Thank you, Tiffany, and thank you all for joining us today. As detailed in our press release, we are excited to discuss the substantial progress of our game changing modifier gene therapy platform. All three gene therapies are advancing through the clinic and we're on track to meet our goal of three biologics license application/market authorization application filings in the next three years. Modifier gene therapies offer potential cures for life. Unlike traditional gene therapies or gene editing, modifier gene therapies have the ability to regulate gene networks, reset homeostasis, restores the functional network and create a healthy environment for retinal cells to survive. Since photoreceptors in retinal cells are non-dividing, creating a healthy environment is a powerful concept and cells can potentially survive for life with this therapy. Today, based on the unique mechanism of action, these therapies target diseases to large patient populations globally, millions, instead of a very small group of hundreds to a few thousand patients as with the traditional gene therapies in the market today. Positive clinical data continues to perform the multi-layered gene therapy approach. We started off the year with a two year safety and efficacy data from the Phase 1/2 OCU400 clinical trial that further supports the gene agnostic mechanism of action of OCU400, a broad RP treatment not restricted to specific mutations with durability. It was especially gratifying to reach an alignment with FDA for the OCU410ST Phase 2/3 pivotal confirmatory trial, which can be the basis of a BLA submission in 2027. Accelerating the clinical timeline of OCU410ST will save significant costs and potentially address disease burden even sooner than anticipated. Finally, dosing was complete. Ahead of schedule in the Phase 2 portion of the OCU410 Phase 1/2 ArMaDa clinical trial for geographic atrophy late stage dry AMD. We are planning to initiate the Phase 3 clinical trial in 2026 on target with a BLA submission in 2028. I will now provide additional details around the program updates. OCU400 has the potential to treat approximately 300,000 RP patients in the US and EU and 1.6 million patients globally using the gene agnostic approach delivered via single subretinal injection to target all 100 genes associated with RP. A traditional gene therapy approach would require developing 100 different products to address all 100 genes, which is not commercially viable. More significantly, recent news affirms that the traditional gene therapy approach is ineffective in achieving clinically meaningful outcomes for treating RP. The positive two year long term safety and efficacy data from the Phase 1/2 clinical trial of OCU400 for RP demonstrates a durable and statistically significant with a P value of 0.005 improvement in the visual function LLVA in all evaluable treated subjects at two years when compared to untreated eyes. Additionally, 100%, 10/10 of treated evaluable subjects demonstrated improvement or preservation in visual function compared to untreated eyes. The Phase 3 study spanning one year will enroll 150 participants divided into two study counts, 75 participants with the raw gene mutations and 75 participants who are gene agnostic. In each arm, participants will be randomized in a 2:1 ratio to receive either treatment or remain in an untreated control group respectively. The OCU400 Phase 3 line wide clinical trial is open to all eligible RP patients, early to advanced stage RP, including pediatric subjects age five plus regardless of gene mutation, syndromic and non-syndromic forms of RP. Two key parts of our potential BLA/MAA filings next year are on schedule. The first is manufacturing and we are tracking to complete process validations this year in support of registration. This material can also be used for commercial supply in 2027. The second part, the Phase 3 clinical trial is progressing well. Just this week, EMA granted eligibility to submit our OCU400 MAA via centralized procedure as an ATMP based on the current study design and statistical analysis plan. This is a significant project milestone for OCU400. EMA has appointed a project lead to support any queries related to the application and six months prior to MAA submission, the rapporteur and the co-rapporteur will be appointed to support the application. This eligibility grant is a testament to EMS recognition of the potential of OCU400 to address serious unmet medical need in Europe. There is currently no approved treatment option for Stargardt disease that encompasses more than 1200 mutations and affects 100,000 people in the US and EU and 1 million globally. The FDA's decision to approve a Phase 2/3 trial registration underscores the potential of OCU410ST to meet this critical unmet medical need and has never been explored in clinical trials for Stargardt disease. Data from the OCU410ST Phase 1 GUARDIAN clinical trial has shown significant improvements in both structural and functional outcomes. Additionally, OCU410ST has consistently demonstrated a very favorable safety and tolerability profile. In BCVA, treated eyes demonstrate a two line or 10 letter gain in the visual equity compared to untreated eyes and a statistically significant p value of 0.02 improvement in visual function when compared to untreated LOIs. In the latest data, atrophic lesions grew slower by 54% at six months and by 103% at 12 months in evaluable treated eyes when compared to untreated eyes. The Phase 2/3 pivotal confirmatory clinical trial, which includes an adaptive design with an interim MAST analysis at eight months, with randomized 51 subjects, 34 of whom will receive a single subretinal injection of OCU410ST in the eye with worse visual acuity and 17 of whom will serve as untreated controls. The primary endpoint in the clinical trial is change in atrophic lesion size. Secondary endpoints include visual acuity as measured by test corrected visual acuity, BCVA, and LLVA compared to untreated controls. One year data will be utilized for the BLA filing. OCU410 specifically designed to address multiple pathways implicated in the pathogenesis of dry AMD offers a distinct advantage over current treatments that target only one cause of GA require multiple injections per year and are accompanied by various safety concerns. Our goal with OCU410 is to provide a comprehensive and durable solution, a potential one time therapy for life for the 2 million to 3 million people in the US and Europe and 8 million globally suffering GA. In February, dosing was complete in the Phase 2 portion of the OCU410 Phase1 1/2 ArMaDa clinical trial for GA. In evaluable subjects, OCU410 12-month data demonstrates a four line or 23 letter gain in the visual acuity. There was 41% slower GA lesion growth in treated eyes versus untreated fellow eyes after a single injection. Furthermore, a 12-month OCU410 treatment preserves more retinal tissue around the GA lesions of treated eyes compared to commercially available products given monthly or every other month. In the Phase 2 study, the safety and efficacy of OCU410 in patients with the GA secondary to dry AMD will be assessed. 51 patients with randomized 1:1 into either of two treatment groups, medium or high dose or a control group. In the treatment group, subjects received a single subretinal 200 microliter administration of medium dose or high dose, while the control remained untreated. The Data and Safety Monitoring Board has evaluated safety in all 51 patients from Phase 2 clinical trial. Today, there have been no serious adverse events related to OCU410. Phase 2 interim results are expected in the fall of this year. I would also like to provide a summary of programs outside of our first in class modifier gene therapy platform. Earlier this year, the first patient was dosed in the Phase 1 clinical trial for OCU200, the company's biologic product candidate for diabetic macular edema. We are currently dosing the second cohort based on first cohort safety data. Ocugen plans to complete the Phase 1 clinical trial in the second half of 2025. The company intends to initiate the Phase 3 trial for NeoCart contingent on adequate availability of funding and are based on the potential of a future partnership. Lastly, the investigational new drug application is in effect for OCU500 and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases intends to initiate a Phase 1 clinical trial in the second quarter of 2025. Ocugen is continuing discussions with the relevant government agencies as well as strategic partners regarding developmental funding for its vaccine technology for flu. With that, I will now turn the call over to our Chief Accounting Officer, Ramesh Ramachandran, to provide an update on our financial results for the first quarter ended March 31, 2025.