19th International Symposium on

Recent Advances in Drug Delivery Systems

Tuesday, February 25, 2025 - Friday, February 28, 2025
University Guest House & Conference Center 
110 South Fort Douglas Boulevard, Salt Lake City, Utah 84113

What is PORTO Event 2021

About the Event

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Conference Agenda
2008 / 2010

Porto Design School

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2010 / 2012

University of Envato

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2012 / 2014

The UX School

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2014 / 2016

Porto University

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In-Person Poster Printing

Please see the links below if you need assitance with printing your poster

 

Online Poster Submission for Printing: J. Willard Marriott Library (utah.edu) 

General information: Printing A Poster – Research Posters and Poster Sessions – ULibraries Research Guides at University of Utah 

Fedex Office Print & Ship Center: https://maps.app.goo.gl/crymf2X7rMD1mq2v6 

International Advisory Board
 

Kristy Ainslie | University of North Carolina | Chapel Hill, North Carolina USA

Khuloud Al-Jamal | Hong Kong University | Hong Kong 

Christine Allen | University of Toronto | Toronto, Canada  

Paolo Caliceti | University of Padua | Padua, Italy  

Xiaoyuan Chen | National University of Singapore | Singapore   

Stefaan De Smedt | Ghent University | Gent, Belgium  

Tejal Desai | Brown University | Providence, Rhode Island USA

Tomáš Etrych | Institute of Macromolecular Chemistry | Prague, Czech Republic  

Elias Fattal | Paris-Saclay University | Chatenay Malabry, France  

Zhen Gu | Zhejiang University College | Hangzhou, China  

Alexander Kabanov | University of North Carolina | Chapel Hill, North Carolina USA

Kazunori Kataoka | Kawasaki Institute of Industrial Promotion | Kawasaki, Japan  

Glen Kwon | University of Wisconsin | Madison, Wisconsin USA

Ick Chan Kwon | Korea Institute of Science and Technology | Seoul, Republic of Korea

Twan Lammers | RWTH Aachen University Medical Faculty | Aachen, Germany  

Claus-Michael Lehr | Helmholtz-Institute for Pharmaceutical Research Saarland & Saarland University | Saarbrucken, Germany  

Kam Leong | Columbia University | New York, New York USA

Jean-Christophe Leroux | Federal Institute of Technology | Zurich, Switzerland

Olivia Merkel | Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität | München, Germany  

Tamara Minko | Rutgers University | New Brunswick, New Jersey USA

Samir Mitragotri | Harvard University | Boston, Massachusetts USA

Vladimir Muzykantov | University of Pennsylvania | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania USA

Yu-Kyoung Oh | Seoul National University | Seoul, Republic of Korea  

Vandana Patravale | Institute of Chemical Technology | Mumbai, India  

Amirali Popat | The University of Queensland | Woolloongabba, Australia 

Suzie Pun | University of Washington | Seattle, Washington USA

Aliasger Salem | The University of Iowa | Iowa City, Iowa USA

Rana Sanyal | Bogazici University | Istanbul, Türkiye  

Ronit Satchi-Fainaro | Tel Aviv University | Tel Aviv, Israel  

Dmitri Simberg | University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus | Aurora, Colorado USA

Patrick Stayton | University of Washington | Seattle, Washington USA

Nicole Steinmetz | University of California San Diego | San Diego, California USA

Molly Stevens | University of Oxford | Oxford, United Kingdom   

Xun Sun | West China School of Pharmacy | Chengdu, China  

María Vicent | Principe Felipe | Valencia, Spain  

Yoon Yeo | Purdue University | Lafayette, Indiana USA

Zhiyuan Zhong | Soochow University | Suzhou, China  

 

Conference Agenda

Click HERE for a downloadable version of the agenda

Agenda is subject to change

Tuesday, February 25, 2025

Times TBD
Optional Ski Outing (more details coming)
Brighton Ski Resort
4:30 – 7:00 PM Onsite Registration  Granite Balllroom Lobby
6 PM
WELCOME RECEPTION
Granite Ballroom

Wednesday, February 26, 2025

7 AM
REGISTRATION & BREAKFAST
Douglas Ballroom Lobby
8 – 8:15 AM
OPENING SESSION
Erin Rothwell, Vice President for Research
University of Utah
Randall Peterson, Dean, College of Pharmacy | University of Utah
Hamid Ghandehari, Chair, Molecular Pharmaceutics | University of Utah
Douglas Ballroom 
8:15 – 10:15 AM
SESSION I
Moderators: Juliane Nguyen, Claus-Michael Lehr
Douglas Ballroom
8:15 AM
Gene Editing of the Brain and the GI Tract
Kam Leong, Columbia University Medical Center
8:45 AM
Biomaterials for Drug Delivery in Women’s Health
Brittany E. Givens, University of Kentucky
9:15 AM
Bioreducible Polymer Nanoparticles for CRISPR-Cas Ribonucleoprotein Delivery
Christopher L. Grigsby, Queen’s University, Belfast
9:45 AM
Activatable Polymer Nanoprobes and Nanomedicines for Advanced Tumor Surgery or Treatment of Head and Neck and Pancreatic Tumors
Tomás Etrych, Czech Academy of Sciences
10:15 – 10:45 AM
COFFEE BREAK
 
10:45 AM – 12:15 PM
SESSION II
Moderators: Eun Ji Chung, Alexandros Marios Sofias
Douglas Ballroom
10:45 AM
Machine Learning Reveals Chemical Features in Polymer Micelles Determines mRNA Binding, In Vitro, and In Vitro Performance and Tropism
Theresa M. Reineke, University of Minnesota
11:15 AM
Automation and Active Learning for the Autonomous Design of Drug Formulations
Adam Gormley, Rutgers University
11:45 AM
Computational Approaches for Improving RNA Nanocarriers for Inhalation Therapy
Olivia Merkel, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
12:15 – 1:15 PM
LUNCH
 
1:15 – 2:30 PM
SESSION III
Poster Session and Coffee
Granite Ballroom
2:30 – 5 PM
SESSION IV
Moderators: Hagar Labouta, Nobuhiro Nishiyama
Douglas Ballroom
2:30 PM
A Futuristic (or not so?) Approach for Assessing Nanoparticles Immunotoxicity
Marina Dobrovolskaia, Nanotechnology Characterization Laboratory, Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research
3 PM
Controlling Timing and Location in Vaccine Delivery
Darrell J. Irvine, Scripps Research
3:30 PM
Engineering Tolerance: Acetalated Dextran Microparticles in the Generation of B-regs and T-regs
Kristy Ainslie, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
4 PM
Nanomedicine Hitchhiking with Immune Cells in Cancer and Inflammation
Alexandros Marios Sofias, RWTH Aachen University Hospital
4:30 PM
Harnessing possibilities: Extracellular Vesicles as the Upcoming Breakthrough in Treatment Approaches
In-San Kim, Korea Institute Science & Technology

Thursday, February 27, 2025

7 AM
REGISTRATION & BREAKFAST
Douglas Ballroom Lobby
8 – 10 AM
SESSION V
Moderators: Yue Lu, Kam Leong    
Douglas Ballroom
8 AM
Multiscale Engineering of Immune Cells Using Organoids and Nanowires 
Ankur Singh, Georgia Tech and Emory University School of Medicine
8:30 AM
Engineering Extracellular Vesicles as Nanotherapeutics for Cardiovascular Disease
Eun Ji Chung, University of Southern California
9 AM
Lipid Nanoparticle-Based mRNA Delivery for Retinal Therapies
Katrien Remaut, Ghent University
9:30 AM
Sticky Solutions: Probiotics, Velcro, and Zippers in Targeted Therapies
Juliane Nguyen, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
10 – 10:30 AM
COFFEE BREAK
 
10:30 AM – 12:30 PM
SESSION VI
Moderators: Olivia Merkel, Ronald Siegel
Douglas Ballroom
10:30 AM
Peptide-based Nanomaterials for Precision Medicine in the Injured Brain
Ester Kwon, University of California San Diego
11 AM
Bioengineering Models to Study Cell-specific Durotaxis in Fibrotic and Lung Diseases 
Taslim Al-Hilal, University of Utah
11:30 AM
Using Microfluidics to Drive Innovation in Nanomedicine
Hagar Labouta, University of Toronto
12 PM
Engineering and Controlling Biohybrid and Bioinspired Microrobots for Magnetically Enhanced Drug Delivery
Simone Schuerle, ETH Zürich
12:30 – 1:30 PM
LUNCH
 
1:30 – 2:45 PM
SESSION VII: Poster Session & Coffee
Granite Ballroom
2:45 – 4:45 PM
SESSION VIII
Moderators: Naama Geva-Zatorsky, Mingnan Chen
Douglas Ballroom
2:45 PM
Vascular Drug Delivery: Fortuitous Homing vs Cognizant Targeting
Vladimir R. Muzykantov, University of Pennsylvania
3:15 PM
Building Hybrid Biologics for Therapeutics and Diagnostics
Shawn Owen, University of Utah
3:45 PM
Bioengineering Cell-Based Therapeutics From Benchside to Bedside
Omid Veiseh, Rice University
4:15 PM
Prodrug/Enzyme Intranasal Delivery for Rapid Prevention or Reversal of Seizure Emergency
Ronald A. Siegel, University of Minnesota
7 PM
BANQUET
Granite Ballroom

Friday, February 28, 2025

8 AM
BREAKFAST
 
9 AM – 12 PM
SESSION IX
Moderators: Adam Gormley, Shreya Goel
Douglas Ballroom
9 AM
Drug Delivery Across Biological Barriers to Combat Bacterial Infections and Antimicrobial Resistance
Claus-Michael Lehr, Helmholtz-Institute for Pharmaceutical Research Saarland & Saarland University
9:30 AM
Functional Plasticity in Microbiota-Host Interactions
Naama Geva-Zatorsky, Technion- Israel Institute of Technology
10 AM
Core-shell Design of Nanomedicine for Targeted Delivery of Biopharmaceuticals
Nobuhiro Nishiyama, Tokyo Institute of Technology
10:30 AM
Anticipating a New Wave of HPMA-Based Copolymer-drug Conjugates: Recent Advances and Future Perspectives in Cancer Therapy
Jiyuan (Jane) Yang, University of Utah
11 AM
Awards for Posters and Presentations
11:30 AM
Closing Remarks
11:45 AM
LUNCH

 

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    Venue

    Conference Venue and Hotel Information

    Conference Venue:

    University Guest House & Conference Center
    110 S. Fort Douglad Boulevard, SLC Utah, 84113
    (hotel located on the University of Utah campus, ~20 minutes from airport, ~10 min from downtown)

    Method of Reservations:

    Reservations for the Event will be made by individual attendees directly at 1(888)416-4075 or (801) 587-1000. 

    Hotel room cutoff date for the group rate is January 26, 2025.  After that date, the hotel will take reservations directly on a space available basis.  Please call 1(888)416-4075 or (801) 587-1000.

    Additional Hotel options:

    *Please note contracted room blocks have not been set up at the Marriott University Park or the Hampton Inn & Suites. Rates and availability will vary.  

    Marriott University Park
    801-581-1000
    (~5 minutes from University Guest House)

    Hampton Inn & Suites 
    801-583-3500
    (~10 minutes from University Guest House)

    Join our expert-led workshops to master pottery, woodwork, textiles, and more. Unleash your creativity, gain new skills, and craft your unique handmade pieces. All levels welcome!

    Local Information

    Ski with RADDS

    Join your colleagues from RADDS on an optional ski outing! Included in the cost (TBD) of the outing:

    • Lift ticket to Brighton Ski Resort in Big Cottonwood Canyon
    • Equipment rentals 
    • Transportation to and from the mountain

    If you are interested in skiing with RADDS on Tuesday, February 25, 2025, please indicate your interest in your conference registation and more information will be provided when it is available.

    See you on the slopes!

    Visiting Salt Lake City and Utah

    Salt Lake City lies in a mountain valley with the Wasatch Mountains to the east and north. The Oquirrh (pronounced “oaker”) Mountains border the western edge of the valley. Salt Lake’s official elevation is 4,330 feet/1,320 meters above sea level. The city is situated on land once covered by the prehistoric Lake Bonneville. This ancient lake existed within portions of Utah, Nevada, and Idaho, with an elevation rising from 4,200 feet to 5,200 feet (1,280 meters to 1,585 meters) at some points. The eastern and northern portions of the city are located on a series of terraces, or former beaches, which are known locally as “the benches.” 

    • Utah is in the Mountain Time Zone and uses Daylight Savings Time
    • City Elevation: 4,330 feet; 1,320 meters 
    • Nearby Mountains: (Snowbird base) 8,100 feet; 2,469 meters 

    Things to Do in Salt Lake City

    Salt Lake has a way of drawing people who might be called intellectual adventurers. Lovers of art and culture, nature and outdoors. And while there’s no shortage of places to bar hop (hey, no judgments!), we invite you to really get to know Salt Lake – its natural beauty, family-friendly attractions, enriching history, sporting spirit, and some truly “Only in Utah” experiences. Curious? You’ve come to the right place.


    Getting around town


    Ski Utah

    Utah is home to The Greatest Snow on Earth® and some of the best ski resorts around. Here you’ll find endless pockets of powder, snowy red rock views, welcoming slope side culture, and the unmatched accessibility of it all. No matter what brings you to ski or ride in Utah, make sure you have enough time to take it all in.


    Adjusting to the Higher Altitude in Utah 

    Adjusting from a low-altitude locale to the higher altitude of Salt Lake, or Park City (7,000+ feet/2000+ meters) may cause some visitors to exhibit some mildly uncomfortable symptoms like these: 

    • headaches
    • dehydration 
    • body aches (“flu”-like symptoms in the muscles and joints) 

    How can you adjust comfortably to the higher altitude and avoid or diminish  these kinds of symptoms? 

    First and foremost: Drink plenty of water! Utah’s water—right from the faucet—is clean, pure, healthy, and delightful. You’ll enjoy drinking LOTS of Utah water! Keeping your body hydrated is very important because high altitudes can dehydrate your system. This can be further complicated in arid regions like Utah. AND “jet-lag” can make matters worse! Water assists your body in flushing toxins, which is critical because altitude affects the body’s ability to dispose of carbon dioxide through breathing. Keep drinking water. Remember that if you feel thirsty, you have waited too long to drink. 

    If possible, on the first day you arrive, REST—and avoid strenuous exercise—to give your body time to adjust. Small and frequent meals of protein and complex carbohydrates can help keep symptoms to a minimum. Drink water BEFORE you feel thirsty! 

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