration and partnerships between MIT-connected startups and industry, as well as with other areas around the MIT innovation ecosystem and beyond. 

    Prior to working for MIT Corporate Relations, she worked for over a decade at Credit Suisse Group in New York and London, in a few different roles in event management and as Director of Client Strategy. Ms. Rodenstein has combined her experience in the private sector with work at non-profits as a Consultant and Development Director at New York Immigration Coalition, Immigrant Defense Project, and Americas Society/Council of the Americas. She also served as an Officer on the Board of Directors of the Riverside Clay Tennis Association in New York for several years. Additionally, she earned her B.A. in Political Science and Communications from New York University, with coursework at the Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey in Mexico City, and her M.A. in Sociology from the City University of New York.

    Next-Generation Surgical Navigation and Robotics
    Hieu Le Mau
    Director of Operations, Zeta Surgical
    Hieu Le
    Hieu Le Mau
    Director of Operations

    Hieu Le is the Director of Operations of Zeta Surgical, where he oversees regulatory, quality and supply chain operations. He is a graduate of the National University of Singapore, and previously held positions at GlaxoSmithKline and PASCALL Systems.

    AI-Powered Chronic Condition Management
    Bettina Hein
    Founder and CEO, juli Health
    Bettina Hein
    Bettina Hein
    Founder and CEO

     

    Bettina Hein is a serial software entrepreneur who has built two $100M+ AI-driven technology companies and is now founder and CEO of juli, a chronic condition management platform. Bettina has received numerous awards such as the Massachusetts Immigrant Entrepreneur of the Year Award and the L’Oréal Next Generation Award. She was also named a Young Global Leader at the World Economic Forum. Bettina is a well versed speaker and shares her experience and knowledge on entrepreneurship at various events.

    AI Driven Bloodless Blood Tests
    Sean Matsuoka
    Co-Founder & COO, General Prognostics
    Sean (Shunsuke) Matsuoka
    Sean Matsuoka
    Co-Founder & COO

    Sean (Shunsuke) Matsuoka has experience in marketing at Sony, management consulting at McKinsey & Company, and business development at M3 Inc. and caresyntax. Sean brings a wealth of experience in business development across diverse sectors, including notable companies like Mitsubishi Corporation (MC Healthcare), Takeda Pharmaceutical (Whiz Partners), and Fujifilm. His ability to foster collaborations, especially within pharmaceuticals and medical devices, is highlighted by his track record of managing deals with industry leaders. Holding degrees from Keio University and Harvard Business School, he is a versatile leader poised to drive impactful growth and innovation.

    Advanced Tools for Understanding Single-Cell Genomics and Advancing Cellular and Precision Medicines
    James Flanigon
    James Flanigon
    CEO

    Dr. James Flanigon is the co-founder and CEO of Honeycomb Biotechnologies, focused on moving the field of single cell genomics from research into clinical applications. Dr. Flanigon brings over 20 years of experience to the intersection of genomics, information technology, and business development across both academia and the biopharmaceutical industry. Prior to Honeycomb, Jim was the CTO of Cancer Clinics of Excellence, an organization of over 200 oncologists focused on bringing cutting edge clinical trials, diagnostics, and information technologies to the edges of cancer treatment. He also led molecular diagnostics at Genzyme (now part of Sanofi), using genomic approaches to accelerate clinical diagnostics. Dr. Flanigon received his PhD in bioengineering and informatics from Boston University, as well as an MBA from MIT, and an Engineering degree from Stanford.

    Generative Protein Design, Genomic Medicines Delivery
    Uyanga Tsedev
    Co-Founder and Chief Scientific Officer, Gensaic
    Uyanga Tsedev
    Uyanga Tsedev
    Co-Founder and Chief Scientific Officer

    Dr. Uyanga Tsedev is a biomaterials engineer with broad interest in protein assemblies and manipulation of genetically encoded materials. As co-founder and CSO of Gensaic, Dr. Tsedev drives the discovery of functional sequences and the AI-guided evolution of protein structures for therapeutics delivery. She received her PhD in Biological Engineering from MIT, building genetically modified phage-like particles for localized delivery of DNA and small molecules in cancer models at the Koch Institute. Her MS in Mechanical Engineering was also completed at MIT, researching biological scaffolds for nanoscale materials templating. Before coming to MIT, Dr. Tsedev obtained her BS at Harvard University, where she worked on bioresponsive drug delivery and tissue engineering technologies with groups at the Wyss Institute and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.

    Bringing the Power of Medicinal Chemistry to Protein Therapies
    Helena de Puig Guixe
    Helena de Puig headshot
    Helena de Puig Guixe
    CEO

    Helena received her Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and completed her postdoctoral training in synthetic biology in the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering (Harvard). She has experience in nanotechnology, synthetic biology, diagnostics, and high throughput antibody screening and development. Her work has resulted in 15 patents and 27 publications (2000+ citations).

    Delivering Extraordinary Cells to Manufacture Bi-Specific Antibodies
    Konstantinos Tsioris
    Co-Founder & President, OneCyte Biotechnologies
    Konstantinos Tsioris headshot
    Konstantinos Tsioris
    Co-Founder & President

    Dr. Konstantinos Tsioris has spearheaded OneCyte Biotechnologies since its inception, serving as President and driving innovation in the biotech industry. At OneCyte, we're revolutionizing single-cell technology for live-cell discovery, enabling us to uncover ideal cells with unparalleled scale, resolution, and speed. Our mission is to empower biotechnology companies to create the next generation of medicines. By addressing the toughest challenges in cell line development, OneCyte delivers highest quality manufacturing cell lines in industry leading timelines. Join Dr. Tsioris as he shares insights into our groundbreaking work at OneCyte, to help drive the next generation of medicines forward.

    Non-Invasive Biomarker Measurement Using Sweat
    James Ryan
    Chief Revenue Officer, Epicore Biosystems
    James Ryan
    Chief Revenue Officer

    Jim Ryan is the Chief Revenue Officer of Epicore Biosystems. After graduating from Harvard University in 1993, he moved to Japan where he earned his Masters Degree at Osaka University, then joined Octel Communications, a Silicon Valley startup, to help rebuild their Tokyo office and Japan business. He successfully built their Japan revenue to nearly $50M; He is an experienced global commercialization leader who has built new markets, sales teams, and revenue for seven growth-stage startups, leading to 5 acquisitions and 2 IPOs. In his 30-year career to date, Jim has done business in over 40 countries on all six continents, and has negotiated and signed hundreds of licensing, OEM, channel sales, distribution and framework agreements with companies around the world. He has been responsible for generating over $1B in revenues. In 2013, he co-founded and funded Medstro, a digital health startup. As Medstro's COO/CRO, he was responsible for bringing in business and delivering revenue, as well as managing the financial operations of the company. After Medstro launched in April 2014, he secured large contracts with Google, Philips Healthcare, Anthem, Boston Scientific, the NewEngland Journal of Medicine and the American Medical Association, which resulted in Medstro becoming cash-flow positive in only 14 months, and profitable in only the second year of operations. He grew Medstro's revenue at a CAGR of 267%, and successfully sold Medstro for 10x invested capital in 2018. Since then, Jim advised nearly a dozen academic startup teams on go-to-market and commercialization strategy, before joining Epicore as CRO in December 2023.

    Medical Device for Non-Invasive White Blood Cell Monitoring
    Carlos Castro-Gonzalez
    Co-Founder & CEO, Leuko Labs
    Carlos Castro Gonzalez headshot
    Carlos Castro-Gonzalez
    Co-Founder & CEO

    Carlos Castro-Gonzalez is an engineer and entrepreneur driven by translational research in healthcare. Carlos received an MSc in Electrical Engineering from KTH (Stockholm, Sweden) and a PhD in Biomedical Engineering from UPM (Madrid, Spain). After his PhD, Carlos was selected for the prestigious M+Vision fellowship at MIT, where he led international, multi-disciplinary projects to translate medical imaging technologies into clinically applicable products at the crossroads of engineering, business and medicine. His work includes award-winning AI algorithms to diagnose cardiac CT images and an ultrasound product for early diagnosis of infant meningitis. Recently, he co-founded and is the CEO of Leuko, an MIT spinoff focused on commercializing PointCheck™ the first medical device to noninvasively monitor white blood cells with the goal to improve cancer chemotherapy outcomes. Carlos was named Innovator Under 35 by MIT Technology Review and has won multiple awards including the Rice Business Plan Competition, MassChallenge HealthTech, Startup World Cup and a prestigious SBIR award by the National Institutes of Health.

    Leveraging the Power of AI for Data Collaboration Without the Compromise
    Sadegh Riazi
    Co-Founder & CEO, Pyte
    Sadegh Riazi
    Sadegh Riazi
    Co-Founder & CEO

    Dr. Sadegh Riazi is a technology enthusiast, co-founder and CEO of Pyte. He received his PhD in secure computation from UC San Diego where he was awarded the best PhD thesis award. Sadegh founded Project HEAX at Microsoft Research (a new computing platformfor Homomorphic Encryption). Prior to that, he studied Electrical Engineering and designed a new system for Brain-Computer Interfaces. Sadegh is a fellow of the Institute for Global Entrepreneur and has received multiple prestigious awards including Richard Newton Young Fellow Award, Jacobs Graduate Student Award, and Silver Medal in International Student Olympiad.

    12:25 PM
    Zahra Kanji
    Zahra Kanji
    Director

    Zahra Kanji, director of MIT Hacking Medicine, an organization at MIT with the mission of energizing and connecting the best minds across the healthcare ecosystem to solve healthcare’s biggest challenges. She completed her undergraduate and graduate studies at MIT and earned her MPH from Harvard. Trained as an engineer and in public health, she has worked on healthtech innovation with top tech companies like Amazon and Apple, as well as leading MIT Hacking Medicine (HackMed). HackMed hosts events and trains the next generation of entrepreneurs in health while doing research on its own methodology that shows grassroots efforts like this are more effective in effecting change than a top-down approach.  For over twelve years, HackMed has worked with tech companies such as Google and MSFT, hospital systems such as the VA and NHS, and medtech companies to bring them together with students, engineers, physicians, and business professionals to create the right environment and people with diverse skill sets to solve deep problems in healthcare. From these events, new teams emerge, forming startup companies that have gone on to raise over $ 2.5 billion in venture funding.  Biofourmis, Podmetrics, PillPack, and Abridge are just some examples of our past success stories. 

    12:30 PM

    Lunch with Startup Exhibit
    1:30 PM
    Principal Research Scientist and Principal Investigator, David H. Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research
    Ana Jaklenec
    Ana Jaklenec
    Principal Research Scientist and Principal Investigator

    Dr. Ana Jaklenec, a principal research scientist and principal investigator at the David H. Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT, is a leader in the fields of bioengineering and materials science, focused on controlled delivery and stability of therapeutics for global health. She has over 15 years of experience and is an inventor of several drug delivery technologies that have the potential to enable equitable access to medical care globally. The Jaklenec lab at the Koch Institute is developing new manufacturing techniques for the design of materials at the nano- and micro-scale for self-boosting vaccines, 3D printed on-demand microneedles, heat stable polymer-based carriers for oral delivery of micronutrients and probiotics, and long-term drug delivery systems for cancer immunotherapy. She has published over 100 manuscripts, patents, and patent applications and has founded three companies, Particles for Humanity, VitaKey, and OmniPulse Biosciences.

    Engineering translatable technologies to help global populations, and especially in developing countries has been met with various challenges related to infrastructure, patient access, and cold chain. I will present how polymers can be leveraged with engineering design to develop solutions for global health.   For example, the development of the SEAL (StampEd Assembly of polymer Layers) technology that allows controlled pulsatile release of biologics days to months after injection, for single-injection self-boosting vaccines and cancer immunotherapy will be discussed. Additionally, the design of a microneedle vaccine printer that enables decentralized manufacturing of thermostable COVID-19 mRNA vaccine will be presented.

    2:05 PM
    Robert T. Haslam (1911) Professor
    Singapore Research Professor, MIT Chemical Engineering
    Patrick Doyle
    Patrick S. Doyle
    Robert T. Haslam (1911) Professor
    Singapore Research Professor

    Patrick Doyle, a Chemical Engineering Professor at MIT, is renowned for his extensive research interests encompassing fundamental studies of single DNA molecules, nanoemulsions, nanofluidic/microfluidic devices, and innovative technologies for detecting DNA, miRNA, and proteins. Within his research group, a significant thrust involves leveraging microfluidics and soft matter concepts for pharmaceutical formulations. Another key focus is the development of barcoded technologies for sensitive miRNA detection, with impactful applications in cancer research and anti-counterfeiting measures.

    Beyond his academic pursuits, Patrick Doyle has left an indelible mark as the co-founder of startup companies Firefly Bioworks (acquired by Abcam in 2015) and Motif Micro (acquired by YPB Systems in 2018). His engagement with numerous companies extends to roles as a consultant, Scientific Advisory Board (SAB) advisor, and participation in sponsored research within his lab. Adding to his diverse portfolio, Patrick serves as the Graduate Officer in the Chemical Engineering Department at MIT.

    Specializing in micro- and nano-fluidics, multiplexed sensing, DNA biophysics, nanoemulsions, colloids, rheology, Brownian dynamics simulations, and particle engineering in Pharma, Patrick Doyle continues to be a visionary leader and innovator in the field.

    The fast pace of breakthroughs in cancer immunotherapy, combined with the new paradigm of moving toward high-concentration dosages, is generating new challenges in the formulation of biologics, especially monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). Subcutaneous administration is a desired route for mAbs. However, formulating mAbs for small injection volumes at high concentrations with suitable stability and injectability is a significant challenge. Here, I will present a platform technology that combines the stability of solid forms of antibodies (crystalline or amorphous) with the injectability and tunability of soft hydrogel particles. I will discuss application of this approach to formulate anti-PD-1 antibody pembrolizumab and human immunoglobulin G. In vitro and in vivoperformance of the formulations will be discussed.

    2:40 PM
    James R. Mares ‘24 Career Development Chair Assistant Professor, MIT Chemical Engineering
    Qin (Maggie) Qi
    Qin (Maggie) Qi
    James R. Mares ‘24 Career Development Chair Assistant Professor

    Dr. Qin (Maggie) Qi is the James R. Mares ’24 Career Development Chair Assistant Professor in Chemical Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Her research applies fluid mechanics and transport principles to engineer soft materials for medical applications. She received her Ph.D. in chemical engineering with Prof. Eric Shaqfeh at Stanford University in 2018, where she won the T.S. Lo Fellowship and Stanford Graduate Fellowship. There, she also collaborated with the Royal College of Surgeons and BD Biosciences to develop a diagnostic device for various bleeding disorders. She then conducted postdoctoral research with Prof. Samir Mitragotri at the Wyss Institute of Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University, where she developed a subcutaneous-tissue-on-a-chip model for pharmacokinetic testing (licensed to Sanofi). She was elected to the inaugural class of MIT Rising Stars in Chemical Engineering. She recently received the FY23 MIT research support committee award and was named a Science Influencer Mentor sponsored by the FDA.

    Microscopic flows in a biological environment play a remarkable role in regulating human health, from disease causes to driving forces behind diagnostics and therapeutics. Its influence on other living organisms also has far-reaching impact in energy and environment. Such flow-induced dynamic effects, however, are often overlooked in engineering designs due to limitations in existing research toolsets. As a result, conventional biological and medical research face various challenges in accuracy, cost and translational success. In this talk, I will present our group’s work on applying fluid mechanics principles to design biomaterials, cell therapies and pharmacological models. We develop both experimental (in vitro) and computational tools mimicking a dynamic biological flow environment. The combination of these new tools enables us to reduce the use of animal models and shorten the preclinical research timeline while achieving tailor-made design outcomes towards precision medicine.

    3:15 PM

    Networking Break
    3:45 PM
    Owen Leddy
    Owen Leddy

    Owen Leddy is a Ph.D. candidate in the MIT Department of Biological Engineering, co-advised by Professor Bryan Bryson and Professor Forest White. His research uses mass spectrometry analysis of peptides presented on MHCs for recognition by T cells (immunopeptidomics) to reveal mechanisms of antigen processing and presentation in tuberculosis and identify potential vaccine targets. Before coming to MIT, he obtained his B.S. in Biological Chemistry at the University of Chicago, where he conducted research in biophysics and molecular microbiology with Professors Aaron Dinner, Dominique Missiakas, and Olaf Schneewind. 

    T cell recognition of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb)-specific peptides presented on major histocompatibility complex class I and II (MHC-I/II) contributes to immunity to tuberculosis (TB), but the principles that govern the presentation of Mtb antigens on MHCs are incompletely understood. We hypothesized that addressing this knowledge gap would accelerate TB vaccine development for use in diverse human populations. We utilized mass spectrometry (MS) analysis to identify the repertoire of peptides presented on MHCs by Mtb-infected primary human phagocytes. We revealed that substrates of Mtb’s type VII secretion systems (T7SS) are overrepresented among Mtb-derived peptides presented on MHC-I. Quantitative, targeted MS showed that Mtb’s ESX-1 secretion system is required for the presentation of Mtb antigens on MHC-I. This system is notably absent in attenuated mycobacterial strains currently used for immunization against TB. We next established a biochemical workflow for the identification of antigens presented on MHC-II. These studies revealed Mtb protein antigens that could be presented on MHC-II by human phagocytes expressing a range of MHC-II alleles. We leveraged these discoveries to develop a workflow to evaluate new vaccine candidates for their capacity to generate peptide-MHC complexes in human antigen-presenting cells that are identical to those generated during Mtb infection, a potentially critical pre-clinical screening step. Our study identifies Mtb antigens presented on MHCs that could serve as targets for TB vaccines and reveals potential explanations for the limited efficacy of existing TB vaccines in human populations.

    4:20 PM
    Assistant Professor of Biology, MIT Department of Biology
    Core Member, Ragon Institute of Mass General, MIT, and Harvard
    Harikesh Wong
    Harikesh Wong
    Assistant Professor of Biology, MIT Department of Biology
    Core Member

    Dr. Harikesh Wong completed his PhD in Cell Biology at the University of Toronto, studying molecules at the nanoscale to determine how individual immune cells initiate signalling at short timescales. He then pursued his post-doctoral training with Dr. Ronald N. Germain at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), working at the interface of Immunology and Systems Biology. Here, Dr. Wong combined highly multiplexed imaging, cleared organ volume imaging, and computational modelling to study immune cells at single-cell resolution in tissues, with the goal of understanding how multicellular communication regulates the immune response over much greater spatiotemporal scales. Dr. Wong will open his lab in early 2022 as a Core Member of the Ragon Institute and an Assistant Professor in the MIT Department of Biology.

    T cells are pivotal in mounting protective responses against pathogens and tumors, yet their activity entails a critical balance to avoid detrimental host tissue damage. This trade-off necessitates mechanisms that continually adjust the magnitude of T-cell responses, both in time and space. In physiological tissue environments, such control involves coordinated communication among multiple cell types, resulting in intercellular regulatory circuits. While this concept has become increasingly appreciated, in most instances, it fails to account for a critical variable: not all tissues are the same. Indeed, tissues differ markedly in their functions, selection pressures, and capacities for regeneration, implying that the trade-offs between effective host defense and the risk of collateral damage may be tissue-specific. We hypothesized that T cell regulatory circuits are uniquely adapted to the specific demands and characteristics of each tissue type, leading to variable immune responses across the body. To explore this concept, we employed high-resolution multiplexed imaging and computational approaches to examine the baseline variations in regulatory circuits across different tissues, such as barrier sites, endocrine organs, and reproductive organs. Our preliminary data has revealed distinct patterns of T cell regulation that correlate with tissue-specific attributes, suggesting a nuanced framework of immune control that is finely adjusted to the local tissue context. These findings challenge the one-size-fits-all view of immune regulation and open new avenues for understanding how tissue-specific immune responses contribute to health and disease.

    4:55 PM
    Associate Professor of Media Arts and Sciences
    LG Career Development Professor of Media Arts and Sciences, MIT Media Lab
    Canan Dagdeviren
    Associate Professor of Media Arts and Sciences
    LG Career Development Professor of Media Arts and Sciences

    Canan Dagdeviren joined the faculty in January 2017 to direct the new Conformable Decoders research group at the MIT Media Lab. The group will create mechanically adaptive electromechanical systems that can intimately integrate with the target object for sensing, actuation, and energy harvesting, among other applications. Dagdeviren believes that vital information from nature and the human body is ‘coded’ in various forms of physical patterns. Her research focuses on the creation of conformable decoders that can ‘decode’ these patterns into beneficial signals and/or energy.

    Dagdeviren created a wide range of piezoelectric systems that can be twisted, folded, stretched/flexed, wrapped, and implanted onto curvilinear surfaces of human body, without damage or significant alteration in device performance. She received her PhD in materials science and engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign with a focus on exploring patterning techniques and creating piezoelectric biomedical systems. Her collective PhD research involved flexible mechanical energy harvesters, multi-functional cardiac vessel stents, wearable blood pressure sensors, and stretchable skin modulus sensing bio-patches. As a Junior Fellow of the Society of Fellows of Harvard University, she conducted her postdoctoral research at MIT David H. Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research to design and fabricate multi-functional, minimally invasive brain injectrodes that can simultaneously deliver drugs on demand and electrically modulate neural activity precisely and selectively for the treatment of neurological disorders such as Parkinson’s disease.

    Dagdeviren’s work has been recognized by various prestigious media outlets, such as the SmithsonianMIT Technology ReviewPopular Mechanics, CBS News, LA Times, BBC News, New Scientist, Medical Daily, IEEE Spectrum, Physics World, Nature Materials, C&ENews, Forbes, and Qmed/Medical Product Manufacturing News. In 2015, Dagdeviren was named to the "Top 35 Innovators Under 35" (inventor category) by MIT Technology Review, and to the "Top 30 Under 30 in Science" by Forbes.  Dr. Dagdeviren has been named as the 2017 Innovation and Technology Delegate of the American Academy of Achievement. In 2019, Dr. Dagdeviren has been named as one of the nation’s 87 brightest young engineers by the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) to take part in the NAE’s 25th annual US Frontiers of Engineering (USFOE) Symposium.  In 2021, Dr. Dagdeviren was honored with two awards: the 2021 National Science Foundation’s Faculty Early Career Development Program (CAREER) award, and the 3M Non-Tenured Faculty award.

    Conformable electronics are regarded as the next generation of personal healthcare monitoring and remote diagnosis devices. In recent years, piezoelectric-based conformable ultrasound electronics (cUSE) have been intensively studied due to their unique capabilities, including nonradiative monitoring, soft tissue imaging, deep signal decoding, wireless power transfer, portability, and compatibility. In this talk, recent advancements in wearable ultrasound technologies will be presented with applications spanning from early breast detection to transdermal drug delivery.

    5:30 PM

    Networking Reception
  • Day 2 | Thursday April 11, 2024
    9:00 AM

    Welcome and Introduction
    9:15 AM
    Assistant Professor, MIT Department of Chemistry
    Core Member, Broad Institute
    Xiao Wang
    Xiao Wang
    Assistant Professor, MIT Department of Chemistry
    Core Member

    Xiao Wang is a core institute member of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard and an assistant professor in the Department of Chemistry at MIT. She started her lab in 2019 to develop and apply new chemical, biophysical, and genomic tools to better understand tissue function and dysfunction at the molecular level. Xiao conducted postdoctoral research at Stanford University with Prof. Karl Deisseroth. She received her B.S. in Chemistry and Molecular Engineering from Peking University in 2010 and her Ph.D. in Chemistry from the University of Chicago in 2015, mentored by Prof. Chuan He.

    Spatially charting molecular cell types at single-cell resolution across the entire three-dimensional (3D) volume of the brain is critical to illustrating the molecular basis of the tissue anatomy and functions. Recent development of spatial transcriptomic methods has enabled scalable profiling of transcriptome-defined spatial cell atlas. Yet, there is still a big gap between spatial cell atlas and tissue function. In this presentation, I will introduce a few experimental and computational advances in the mapping of RNA life cycle in our lab that further enable multi-modality deep profiling of cell types and states in situ, bridging single-cell molecular profiles with single-cell functional status in intact biological tissues and accelerating gene-to-function discoveries in development and diseases.

    9:50 AM
    Underwood-Prescott Career Development Professor, MIT Department of Biological Engineering
    Anders Sejr Hansen
    Anders Sejr Hansen
    Underwood-Prescott Career Development Professor

    Anders Sejr Hansen obtained his undergraduate and Master’s degree in Chemistry at Oxford University in 2010. He received his Ph.D. in Chemistry and Chemical Biology from Harvard University in 2015, where he worked with Erin O’Shea and applied systems biology approaches to understand how cells can encode and transmit information in the dynamics of transcription factor activation. For his post-doc at UC Berkeley with Robert Tjian and Xavier Darzacq, Anders developed new imaging approaches for dissecting the dynamics of 3D genome organization with single-molecule resolution in living cells. Anders joined MIT as an Assistant Professor of Biological Engineering in early 2020.

     Proper regulation of gene expression is essential for cell function, and dysregulation of gene expression is a primary cause of disease. The primary units of gene control in humans are enhancers. Enhancers can be located far away from the genes they control on the linear genome, raising the question of how the cell ensures that the right enhancer contacts and activates the right gene. We will present new super-resolution live-cell imaging and 3D genomics methods we have developed to begin to answer this question, what we have learned from these studies, and how we are beginning to use these technologies to translate findings from human genetics into a better understanding of how 3D genome misfolding causes disease. 

    10:25 AM

    Networking Break
    10:55 AM
    Novartis Professor of Chemistry, MIT Department of Chemistry
    Laura Kiesling
    Laura L. Kiessling
    Novartis Professor of Chemistry

    Professor Kiessling received an Sc.B. degree in chemistry at MIT, where she performed undergraduate research in organic synthesis with Professor Bill Roush. She received a Ph.D. degree in chemistry at Yale University for her research with Stuart L. Schreiber. She was an American Cancer Society postdoctoral fellow with Peter B. Dervan at California Institute of Technology. She then joined the faculty at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, where she became the Steenbock Professor of Chemistry, the Laurens Anderson Professor of Biochemistry, and the Director of the Keck Center for Chemical Genomics. In 2017, she returned to MIT as the Novartis Professor of Chemistry.

    Professor Kiessling is a member of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences, the American Academy of Microbiology, the American Philosophical Society, and National Academy of Sciences. She is the founding Editor-In-Chief of the journal ACS Chemical Biology . She is an author of over 140 peer-reviewed journal articles, and an inventor on more than 28 US patents. She has advised approximately 100 graduate and postdoctorate students. Alumni from her research group are contributing through their positions as faculty members of distinguished research universities, medical schools, and colleges and as research scientists at innovative start-up companies, leading corporations, and government laboratories.

    Blueprints for agents regulating immune responses (vaccines or tolerizing agents) are needed. The design principles have been elusive because many immune system receptors can transmit signals that lead to either immunity or tolerance; therefore, a molecular understanding is needed. Our group is interested in how cell surface glycans of foreign cells (pathogens, cancer cells) influence immune responses and how such information can be co-opted to combat disease. To this end, we are generating small molecules and polymers as chemical probes to elucidate the different combinations of signals that give rise to tolerance or immunity. To this end, we found that glycan conjugates can give rise to potent signals that result in anti-cancer immunity. This seminar will discuss the relevant design features of these conjugates and the mechanisms underlying their activity against tumors.

    11:30 AM
    Jason Yim
    Jason Yim
    Ph.D. Candidate, (PI: Tommi Jaakkola)

    In the dynamic world of EECS academia, Jason Yim stands out as a distinguished 3rd-year PhD candidate at MIT CSAIL. Guided by the expertise of the esteemed coffee connoisseur Tommi Jaakkola and the avid running enthusiast Regina Barzilay, Jason brings a wealth of experience to his current position.

    Before embarking on his doctoral studies, Jason served as a research engineer at DeepMind, a testament to his practical expertise. He earned his foundational knowledge, attaining a B.S. in Computer Science and Applied Mathematics from Johns Hopkins University. The NSF Graduate Research Fellowship (GRFP) generously supports his current research endeavors.

    This dedicated researcher is fervently committed to advancing machine learning methods in scientific domains, with a keen focus on applications in biology and chemistry. Jason's passion extends to utilizing these methods in the realms of medicine, environmentalism, and the broader pursuit of scientific knowledge.

    Known for his insatiable curiosity, Jason relishes the process of comprehending the intricate science behind each problem. His approach involves developing practical algorithms that faithfully mirror the underlying structure and mechanism. Not constrained by specific techniques, he seeks a solid foundation in mathematics, statistics, and optimization to craft novel machine-learning methods.

    His research portfolio showcases a broad spectrum, including applications in medical imaging, protein structure modeling, protein fitness optimization, and de novo protein design. Methodologically, he has delved into geometric deep learning, generative models, discrete optimization, and Riemannian manifolds.

    In addition to his academic pursuits, Jason places high value on strong research engineering. He champions efficiency, moving swiftly to tackle challenges and minimize bugs. To delve deeper into his recent contributions, interested parties are encouraged to explore his publications page. For an even more personal insight, one can hear about his work through his CSAIL student spotlight. The narrative of innovation and exploration continues to unfold in Jason Yim's promising academic journey.

    Deep learning has enabled considerable progress in protein structure prediction and design. In particular, the same technology underlying ChatGPT and DALL-E is rapidly being integrated into the workflows for de novo protein design. I will describe our work on this recent progress, RoseTTAFold Diffusion (RFdiffusion), that has enabled a generative AI framework for a wide range of protein design challenges. At the same time, generative AI is far surpassing the capabilities of traditional methods. These challenges span designing binder, enzymes, and peptides that have therapeutic applications. I will discuss the innovations, challenges, and future outlook of how generative AI will enable advancements in protein design.

    12:05 PM

    Adjournment with Boxed Lunch