Thank you, Jim. I'll start with a recap of our recent data for the BRILLIANCE trial for EDIT-101 for the treatment of LCA10. To give some quick background, CEP290 associated retinal degeneration or LCA10 is a rare inherited disorder affecting about three out of every 100,000 children. It’s autosomal recessive, which means that to be impactful, the person has to inherit two copies of the defective gene, one from each parent. Now if you can repair at least one of these copies, you can potentially treat the disease. Despite being rare, it is the most common cause of early onset inherited retinal degeneration. The loss of vision is caused by early loss of photoreceptors in the eye. Patients are usually diagnosed during infancy and early childhood, with the majority of vision loss occurring in the first decade. However, even in adults, there remains a small area of preserved anatomy in the central part of the retina. And this provides the opportunity for gene correction. When Editas first started the EDIT-101 program, this was the very first time that any Company had attempted gene editing in the human body. And as a result, the BRILLANCE trial was designed primarily as a safety study, with the purpose of identifying the highest tolerated dose for subsequent study. At September's Retinal Degeneration Symposium, we shared safety data on two patients treated at the first and the lowest dose cohorts, and the four patients treated in middle dose cohort as of the data cutoff date in August 4th. All observed for adverse events were mild to moderate and majority of these reported events were directly attributable to the surgical procedure. Importantly, no detectable immune responses against Cas enzyme were observed. This is great news and its results are comparable for the two dose cohorts. Our non-clinical data suggests that we would expect a greater number of photoreceptors to be effectively edited at each consecutive dose level. The safety observed has allowed us confidence to start treatment subjects in the highest plan dose cohort, and has allowed us to start enrolling the pediatric dose cohort - with the mid-dose pediatric cohort. We expect that EDIT-101 will have a differentiated safety profile, as it is administered as a single one-time injection directly to the part of the retina where the photoreceptors are preserved. Targeted approach treats not only those cells – treats only those cells, sorry, thereby limiting any potential effects on the structures of the eye. Although the primary endpoint of the study is safety, there are multiple exploratory endpoints that are focused on efficacy. Preliminary findings were presented for the five patients who had at least three months follow-up after treatment. This included the two patients in the low-dose cohort and three in the mid-dose cohort. The three months mark was selected as the earliest time point where we might expect to be able to pick up some sign of editing for several reasons. Based on the injection procedure, there needs to be time for the retina to heal and for maximal editing to occur. And they also take additional time for the dysfunctional CEP290 protein to be replaced by the newly-generated functional protein. Three months is really when the clock starts, and it may take longer for the brain to respond to the new signals. One of the challenges of treating an ocular disease that we don't have a direct way of measuring how much of the normal CEP290 protein is being made in the eye or have a direct way to determine how many cells were edited. So, we're dependent on surrogate measures of efficacy, such as full-field light sensitivity threshold testing, best corrected visual acuity, and improvement in an individuals of -- individual's ability to navigate standardized navigation courses with varying levels of difficulty. At least one positive change in any of these procedures was the suggest that a biologic effect has occurred on how the treated photoreceptors in the eye register light. For this reason, we were very pleased to document meaningful changes from baseline in one or more measures in the two mid-dose subjects in whom we have the longest follow-up. The changes proved biological activity. Most excitingly, in an at least one subject in the mid-dose cohort, there is a clinically meaningful change in best corrected visual acuity and a real change in her ability to maneuver through obstacles at different levels of light. These are approvable clinical endpoints. As for the other patients treated in the mid-dose cohort, it may have been too easy to draw a conclusion -- it may have been too early, I'm sorry, to draw conclusions, which is why we continue to follow them. In the meantime, we are eager to see whether the study can produce similar or stronger responses in the subjects who are now being treated in the high-dose group. We've been very pleased with the safety we have observed so far and in the initial signals that effective editing has occurred. This is illustrated by clinically meaningful changes in the mid-dose cohort and in those subjects with the longest follow-up. Consequently, BRILLIANCE study is moving forward. We continue to progress the high-dose and – the adult high-dose and the pediatric mid-dose cohorts, and expect to complete dosing of these two cohorts in the first half of next year. Now, turning to our ex vivo programs, specifically EDIT-301 for sickle cell disease and transfusion-dependent beta thalassemia. We believe that EDIT-301 has the potential to be a leading gene editing medicine based on its highly efficient editing and specificity, which we expect to result in optimized safety and efficacy. By demonstrating robust and sustained fetal hemoglobin, or hemoglobin F expression, with both short and long-term safety, we aim to have a differentiated medicine to treat sickle cell disease and beta - thalassemia that will hopefully lead to longer lifespans and better quality of life for these patients. Currently enrolling patients in the Ruby study for the treatment of sickle-cell disease. In this program, we are using our engineered Cas12a enzyme to target a region in the beta globin locus. We believe this to be a potentially safer target for gene-editing because several different mutations or Polymorphism that are not associated with human disease occur at this site. More specifically, the Editas approach mimic naturally occurring mutations associated with the condition called hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin, which we know prevents [Indiscernible]. We've demonstrated excellent pre-clinical data that support the benefits of editing the beta globin locus and our Cas12a enzyme, and we're also very excited to be advancing that program to the clinic. As mentioned, patient screening and enrollment is moving forward for EDIT-301 at sickle cell disease. We have patients who are currently undergoing cell harvesting cycles as a requisite to editing their own stem cells, and we look forward to dosing the first patient in the first half of next year. On EDIT-301 for transfusion-dependent beta - thalassemia, we're going to be presenting data at the American Society of Hematology Conference next month. Preclinical data will demonstrate that edited CD34 cells showed significant improvement in erythroid maturation and health, along with increased total hemoglobin content. This reinforces our belief that our therapeutic strategy has great potential for beta-thalassemia in addition to sickle-cell [Indiscernible]. We remain on track to file our investigational new drug application for EDIT-301 with beta-thalassemia by year-end. And with that, I'd like to turn things over to Mark to run through our pipeline and our gene editing technology.