Thanks. And thank you, Alex, and thank you for everyone to joining Inhibikase Therapeutics’ first quarter 2022 earnings call. As we kicked off the year, we have worked diligently to advance our clinical and preclinical development programs as well as extend our thought leadership in Parkinson's disease. This past month, for example, we brought together leading KOLs in the field of movement disorders to host an educational investor event. We also participated in multiple medical conferences this past quarter, including the Annual AD/PD Conference where we presented results from our Phase 1 and Phase 1b studies for IkT-148009 as well as the Next Generation Kinase Inhibitors Summit, where we highlighted the rationale behind targeting c-Abl Parkinson's disease. As we look ahead in the second quarter, we anticipate achieving a number of key milestones. Most importantly, we expect to dose the first patients in our Phase 2a study for IkT-148009 in Parkinson's. In addition, we also expect filing our IND application for IkT-001Pro for stable phase Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia, or CML, as well as report preclinical data from at least one study of IkT-148009 in Multiple Systems Atrophy or MSA. Before I dive into our clinical and preclinical pipeline programs, I want to encourage everyone to watch the replay of our Educational Investor event that we hosted last month. Together with our key opinion leaders, we cover the current unmet need, competitive and regulatory landscape in Parkinson's disease as well as our development strategy for IkT-148009 as a potential therapeutic option for patients. The event can be accessed under the Events & Presentations section of our IR website. So now let me start with our lead program, IkT-148009. IkT-148009 is a highly selective non-receptor an Abelson Tyrosine Kinase c-Abl inhibitor. As you may remember, 148009, was designed to have a predictable low-toxicity profile and to have the ability to cross the blood-brain barrier and accumulate in the brain. Animal Studies, including, Chronic Toxicology Studies confirm these designs. We are currently evaluating IkT-148009 in a Phase 1b extension study. The trial is a 3:1 randomized, placebo-controlled dose escalation trial that is evaluating the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of seven-day dosing of IkT-148009 at three escalating dose levels and patients with mild to moderately advanced Parkinson's disease. The study is also, assessing motor and non-motor function and gut motility and plans to measure alpha-synuclein aggregates as exploratory endpoints. In March, we presented data from the first cohort of the study at the Alzheimer's and Parkinson's Diseases Conference, or AD/PD Conference. The data from this cohort suggested that the safety and tolerability profile in patients closely met that of older healthy volunteers from our Phase 1 study. Pharmacokinetics of IkT-148009 in volunteers and subjects was also similar, further suggesting the pharmacology of IkT-148009 is consistent across patient groups and penetrates the central nervous system. We have dosed six of eight patients in the second cohort and expect to complete this cohort in the second quarter. We expect to present additional data from the study and comment on the measures of the effects on Parkinson's disease at a medical meeting later this year. While the trial is still blinded, we cannot draw any conclusions about the potential benefit of IkT-148009 based on the dosing of a small number of patients for seven days at different doses. We have determined that IkT-148009 does not worsen the patient's Parkinson's disease when dosed for seven days and that the pharmacology of IkT-148009 in patients is similar to that of healthy subjects of the same age. Based on these outcomes, we continue to believe that the results seen thus far in our Phase 1 and Phase 1b studies support the safety and therapeutic potential of IkT-148009 as a disease-modifying treatment for Parkinson's, and we are working diligently to advance IkT-148009 into a Phase 2a study. The Phase 2a study dubbed 201 Trial will be a 3:1 randomized, double-blind 12-week dosing trial that will evaluate the safety and tolerability of three doses of IkT-148009 in up to 120 patients diagnosed with Parkinson's disease who have not yet progressed to the need for symptomatic treatment. The trial will also measure a hierarchy of motor and non-motor function using patient and clinician reported outcomes inside and outside of the brain as secondary endpoints, and will evaluate whether treatment with IkT-148009 leads to a reduction or clearance of pathogenic alpha-synuclein aggregate as exploratory end points. We are currently in the process of activating clinical sites and look forward to announcing dosing in the first patients in the second quarter. Turning now to our preclinical efforts. We are advancing two programs that leverage our work in neurodegeneration. The first is IkT-001Pro, our prodrug formulation of matinib Mesylate which we have designed as a potentially safer, better tolerated treatment for Imatinib-sensitive cancers, such as stable-phase Chronic Myeloid Leukemia. We are conducting the necessary stability studies for IND submission for the IND submission package and expect to submit the investigational new drug application this quarter. Following the receipt of the study it may proceed later and other discussions with the FDA, we intend to commence bioequivalence studies in accordance with the 505(b)(2) regulatory pathway. Finally, we are continuing our preclinical work evaluating 148009 ph for the potential treatment of multiple system atrophy. As you may remember, MSA is a rare, rapidly progressive neurodegenerative movement disorder that affects both essential and autonomic nervous systems. Similar to Parkinson's, MSA is characterized by pathological alpha-synuclein aggregation, which may lead to cell dysfunction and degeneration of neurons. MSA affects approximately 20,000 people in the US and there are currently no approved treatments to slow or halt progression of this disease. These preclinical studies are evaluating whether inhibition c-Abl could have a therapeutic benefit in MSA, and we expect to report data in at least one of two animal models in the second quarter of 2022. The preliminary readouts from one animal model study indicates that therapeutic administration of IkT-148009 has a beneficial effect. Depending on the full results from these model studies and subject to agreement with the FDA and equivalent regulatory bodies in European Union, we may advance 148009 into a Phase 2a clinical study in the fourth quarter of 2022. Now let me turn the call over to our CFO, Joe Frattaroli, to review the financials. Joe?