Thanks Rich. Good afternoon everyone and thank you for joining us today. The past year was highly eventful for Protagonist, and we look forward to 2019 as a year of solid execution as we move ahead with clinical development of three very diverse drug candidates, all generated from our proprietary peptide technology platform. We begin the year with adequate financial resources to support progression of these three candidates to important inflection points from now through the end of 2020. On today's call, I would like to review the status of our development candidates and highlight six key milestones we anticipate for 2019. Joining me today is David Liu, our CSO and Head of R&D; Rich Shames, our Chief Medical Officer; and Suneel Gupta, our Executive VP of Clinical Operations and Pharmacology. They will all be available to address questions you may have during the Q&A session. Following my overview, Don Kalkofen, our Senior Advisor for Finance and Accounting, will review our financial results, and then we will open up the call to questions. So to begin, I would like to emphasize that Protagonist is exclusively focused on peptide therapeutics. Over the past 10 plus years, we have created and optimized the peptide engineering technology platform that enables us to discover new chemical entities with highly distinctive attributes. Specifically, we are able to develop peptide therapeutics designed to address specific medical challenges that cannot be adequately addressed with classical small molecule or large antibody approaches. We are therefore able to pursue those projects and opportunities in medicine that most other companies are unable to undertake. Thus, there is a significant barrier-to-entry for others towards accessing the kind of assets we are discovering and developing as they do not possess the privileged know-how or the type of proprietary technology platform that we have. Through the use of our platform, we have built a pipeline of three distinct therapeutic candidates that are now in different stages of development. Our most advanced asset is PTG-300, a synthetic peptide mimetic of the natural hormone, hepcidin. PTG-300 is engineered to have better drug like properties for the use as a therapeutic agent. It is engineered to be more potent, more stable, less complex in structure, and easier to synthesize in comparison to the natural hormone hepcidin. Hepcidin is a master regulator of iron homeostasis in our body. And therefore, the mimetic peptide PTG-300 has the potential to address unmet medical needs in multiple blood disorder-based indications, many of which fall in the category of rare diseases. Thereby, providing an opportunity for orphan drug development for those specific indications. Our two other aspects, PTG-200 and PN-943, are gut-restricted, orally stable peptides that are being developed as potential oral therapy for inflammatory bowel diseases or IBD. In IBD, we are targeting those biological pathways that have already been validated by approved and marketed injectable antibody drugs. What sets us apart here from these injectable antibodies is our oral gut restricted approach to targeting these validated pathways. Our first oral gut restricted IBD asset is PTG-200, and it targets the IL-23 receptor. The clinical validation for this approach comes from Janssen's approved injectable antibody therapeutic Stelara that targets the IL-12/23 pathway and that is approved for Crohn's disease. You can also appreciate then that it is not a random coincidence that we have a partnership with Janssen around PTG-200 as it offers the potential to synergize and extend the Stelara franchise. PTG-200 is ready for a Phase 2 study in Crohn's patients, and we expect this study to be initiated by Janssen in the first half of 2019. Our second asset in the IBD space is the oral gut restricted candidate PN-943, which targets alpha-4-beta-7 integrin, the same biological target through which Takeda's injectable antibody IBD drug, ENTYVIO, works. PN-943 is currently in Phase 1 studies in healthy volunteers. While the injectable antibodies like Stelara and ENTYVIO are important and available treatment options, there is a strong shift in the potential treatment paradigm towards oral targeted therapy in IBD as witnessed by multiple companies working on oral JAK inhibitors and S1P modulators. Oral therapeutic options, like PTG-200 and PN-943 that work through mechanisms already proven and validated by injectable antibodies could be a potentially safe and a welcome needle-free option for IBD patients. So, until now, I have talked about why and how our three clinical assets are unique, well-differentiated, address unmet needs, and in general, present a barrier to direct competition. Now, let us talk about the specifics that is what is the current status of these three assets and what milestones and announcements can be expected in 2019 and beyond. As mentioned before, we are fortunate to be in a strong position to move forward with adequate financial resources to support all of these programs through the end of 2020. First, let's review the status of hepcidin mimetic PTG-300. With 300, we have previously demonstrated pharmacodynamic readout phase clinical proof-of-concept in Phase 1 studies, achieving dose related reductions in serum iron levels in healthy volunteers. It should be noted that in this Phase 1 study, PTG-300 was shown to have a significantly longer half-life of 21 to 42 hours in comparison to hepcidin, which is expected to have a half-life of five to eight hours. Being a mimetic of the natural hormone that serves as a master regulator of iron homeostasis, 300 has potential utility in multiple blood disorders, such as beta-thalassemia, myelodysplastic syndrome, polycythemia vera, and hereditary hemochromatosis. Out of this, the fourth indication we have chosen to pursue is beta-thalassemia, a rare disease characterized by deficient or defective production of red blood cells and excessive iron overload in the body. Currently, there is no approved medication for these patients and they are often dependent on blood transfusion with many patients requiring lifelong transfusions to survive. PTG-300 has received orphan drug designation from the European Medicines Agency and U.S. Food and Drug Administration as well as fast-track designation from the U.S. FDA. We recently initiated dosing of PTG-300 in the TRANSCEND study, a global Phase 2 study in beta-thalassemia patients. This is a single arm, open label study in 84 patients designed to evaluate safety, clinical proof-of-concept, and dose optimization in both transfusion-dependent as well as non-transfusion-dependent beta-thalassemia patients. We are satisfied with the rate of patient enrollment to date, and we expect to report initial results from the TRANSCEND study in the second half of the year. Beyond beta-thalassemia, we see strong potential for PTG-300 in other indications and expect to initiate a second indication in the second half of the year. So that was the overview on our subcutaneous hepcidin mimetic 300 for blood disorders and diseases. Now, let us switch gears and update you on our two oral gut-restricted IBD assets. First, let's address the oral IL-23 receptor antagonist, PTG-200. As a refresher, we entered into partnership with Janssen for PTG-200 around mid-2017 when it was a preclinical asset. Since then, all preclinical studies as well as Phase 1 studies have been completed by Protagonist and the drug has been found to be well-tolerated with no serious adverse events or dose-limiting toxicities observed in healthy volunteers and it is now ready for evaluation in patients. Both Protagonist and the Janssen teams are working together toward the objective of filing the U.S. IND in the first half of 2019 to begin a global Phase 2 study in patients with Crohn's disease. Our partnership remains strong and we are privileged to be working with a partner like Janssen with such deep-rooted expertise and experience in the field of IBD and with a strong commitment towards oral gut-restricted approach as a future therapeutic option for IBD patients. Now, let's address our fully owned oral gut-restricted alpha-4-beta-7 integrin antagonist, PN-943, that we are currently developing on our own at this stage. 943 is currently in a Phase 1 study in healthy volunteers, wherein besides establishing safety and PK, we will also benefit tremendously from measuring pharmacodynamics or PD effects of blood receptor occupancy or RO. You may recall that PN-943 builds up on an earlier program with a similar oral gut-restricted alpha-4-beta-7 integrin antagonist, PTG-100, wherein we had established a good correlation between Phase 1 pharmacodynamic data and the Phase 2 histological and clinical remission rates in ulcerative colitis patients. And these findings are presented as an Oral Talk at the UEGW Conference in October of 2018. PN-943 is an analog that has shown superiority to 100 by all measures of in-vitro and in-vivo preclinical studies that we have investigated to-date. We are glad to share that the preclinical research findings that describe the properties of PN-943 have been accepted for an oral presentation for Sunday, May 2019 at the Digestive Diseases Week Conference in San Diego. PN-943 provides a notable example of the versatility of the Protagonist peptide engineering platform, which allows to create backup candidates with improved properties. And in this case, it has allowed us to switch conveniently from 100 to 943 without significantly expanding the overall development timelines. We are expecting initial clinical safety PK and PD results from the Phase 1 study of 943 in healthy volunteers in the first half of 2019. The Phase 1 results will inform the design of a Phase 2 study of 943 in patients with ulcerative colitis with an expected U.S. IND filing in late 2019. So, in summary, 2019 will be an eventful year with six specific milestones. With hepcidin mimetic PTG-300, the three specifics events are first, dosing of the first patient beta-thalassemia patient, which we already accomplished in early January. Two, preliminary results from the TRANSCEND study in the second half of the year, and three, initiating another indication besides beta-thalassemia in the second half of the year. Our fourth milestone of the year is with regard to the oral IL-23 receptor antagonist, PTG-200, wherein we expect Janssen to file a U.S. IND in the first half of 2019. And the last two out of the six milestones pertain to our oral alpha-4-beta-7 integrin antagonist, PN-943, wherein we look forward to, one, finishing the Phase 1 study and sharing the PD data in the first half of the year, which will then guide the Phase 2 study designed in UC patient. And then last, an IND filing by year end for this Phase 2 study. With that overview now, I will now turn the call over to Don to review our fourth quarter and year-end financial results. Don?