Thank you, DA. As DA mentioned, we are currently have four open clinical programs exploring the treatment of ALS, the prevention of allograft rejection, both in kidney and in islet cell transplantation and IgA nephropathy. In the ALS Phase 2 trial, all patient visits are now complete, all patient samples have been analyzed and we're approaching database lock, thus keeping us on track to provide top line data this quarter. This study is an ascending dose trial that evaluates four dose levels of tegoprubart administered every – for 12 weeks. Data from this study will include safety and tolerability of tegoprubart as well as multiple categories of biomarker endpoints with each subject serving as their own control by comparing changes from baseline. In the first category of biomarkers, we'll assess CD40 ligand target engagement because mechanistically inhibiting CD40 ligand function has profound effects on B cell maturation, antibody production and the antibody class switching. We anticipate we'll be able to assess the inhibition of CD40 ligand target engagement by tegoprubart with biomarkers of B cell function including CXCL13 and others. The secondary biomarker categories changes in pro-inflammatory chemokines and cytokines upregulated in people living with ALS. There is a long history of ALS data describing increases of pro-inflammatory signals in circulation, including TNF alpha, MCP-1, IL-6, IL-1, and En-raged. We anticipate that in subjects with elevated levels, the blocking of CD40 ligand will result in an overall decrease of these and other pro-inflammatory markers in circulation. We anticipate in subjects with elevated levels of pro-inflammatory chemokines and cytokines, the blocking of CD40 ligand will result in an overall decrease of pro-inflammatory markers in circulation. As such as part of our biomarker strategy, we'll look at a comprehensive panel of more than 30 chemokines and cytokines to assess dose response and ALS patient response to tegoprubart exposure levels. Finally, we will also assess exploratory endpoints, including changes in ALS Functional Rating Scale, or ALS FRS, and levels of neurofilament light chain in circulation, redeem these end points exploratory given the uncertainty that 12 weeks of therapy is sufficient time to see an effect on these endpoints. There are several critical objectives associated with the ALS trial. Confirmation of safety and tolerability through the highest dose cohort is important not only for the ALS program, but also for our other programs. The first objective beyond safety and tolerability is to demonstrate target engagement with exposure to tegoprubart. CD40 ligand is on the surface of activated T-cells and the context of antigen presentation in germinal cell formation. During the process of germinal center formation, B cell proliferation, maturation and the generation of high affinity IgG antibodies occur induced by the expression of chemokines and cytokines such as CXCL13. As a result, based on CD40 ligand's mechanism, we expect tegoprubart to inhibit germinal center formation and B cell maturation and that decrease the generation of cytokines such as CXCL13. There is a significant body of published literatures showing increased levels of pro-inflammatory chemokines and cytokines such as TNF alpha, MCP-1, IL-1, IL-6 and En-raged as well as others and patients with ALS. Based on years of experimental data elucidating the role of CD40 ligand activation and inflammatory induction, the inhibition of CD40 ligand signaling by tegoprubart should thus reduce pro-inflammatory cytokine production. In sum, an exciting positive outcome from this clinical program would be a demonstration of both target engagement and a reduction in pro-inflammatory cytokines. Observing target engagement and reduced inflammation would demonstrate tegoprubart's best-in-class immune-modulatory potential in ALS. In addition to these biomarkers, we are collecting monthly ALS functional rating scores or ALSFRS, a common endpoint in ALS clinical trials, as well as measuring neurofilament light chain NFL levels in circulation. NFL is a prognostic marker of disease progression in ALS and that higher levels correlate with faster disease progression, but is unclear at this point, if levels of NFL will correlate with therapeutic benefit. Because of the relatively limited number of subjects and duration of the trial, however, we view these endpoints as exploratory, while not expected, given the relatively small size and limited duration of the study. If we're able to show a relationship between target engagement reduction in pro-inflammatory markers in either a change in disease progression measured by ALSFRS or reduction NFL levels, we consider this a tremendous win that further validates that a reduction in pro-inflammatory markers by tegoprubart may provide therapeutic benefit for people living with ALS. I'll now switch to discuss our transplantation studies. The cornerstone for the prevention of transplant rejection is the utilization of calcineurin inhibitors or CNIs. Although CNIs are associated with significant side effects, including hair loss, beta cell toxicity causing new onset diabetes, neurotoxicity causing neurological symptoms, including tremors and decreased cognitive function. And CNIs are also associated with increased risk of heart disease, as well as increase in infections in malignancies. Additionally, the chronic utilization of CNIs to prevent graft rejection has been associated with nephrotoxicity and up to a 100% of patients after 10 years, to which paradoxically shorten graft survival and the same organs that CNIs are being taken to protect. By improving the safety and tolerability of first line immunosuppression, we believe that tegoprubart has the potential to both improve patient quality of life and overall morbidity in the near term, as well as ultimately improved grass survival and rates in the long term. Only a few patients are needed to provide an early assessment of the prevention of acute rejection in the absence of CNIs, which have been the mainstay of immunosuppressive regimens to prevent acute rejection for the last 25 years. We have active sites in both Canada and the United Kingdom to conduct a Phase 1b clinical trial of tegoprubart and kidney transplantation. This open label study is planning to enroll up to 12 patients undergoing renal transplant with primary endpoints of safety and pharmacokinetics, as well as exploratory endpoints. including biopsy proof and rejection change in EGFR and biomarkers inflammation and kidney rejection. Our goal is to demonstrate that tegoprubart can be safely utilized to replace CNIs as part of first line immunosuppressive therapy and solid organ transplantation and prevent acute and long-term solid organ transplant rejection without the use of CNIs. Switching over to islet cell transplantation, we have an open site in Canada and are expecting to open our first U.S. site mid-year. Here we are looking at patients with type 1 diabetes with hypoglycemic unawareness who experience significant swings in glucose levels that are associated with serious risk and comorbidities. Our goal is to evaluate tegoprubart and the backbone maintenance of antirejection therapy similar to the rational I just described for kidney transplant rejection. In ICT specifically, we are evaluating the number of patients that achieve insulin independence, and we are also assessing the number of cell transplants required to achieve independence. Our hypothesis is that by removing CNIs, which are directly toxic to the islet cells and replacing it with tegoprubart more patients could achieve better glycemic control and have fewer islet cell transplants. We are currently looking to enroll our first patients in both the renal and islet cell transplantation trials with the goal of providing available data from these two studies later this year. I'll conclude with our program in IgAN. IgAN is the leading cause of glomerular nephritis, a chronic autoimmune condition resulting in progressive kidney damage onset usually occurs in younger adults often while the patient is in their 20s and is characterized by the presence of protein in the urine. Currently, approximately 40% of patients will progress to end-stage renal disease within 15 years to 20 years indicating a significant unmet need because the treatment for end-stage renal diseases is lifelong dialysis or kidney transplant, both of which bear significant patient and health care system costs. We believe there is a strong mechanistic rationale for pursuing CD40 ligand inhibition in IgAN since tegoprubart has the potential to modify disease progression by reducing the formation of IGA via the inhibition of antibody class switching, a decrease in immune complex formation via the inhibition of B cell maturation and a reduction in immune cell infiltration and subsequent complement activation in the kidney. In other words, we believe that take tegoprubart may have a beneficial effect on both the upstream and downstream pathophysiology of IgAN. We are happy to report that we've begun dosing patients in our open label Phase 2a clinical trial in patients with IgAN. In this trial patients with a confirmed diagnosis of IgAN and significant protein will be subsequently enrolled in two different dose courts of up to 21 patients each. The primary endpoint will be percent reduction in proteinuria 24 weeks compared to baseline. And we expect to communicate available data later this year. With that, I'll now turn the call over to Paul for a financial update.