Thank you, Carlo and good morning, everyone. We entered 2022 excited about the opportunity for Seres to bring the first microbiome therapeutic to patients. Throughout the first quarter and in recent weeks, Seres continued to make steady progress across our microbiome therapeutics pipeline. At the center of these advances is our SER-109 program, where we expect to complete a BLA filing in the middle of this year in support of a potential commercial launch in the first half of next year. We believe that SER-109 has the potential to become the first ever FDA approved microbiome therapeutic, a landmark for this emerging class of medicines. Having SER-109 FDA approval, we believe we have the opportunity to fundamentally transform the treatment of recurrent C diff infection and potentially provide patients with a far superior treatment option that is available today. You will recall, our Phase III SER-109 results demonstrated a dramatic reduction in the proportion of recurrency to patients experiencing a further occurrence, demonstrating clear superiority versus antibiotics alone. The Phase III data surpassed statistical thresholds communicated by the FDA and we expect a single clinical study to fulfill efficacy requirements, supporting a BLA filing. The FDA also communicated that our BLA filing should include a safety database of at least 300 subjects receiving a Phase III dose, and with a 24 week follow-up. Our SER-109 open label study is nearing completion and we are looking forward to meaningful clinical results later this quarter. These results will include both safety and efficacy data across a broad group of recurrent CDI patients. As we prepare for a SER-109 BLA filing, we are also continuing to administer SER-109 via an expanded access program. This program enables eligible adults with recurrent C diff infection, including those with the first recurrence to obtain access to SER-109 ahead of a potential FDA product approval. The approval and launch of SER-109 would represent a significant advance for patients living with recurrent CDI, for Seres and for the microbiome field board generally. We are making excellent progress preparing for a successful commercial launch, which we are expecting in the first half of 2023. Our organization, working closely with our collaborator, Aimmune Therapeutics and Nestle Health Science Company, continues to focus on commercial preparedness activities, including market education efforts directed towards payers and healthcare practitioners. The further we advance this work, the more encouraged we are about the opportunity to transform the recurrent CDI market and the potential to help patients with SER-109. This opportunity is significant with approximately 170,000 cases of recurrent CDI in the US per year. Sadly, CDI results in over 20,000 deaths per year and recurrent CDI patients do not have adequate treatment options available today. Some patients are being treated with regimens and procedures that are not FDA approved, including [Technical Difficulty] microbiome transplantation and extended courses of antibiotics, the latter of which can exacerbate harm to the microbiome. In addition, overuse of antibiotics is a driver of antibiotic resistance, a global public health threat. Pending approval, we expect that SER-109 has the potential to address the entire recurrent CDI patient group suffering from this disease. We believe that SER-109 represents a substantial commercial opportunity for Seres. As we have previously shared, the annual cost of the patient with a recurrent C diff has been estimated to result in approximately $34,000 in annual direct healthcare expenses, and this does not include the substantial indirect costs associated with this disease. We believe that with a highly attractive SER-109 profile and the tremendous level of unmet need, this could translate into significant value for patients, payers and for the company. Based on our discussions with healthcare practitioners, there is an eagerness for new, safe, effective and FDA-approved treatment options. We believe SER-109 could provide an important new therapeutic option for recurrent C diff infection and we are working with urgency to bring our therapeutic candidate forward to the market as quickly as possible. In anticipation of launch, we are also making progress, expanding our commercial scale production of SER-109, to prepare for anticipate market demand. Last year, we announced the collaboration with Bacthera, a global leader in biopharmaceutical product manufacturing. This agreement increases our longer-term SER-109 product supply, which adds to our existing manufacturing capabilities. Bacthera building a dedicated facility for commercial manufacturing in its new microbiome center of excellence, a manufacturing site dedicated to the production of live biotherapeutic products. We believe that, our efforts to pioneer the manufacture and scale up of our microbiome therapeutics have further strengthened our leadership position. Beyond the clear benefit that was observed in the SER-109 Phase III study, we also believe that our data provide important proof-of-concept for the potential for microbiome therapeutics in Infection Protection more broadly. Bacterial infections remain a major health problem causing significant morbidity and mortality in several medically vulnerable populations, and we believe that Infection Protection represents a tremendous strategic opportunity for Seres. Earlier this year, we held an investor event where we detailed our Infection Protection strategy. We continued to make progress on this front with SER-155, as well as additional pre-clinical stage programs and we look of providing progress updates. I'd like to now pass the call over to Lisa to discuss our clinical initiatives in more detail.