Thank you, Emiko, and good afternoon, everyone. PepGen made meaningful progress over the course of 2023, including the initiation of our first inpatient clinical trials evaluating programs derived from PepGen Enhanced Delivery Oligonucleotide, or EDO, cell-penetrating peptide platform in two neuromuscular diseases with high unmet medical need. Our lead clinical program, PGN-EDO51 or EDO51 is designed for the treatment of patients with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy, also known as DMD, whose disease is amenable to an exon 51-skipping approach. As a reminder, an estimated 13% people with DMD or approximately 4,200 individuals in the U.S. and EU have a mutation amenable to an exon 51-skipping approach. Our second clinical program, PGN-EDODM1 or EDODM1 is designed for the treatment of Myotonic Dystrophy Type 1, or DM1. We estimate that DM1 affects more than 100,000 people in the U.S. and Europe for whom there are currently no approved disease-modifying treatments. Here at PepGen, developing potentially transformative medicines is the foundation of our mission and long-term vision for building the company. We believe that both our DMD and DM1 programs have the potential to be disease-modifying and meaningfully improve outcomes for patients. Our team is committed to advancing these important programs through the clinic with a sense of urgency to get them to the people living with these diseases as quickly as possible. We believe our recent stock offering puts us in a strong financial position for our team to execute on this commitment. The net proceeds from this offering, together with our existing cash and cash equivalent, extend our projected cash runway into 2026. Turning to the latest updates and highlights from our clinical programs, we are pleased to announce we have completed enrollment for cohort 1 in CONNECT1-EDO51, evaluating the 5 mg per kg dose in DMD patients in our first Phase II clinical trial. Following the review of the safety data of the 5 mg per kg dose cohort by our Data Safety Monitoring Board, and assuming an acceptable emerging safety profile, we plan to escalate to the second cohort at 10 mg per kg of EDO51. The same process will take place prior to advancing to cohort 3. In parallel, earlier this week, we announced we received clearance from the MHRA in the UK to initiate CONNECT2-EDO51, our Phase II study of EDO51 in people with DMD amenable to an exon 51-skipping therapy. We currently expect to be initiating dosing in cohort 1 evaluating the 5 mg per kg dose level in patients in the UK in the third quarter of 2024. Following CONNECT1's preliminary data readout for the 5 mg per kg cohort, we expect to open trial sites for CONNECT2 in other geographies, including the U.S., subject to regulatory authorizations. We anticipate reporting preliminary data for the CONNECT1 5 mg per kg cohort in mid-2024, including safety, exon skipping and dystrophin production. Based upon externally available data and using our own clinical and nonclinical work for internal modeling assumptions, PepGen expects treatment with EDO51 in DMD patients to produce high levels of dystrophin protein. At the 5 mg per kg dose level, we expect to see greater than 1% of normal levels of dystrophin protein above background levels in the CONNECT1-EDO51 trial as measured by Western Blot analysis following four repeat doses of EDO51 in DMD patients. For our 10 mg per kg dose cohort, if EDO51 were to achieve dystrophin levels of greater than 7%, this would be the highest level of dystrophin production achieved by a DMD exon-skipping therapy to date. Our modeling projections for this dose level suggests the possibility that we could potentially achieve greater than 9% of normal levels of dystrophin protein. The combined safety and dystrophin expression data package from CONNECT1 and CONNECT2 is designed to support a potential path towards accelerated approval, assuming alignment with regulatory authorities. Turning to our DM1 development program, we were pleased that the clinical hold on EDODM1 was lifted by the FDA in October 2023. Following discussions with regulatory authorities, we are advancing our EDODM1 therapy at the same dose level starting at 5 mg per kg across all countries, including the U.S., in the Phase I FREEDOM-DM1 clinical trial for people living with DM1. Just last month, EDODM1 was granted fast track designation by FDA. This designation is designed to facilitate the development, and expedite the review of potential therapies designed to treat serious diseases and conditions with clear unmet medical needs. Importantly, fast track designation allows for early and more frequent communication with the FDA, which can potentially lead to earlier drug approval and access for patients. In December 2023, PepGen announced the first patient was dosed in the Phase I FREEDOM-DM1, single ascending dose clinical trial, and we expect to report preliminary data, including safety, splicing correction and functional outcome measures from at least 5 mg per kg dose cohort in the second half of 2024. We expect both the 5 mg per kg dose and 10 mg per kg dose evaluated in the FREEDOM-DM1 clinical study to be pharmacologically active and believe that 10 mg per kg dose could exhibit meaningful splicing correction and myotonia correction. In addition to our FREEDOM-DM1 trial, we expect to open our FREEDOM2-DM1, placebo-controlled multiple ascending dose clinical trial in DM1 patients in the second half of 2024. An important differentiator of our PGN-EDODM1 is that it is designed to selectively target the pathogenic DMPK RNA with the CUG repeat expansion rather than degrading both the normal as well as pathogenic DMPK RNA. As a result of this selectivity, and based on our preclinical data, we believe that EDODM1 has the potential to achieve superior correction of splicing events at a well-tolerated dose levels, which could lead to improved functional outcomes for patients. In addition to our clinical programs, our research team continues to advance and evaluate our preclinical candidates in key areas of focus for neuromuscular and neurologic disorders. PGN-EDO53 is our lead preclinical program designed to skip exon 53 of the dystrophin transcript, a therapeutic target for approximately 8% of patients with DMD. We previously reported superior exon skipping in repeat dose studies in nonhuman primates, and our team is commencing IND and CTA-enabling studies in 2024. We look forward to providing more details as we progress. I will now turn the call over to Dr. Michelle Mellion, PepGen's Head of Clinical Development, to provide an in-depth review of the trial designs, of the ongoing clinical trials in DMD and DM1 that I just mentioned. Michelle?