Thank you, Arnon. I'll begin with Latozinemab, our novel first-in-class progranulin elevating candidate, which we are developing in partnership with GSK. It is the most advanced therapeutic candidate in clinical development for the treatment of frontotemporal dementia in patients with a granulin mutation or FTD granulin. FTD is a rare neurodegenerative disease, but it is one of the most common causes of early onset dementia. Currently, there are no approved treatment options available for patients with FTD. Heterozygous loss of function mutations in the granulin gene result in haploinsufficiency of progranulin, reducing CNS levels to 50% of normal and are causal for FTD with penetrance that approximate 100%. Latozinemab is a novel investigational human monoclonal antibody designed to block and down-regulate the sortilin receptor, which one of several receptors that take up progranulin from the extracellular space. This blockade results in an increase in extracellular progranulin. Latozinemab has been evaluated in Phase 1 and 2 trials, with ongoing evaluation in a pivotal Phase 3 trial for which topline data is expected by the fourth quarter. INFRONT-2 Phase 2 open-label study evaluated treatment effects of Latozinemab in 12 subjects with symptomatic FTD granulin. Effects on progranulin levels and biomarkers of lysosomal function, inflammation, astrogliosis and neurodegeneration were assessed after 12 months of treatment. Treatment restored progranulin to normal levels in both plasma and CSF, representing a two to threefold increase, which was rapid and sustained over the treatment duration of 49 weeks. Although the number of participants in this cohort was relatively small, all the biomarker data moved in the direction that we would expect if Latozinemab slows the progression of FTD pathophysiology. To determine whether there was a treatment-related slowing of disease progression, we assessed change on the CDR plus NACC FTLD Sum of Boxes, which is an FTD-specific modification of the clinical dementia rating scale with additional modules to assess behavioral and language deficits that health authorities have confirmed will be acceptable as a primary endpoint in our pivotal Phase 3 trial. We conducted a blinded comparison of disease progression rates between the Latozinemab-treated participants in INFRONT-2 to baseline propensity match participants from the GENFI2 observational study. This analysis demonstrated that clinical disease progression in the Latozinemab-treated subjects was slowed by 48% over one year compared to the GENFI subjects. INFRONT-3 is a pivotal Phase 3 randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial with a treatment duration of 96 weeks. The trial enrolled 103 symptomatic and 16 at-risk FTD granulin participants who were randomized to receive either 60 milligrams per kilogram of Latozinemab intravenously every four weeks or placebo. Importantly, in this Phase 3 study, we are collecting the same clinical outcome assessments and biomarkers that we assessed in the Phase 2 study of Latozinemab. Previously, we gained alignment from the FDA and EMA to conduct a primary analysis on symptomatic participants in INFRONT-3. We intend to include the at-risk participants in sensitivity analysis. In February 2024, the FDA granted Latozinemab breakthrough therapy designation for FTD granulin based on our INFRONT-2 Phase 2 clinical trial data. With this designation, last year, we held a Type B interaction with the FDA on the potential future biologics license application for Latozinemab. The FDA indicated that it would consider the effects of Latozinemab on plasma and CSF progranulin levels as confirmatory evidence, supplementing the potential clinical effects of Latozinemab pending BLA review. We also aligned with the agency on disease-relevant fluid and imaging biomarkers that may be considered as supportive evidence of clinical efficacy also subject to BLA review. Based on the FDA feedback and the strength of our trial design, we remain confident that the totality of the evidence, including the primary clinical endpoint and biomarkers could provide a path to potential full approval for Latozinemab. In September of 2024, we presented the patient baseline characteristics for INFRONT-3 at the 14th International Conference on Frontotemporal Dementias or ISFTD 2024. The baseline characteristics of symptomatic participants, including age, CDR plus NACC FTLD Sum of Boxes scores and NfL levels were representative of the broader FTD granulin registry population based on available registry data. INFRONT-3 is designed to provide approximately 90% power to detect a 40% slowing of disease progression. If our trial design assumptions hold, a 25% slowing of disease progression is expected to be statistically significant. I'd like to now turn to AL101, our second product candidate in our progranulin portfolio that we are developing in partnership with GSK. Like Latozinemab, AL001 is a monoclonal antibody designed to block and downregulate the sortilin receptor to elevate the level of progranulin in the brain. Its distinct pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties have the potential to enable dosing regimens that may be more suitable for use in the treatment of larger indications, such as Alzheimer's disease. Our Phase 1 study in healthy volunteers demonstrated that AL101 was well tolerated and increased progranulin levels in plasma and CSF in a dose-dependent manner. The ongoing PROGRESS-AD Phase 2 trial of AL101 operationalized by our partner, GSK, is enrolling approximately 282 participants with early Alzheimer's disease across multiple global sites with enrollment expected to complete by mid-2025. The first participant was dosed just one year ago in February 2024. PROGRESS-AD is a 76-week randomized double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial of AL101 designed to assess the safety and efficacy of two doses of AL101 compared to placebo. The primary endpoint of the study is disease progression as measured by the clinical dementia rating Sum of Boxes. The trial also employs other clinical and functional outcome assessments and biomarkers. We look forward to sharing additional information on PROGRESS-AD as the trial advances. Finally, on April 5th, we plan to present the results from the INVOKE-2 Phase 2 clinical trial, which evaluated the safety and efficacy of AL002, a TREM2 agonist in individuals with early Alzheimer's disease. Results will be delivered during an oral presentation at the AD/PD 2025 International Conference on Alzheimer's and Parkinson's Disease taking place in Vienna, Austria. We remain committed to advancing the understanding of Alzheimer's pathophysiology and the development of effective therapeutics for the disease. With that, I'll now turn the call over to Sara to provide an update on our preclinical pipeline. Sara?