MBI® Programme 2015-2016 Principles of Fermentation Processes 5-7 October 2015 Industrial Biotechnology: Biocatalysis through to Synthetic Biology 18-20 April 2016 Rapid Fermentation Process Design: From Development to Manufacture 26-28 October 2015 Analytical Data Analysis for the Bioprocessing Industry 25-28 April 2016 (CPI, Darlington) Downstream Processing – From Cell to Column 16-19 November 2015 Stem Cell Training Course: Human Pluripotent Stem Cells in Culture 25-27 April 2016 Downstream Processing –Chromatography 30 November-3 December 2015 Vaccines Bioprocess Development and Commercialisation 17-19 May Current Challenges in Mammalian Cell Processing 25-27 January 2016 Bioprocess Design & Economic Evaluation 6-9 June 2016 Quality by Design for Effective Bioprocess Characterisation and Validation 22-25 February 2016 Cell and Gene Therapy Manufacturing 1-3 March 2016 (Cell Therapy Catapult, London) Design of Experiments for Bioprocess Optimisation 7-9 March 2016 Bioprocess Facility Design 27-30 June 2016 Single Use Technology for Rapid Manufacturing 11-13 July 2016 All courses held at the department of Biochemical Engineering, University College London unless otherwise specified. ® For up-to-date information on all MBI courses, visit www.ucl.ac.uk/mbi MBI® Awards 2012 IChemE Award for Training Innovation 2014 UCL Life Learning Enterprise Award for CPD and Short Courses Downstream Processing: Chromatography Learn the most suitable purification operation for your process and find out about new technologies on the horizon 30 November-3 December 2015 Est. 1994 Downstream Processing: Chromatography This module focuses on product purification and, through a series of lectures, case studies and a pilot plant session, will enable you to: •Understand the principles of 72.3736 different methods of process chromatography, including Packed Bed, Monoliths, Expanded Bed, Counter Current and Simulated Moving Bed. •Select the appropriate media for, and predict the performance of, chromatography separations upon scale-up. •Assess the suitability of affinity separation as a product purification operation and gain awareness of advances in rational ligand design for difficult separations. •Determine appropriate strategies for the maintenance of column and process hygiene. •Consider how chromatography is changing at industrial scale, and which new technologies will have an impact in the future. 83.7474 Who should attend? This course is intended for engineers, chemists, biologists, biochemists and biotechnologists who are interested in the biochemical engineering aspects of chromatography. Each concept and topic covered will be explained for the beginner - without assuming detailed prior knowledge. Typically, delegates are: R&D scientists, engineers or managers who need to learn more about scale-up, scaledown and operation of chromatographic methods in a production environment. 95.1211 Day 1 •Introduction to module •Chromatography fundamentals •Models and scale-up •High throughput chromatographic bioseparations •Pitfalls in the scaleup of packed bed bioprocesses •Social networking dinner organised for delegates and speakers. Day 4 •Process scale monoliths •New approaches to process scale chromatography •Case study: where and when to apply chromatography? •Where will further improvements in chromatography come from? Day 2 •Pilot-plant studies: chromatography •Tailoring media for bioseparations •Affinity separation •Design of biomimetics for affinity separations •Chromatography practical results Industrial Expert Speakers Include CMC Biologics A/S Bio-Rad Laboratories GmbH Brunel University ABD Life Sciences Ltd BIA Separations Pall Corporation GE Healthcare Proxcys Sartorius Tarpon Biosystems ProMetic Biosciences Proxcys For further information and bookings please contact: E: mbi-training@ucl.ac.uk I Visit: www.ucl.ac.uk/mbi T: +44 (0) 20 7679 9619 I +44 (0) 203 549 5619 Please note the agenda maybe subject to change. 117.869 Day 3 •Process hygiene and column maintenance •Case study: mAb purification; issues in scaling-up to large process scale •Alternative approaches to scaling up •Design of small scale columns for ease of scale-up •Simulated moving bed chromatography for biopharmaceutical production •Liquid - liquid chromatography Module Leader Dr Daniel Bracewell UCL